Met detective kept teen murder victim photos for 'personal gratification'
Met detective kept teen murder victim photos for gratification

Detective sergeant Jason Grafham kept photographs of the mutilated body of a teenager who had been raped and murdered for his own "personal gratification and bragging", a tribunal has found. The hearing at Palestra House in south London ruled that Grafham had "compounded" the "emotional harm and grief" suffered by the family of 18-year-old Sally Anne Bowman, whose naked body was found in a pool of blood in 2005.

No policing reason for keeping photos

The tribunal found there was "no policing reason" for Grafham to have retained the photographs, which dated back to the discovery of her body. Grafham, who retired from the Metropolitan Police one day before the start of the tribunal, was permanently barred from serving in the police. He was also found guilty of gross misconduct for a series of sexually inappropriate and discriminatory or derogatory remarks.

Chairman of the tribunal, Commander Paul Trevers, said Grafham — who did not attend any part of the hearing — would have been dismissed had he not already retired. He cannot have his pension docked as he has not been convicted of a criminal offence.

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Tribunal's findings

Commander Trevers stated: "The panel finds that former DS Jason Grafham retained papers and photographs (of the Sally Anne Bowman case) when there was no policing reason to do so. He showed photographs to other officers when there was no policing purpose to do so. (He) admitted possessing and showing the photographs but maintained that was for policing purposes. The panel does not accept this explanation."

"Displaying (the photos) without any policing purpose was profoundly inappropriate and failed to treat the victim with dignity," Trevers added. "Even after 20 years, the emotional harm, grief and disruption to (the Bowman family's) lives remains significant and the officer's actions compounded this." The panel said this was "wholly inconsistent with locally recognised practice" and had "significant potential to undermine confidence in policing standards".

Discovery of photographs

Earlier, the hearing heard that photocopies of photographs taken from the scene of the rape and murder were discovered after a search of Grafham's desk in December 2024. One witness, known as Miss B, said she had thought Grafham had kept the photographs for "entertainment and bragging purposes". She said she had found it "highly inappropriate" and "disturbing" when she saw him show photographs of the crime scene to a colleague. Another witness, known as Miss C, said that Grafham's frequent referral to his work on the Sally Anne Bowman case had become a "running joke" in the office.

Defence and other allegations

In his defence, Grafham's representative Mark Scrutton claimed he had kept the photographs for "policing purposes". Scrutton said Grafham was "incredibly proud" of his role as an exhibits officer in the case which led to the conviction of Mark Dixie, who was jailed for life with a minimum term of 34 years for the rape and murder of Miss Bowman in 2008.

Separately, Grafham was also accused of making five sexually inappropriate remarks to colleagues, and three discriminatory or derogatory remarks between March and December 2024. The tribunal heard that on the balance of probabilities, all sexually inappropriate remarks and all but one discriminatory or derogatory comment were proven after four colleagues gave evidence.

Met Police response

Speaking after the tribunal, detective chief superintendent Angela Craggs, who leads central specialist crime command at the Met, said: "The actions of former DS Grafham were despicable, incomprehensible and deeply disrespectful. I am profoundly sorry to the family and loved ones of Sally Anne Bowman for the additional pain and distress caused to them by what he did."

"Grafham's comments to colleagues were also incredibly offensive and inappropriate. There is no place in the organisation for those who think such behaviour and language is acceptable," Craggs added. "We are all appalled by his conduct and grateful to colleagues who had the confidence to come forward and report their concerns, which we were able to swiftly act on."

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