I said they faced prosecution and imprisonment, jno. Which they did. (if caught)
No-one agreed with them 'getting away with it'.
Again, you're pointing out extreme cases, policemen who broke the law to suggest that was the way they all carried on.
Surely when an organisation is described as "institutionally racist" that doesn't mean there was the odd "bad apple" who hadn't been caught, but that their mates, colleagues, and bosses were aware and turned a blind?
eleven out of 73 were convicted. So perhaps facing prosecution is no big deal when there's roughly a one in six chance you won't be convicted, and can just retire and pick up your pension.
(Just to be clear, the figures are a few years old. If anyone's got newer ones I'm happy to read them.)
I should have said that Dame Louise was commissioned to write the report about Met disciplinary processes following the kidnap, rape and murder of Sarah Everard by serving Met officer Wayne Couzens.