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Top cops' expenses published


SENIOR Thames Valley Police officers have defended their expense claims, which have been published for the first time.

Receipts show Chief Constable Sara Thornton – who earns £152,343 a year – claimed back £1,877.70, including £135.50 for hiring a dress for herself at a suit for her partner when they attended a state banquet with French President Nicolas Sarkozy and the Queen, at Windsor Castle.

Assistant Chief Constable Brian Langston – on £89,106 a year – claimed back £2,588.55, including £245 to paint his house and a £14.98 mobile phone charger, but also £240 for management training books.

Expenses claims of former Deputy Chief Constable, Alex Marshall, included a £40 memorial wreath laid in tribute to dead police officers, £357.90 on food and a 50p parking ticket.

Assistant Chief Constable Nick Gargan received £1,267.04 on food, parking, travel and accommodation while Deputy Chief Constable Francis Habgood claimed back only £283.94.

Mr Langston said paint was purchased to decorate his home, which is owned by Thames Valley Police Authority and where he has lived for the past 21 years.

He said: “There is always the question of integrity and I always ask myself each time before I claim for expenses, can I justify the use of taxpayers’ money for this?

“If I owned the house then, of course, I would not have claimed for the paint, but it is owned by the Police Authority, which is responsible for the maintenance, consistent with the conditions I was employed under.”

The phone charger ensured he could always be contacted in emergencies and training books were shared with colleagues, he said.

Mr Marshall, who now earns £146,589 as Chief Constable at Hampshire Constabulary, refused to comment on his £2,412.89 expense bill.

But Thames Valley Police spokesman Gayle Rossiter said Mr Marshall believed all his expenses were appropriate and did not think it was unreasonable for the public to pay for meals with colleagues.

A claim for a National Police Memorial Day wreath last June was within regulations, Mrs Rossiter added.

Ms Thornton and Mr Gargan also declined to comment.

Mr Habgood released a statement, saying: “The expenses incurred by chief officers are all incurred as part of work-related activities.

“This includes where an officer or member of staff is required to attend a function in their official capacity.

“In terms of guests at such functions, expenses can be appropriate in certain circumstances where they are incurred because there are specific dress requirements and they are attending as a formal guest in relation to an official function.

“I can confirm the Chief Constable was there in her official capacity with a guest.

“All expenses for chief officers are published openly on our Internet site.”

Comments(6)

William Windsor says...
8:21am Fri 10 Jul 09

Pigs at the trough.

Why Police are getting 'expenses' is beyond me, especially one earning £150,000+ and doing nothing to earn it.

pigsmightfly says...
4:00pm Fri 10 Jul 09

It's time highly paid public servants got off the gravy train!

bigaldublin says...
5:23pm Fri 10 Jul 09

pigsmightfly wrote:
It's time highly paid public servants got off the gravy train!
Why should people have to pay their own work expenses? Their salary is for personal use. It's not a float given out by TVP with the proviso that they 'keep the change'.

If people are paid too much then complain about that but it's ludicrous to state that public servants (or any other worker for that matter) should pay for work related expenditure.

If I have a work mobile phone and it needs a replacement charger I'd pick one up in Argos and claim it back. **** site more cost effective than e-mailing the purchasing dept, them putting in an order, deliver costs, invoice processing costs, cheque production costs....



ex-B.G.S (Priory) says...
9:16am Sat 11 Jul 09

As far as I can see all the quoted expenses claimed were foreseen expenses. Therefore why is there not a system in place for the officers (or any other member of the force), to apply for the requisite payment to be made prior to the outlay. By doing this there would be a tighter control over the "incidental expenses". and there would be less need for members of the force to be reimbursed for so called "out-of-pocket" expenses.

HughdeGree says...
10:22pm Sun 12 Jul 09

All the expenses seem fine to me, if a little penny pinching. So of the salaries however were a surprise. Especially when compared to a PC on the beat who runs more of a risk on a daily basis.

BeauNash says...
4:00pm Tue 14 Jul 09

The expenses scandal of MPs is just a drop in the ocean when compared to the billions scammed by bureaucrats in national and local government.

The police in Oxfordsire are particularly bad as they are the servants of their masters at County Hall and it is not surprising that they won't investigate the corruption and criminality in the corridors of power - they know which side their bread is buttered.


Chief Constable Sara Thornton Chief Constable Sara Thornton

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