Met Police Officer Sacked Over Shocking WhatsApp Messages
A Metropolitan Police officer has been fired without warning after vile misogynistic, ableist, and violent messages were exposed. The damning WhatsApp chat included threats, rape jokes, calls to lie in court, and boasts about abusing police powers.
PC Niall Bowler’s Disgusting Messages Revealed
PC Niall Bowler, once stationed with the Met, was swiftly dismissed following a disciplinary hearing. The investigation uncovered a long stream of offensive and unethical comments shared among colleagues.
- He made sick jokes about sexually abusing his younger brother, saying he was “five fingers deep” and joked with a colleague about “arse raping him dry.”
- Threatened colleagues, hoping one “just stops eating altogether and dies.”
- Used vile slurs like “f**king spaz,” “f**king r****d,” “ugly mental hags,” and “big mouth frog c**t.”
- Boasted about skipping arrest on a suspect labelled a “mental b**ch” to “bugger off before midday.”
- Suggested lying under oath: “We’ll just have to talk sh*t in the box. Say they’re innocent. Get it thrown out.”
- Mocked a Met Police pay rise with: “Even more free money. For being a bunch of nonces and murderers.”
Abuse of Power and Disrespect to Victims
Bowler claimed senior officers ordered illegal phone downloads and accused colleagues of lying on remand papers to “go rogue to get results.” He callously joked about footballer Emiliano Sala, who died in a plane crash, calling him a “dumb m**g c**t.”
Met Crime Chief Condemns Officer’s Behaviour
Deputy Assistant Commissioner Andy Valentine, who led the misconduct panel, blasted Bowler’s actions:
“The language used was consciously discriminatory over a considerable period of time, showing a concerning pattern. The threats of violence and the joking regarding serious sexual violence are particularly concerning.”
He added Bowler’s conduct caused serious reputational damage and eroded public trust in the force.
Met Under Fire Amid Calls for Reform
This scandal piles pressure on Scotland Yard’s ongoing fight against toxic culture within the Met. Public confidence in the force is already battered after multiple controversies.
Campaigners demand systemic reform, tougher vetting, and stricter oversight of UK policing. Anyone worried about police misconduct can report concerns to the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) or the Met’s complaints team.