Three MORE Met cops 'shared dead body snaps': Force watchdog launches NEW probe after officer 'sent photo of sudden death scene to two colleagues' - after Cressida Dick apologised over circulated images of murdered sisters

 Three more serving Met Police officers are under investigation over another photo of a dead body at a suspected crimescene.

One of them is suspected of taking and sharing a picture at the sudden death of a man they attended, whiled the other two either received or were aware of it.

It comes after two PCs were told they could face jail for WhatsApping colleagues pictures of two other bodies.

The new three officers were all investigated by the Independent Office of Police Conduct, who have now passed their findings to the Met Police.

The death happened in January 2020, but the suspected wrongdoing only emerged in the past few months. 

So far the Met has not yet revealed what - if any - action it has taken against them.

Their case was uncovered by investigators looking into the actions of PCs Deniz Jaffer, 47, and Jamie Lewis, 32.

They yesterday admitted misconduct after pictures were taken of murdered sisters Bibaa Henry, 46, and Nicole Smallman, 27, and shared with 42 colleagues.

Details of this latest investigation heaps more pressure on Met Commissioner Dame Cressida Dick, after she was told to 'get the rot out' by the victims' mother.

Separately three other officers are also facing misconduct proceedings over the image of Ms Henry and Ms Smallman. 

Met Commissioner Dame Cressida Dick has come under criticism over officers' crimes

Met Commissioner Dame Cressida Dick has come under criticism over officers' crimes

Unmasked: PC Jaffer, 47, was charged with misconduct in a public office over the pictures

Unmasked: PC Jaffer, 47, was charged with misconduct in a public office over the pictures

Pc Jamie Lewis leaves the Old Bailey, after pleading guilty to misconduct in a public office

Pc Jamie Lewis leaves the Old Bailey, after pleading guilty to misconduct in a public office

PC Deniz Jaffer arrives at the Old Bailey in London, charged with misconduct in a public office

PC Deniz Jaffer arrives at the Old Bailey in London, charged with misconduct in a public officePC Jaffer and Lewis were supposed to protect the scene after the sisters were found stabbed to death in Fryent Country Park in Wembley, north-west London.

But instead, they breached the cordon to take 'inappropriate' and 'unauthorised' photographs of the bodies, which were then sent 'to a dentist and doctor', and a WhatsApp group.

Jaffer took four photographs and Lewis took two - one of which was sent to a female colleague with Lewis's face superimposed onto it.

Police watchdog the IOPC later revealed Lewis also used 'degrading and sexist language' to describe the victims in the WhatsApp team group of 42 colleagues.

As Dame Cressida Dick apologised for the second time, Ms Henry and Ms Smallman's bereft mother Mina slammed the Met Commissioner for the botched investigation into her daughters' deaths. 

She criticised, 'Her shoddy way of behaving and her response since all of this has come out' adding: 'She has not contacted us to say I am really sorry. She has not spoken into this story at all.

Ms Smallman said the Met was 'beyond hope', adding: 'You go to London to start to prepare the funeral of your dead children and are told that police officers that should have been protecting the area had actually taken selfies and sent them out to a dentist and a doctor and a WhatsApp group.' 

Following their guilty pleas, the Met said it was taking 'immediate steps' to put former PC Jaffer, who has resigned from the force, and PC Lewis before accelerated misconduct hearings.

Met Commissioner Dick said yesterday: 'I deeply regret that at a time when they were grieving the loss of their loved ones who were taken in such awful circumstances, they faced additional distress caused by the actions of two police officers.

'What former PC Jaffer and PC Lewis chose to do that day was utterly unprofessional, disrespectful and deeply insensitive. I know that is the view of colleagues across the Met who utterly condemn this behaviour.

'They have pleaded guilty today to a serious criminal offence and sentencing will follow in due course.

'I apologised to Bibaa and Nicole's family in June last year and, on behalf of the Met, I apologise again today. 

 'Now that the judicial process has got to this stage, we are able to take the officers through an accelerated misconduct process.'

Jaffer, 47, of Hornchurch, east London, and Lewis, 33, from Colchester, Essex, had been arrested as part of a criminal investigation by the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) watchdog.

The charge against each of them stated that 'without authorisation he entered a crime scene he had been assigned to protect, sending information about his attendance at the scene to members of the public via WhatsApp and taking photographs of the crime scene'. 

The sisters' mother Mina Smallman, who has described the officers as 'despicable', sat in court for the hearing. 

Paul Goddard, from the CPS, said outside court: 'Pc Jamie Lewis and Pc Deniz Jaffer's senseless conduct fell way below that to be expected from police officers.

'These officers were tasked with protecting a tragic crime scene.

'But instead they violated it for their own purposes, with no regard to the dignity of the victims, or the harm they might do to a murder investigation.

'Their thoughtless and insensitive actions have no doubt caused immeasurable further distress and pain to the heartbroken family and friends of Nicole Smallman and Bibaa Henry who were already left reeling from the loss of their loved ones. Our thoughts are very much with them at this time.'

The pair, attached to the Met's North East command unit, were both suspended from duty following their arrests on June 22 last year.

Jaffer, of Hornchurch, east London, and Lewis, from Colchester, Essex, are on unconditional bail. 

On Thursday the mother of Ms Henry and Ms Smallman vowed to stop their killer ever being released from prison.

Mina Smallman  said justice had been done for her 'beautiful girls' as their 'deluded' killer was locked up for at least 35 years.

Mrs Smallman had looked on while Danyal Hussein sat with his back to the court as he was jailed for life via video link from Belmarsh prison. 

Speaking outside the Old Bailey, in central London, Mrs Smallman condemned the 19-year-old, who had stabbed her daughters to death after making a pact with a devil.

On his behaviour in court, she said: 'It's all a performance. There is nothing wrong with him. He's just an obnoxious human being.'

She went on: 'He is a broken human being who, if he had not been caught, four other families may have been suffering what we have.

'Well he ain't out there now and I think he is so deluded, come 35 years' time they will not let him out.

'I will not let them.'

Mrs Smallman went on: 'There will be no celebrations here but justice has been done.'

She called for a review of the law, after the court heard that Hussein could not be handed a whole life order because of his youth. 

She praised the Metropolitan Police for bringing Hussein to justice, saying she did not 'cast a whole organisation by one particular sort of incident'.

But in the wake of a critical police watchdog report on the handling of the sisters' missing persons report, she said there was an 'underground that has infiltrated and is growing in our Metropolitan Police'.

Artist impression of PC Jamie Lewis and PC Deniz Jaffer appearing at the Old Bailey yesterday

Artist impression of PC Jamie Lewis and PC Deniz Jaffer appearing at the Old Bailey yesterday

Nicole Smallman, 27,
Bibaa Henry, 46,

Nicole Smallman, 27, and Bibaa Henry, 46, who were stabbed to death in Wembley last year

Murderer: Danyal Hussein, 19, who killed sisters Bibaa Henry, 46, and Nicole Smallman, 27, seen here in his police mugshot

Murderer: Danyal Hussein, 19, who killed sisters Bibaa Henry, 46, and Nicole Smallman, 27, seen here in his police mugshot

The sisters (above), who had been celebrating Ms Henry's birthday with friends, were found the following day by Ms Smallman's boyfriend

The sisters (above), who had been celebrating Ms Henry's birthday with friends, were found the following day by Ms Smallman's boyfriend

Mina Smallman, mother of the two victims looking on as Danyal Hussein appears in the dock at the Old Bailey, where he would try to intimidate and provoke her. She refused and would smile and wink back

Mina Smallman, mother of the two victims looking on as Danyal Hussein appears in the dock at the Old Bailey, where he would try to intimidate and provoke her. She refused and would smile and wink backShe also thanked the media who had followed the case, saying: 'Everybody is worth knowing about.'

On her daughters, she said: 'They were beautiful, beautiful girls.

'Bibaa left behind a daughter who has given birth to a son in the last year and I am a great grandmother.'

She said Ms Henry had been an 'amazing' social worker but she grieved for her younger daughter Ms Smallman more because 'she had 20 years less than Bibaa'.

She added: 'Good girls - I'm really proud of them.' 

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