Vital paperwork for grooming gangs inquiry may be lost, says MP
Briefly

Vital paperwork for grooming gangs inquiry may be lost, says MP
"Chris Murray expressed concerns that councils have not been instructed to keep paperwork as they should have been, suggesting that this oversight indicates senior leadership teams are 'not fit for purpose'."
"Baroness Anne Longfield will chair the inquiry into child sexual abuse by grooming gangs, which Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood has promised will be a 'moment of reckoning'."
"The inquiry will hold targeted local investigations into group-based child sexual exploitation, explicitly considering the backgrounds of offenders, including their ethnicity and religion."
"Murray described the errors as 'inexplicable', noting that formal letters instructing councils to prepare for evidence submission 'should have happened quite automatically'."
The inquiry into grooming gangs is set to begin amid concerns that key documents may have been lost due to Home Office errors. Labour MP Chris Murray highlighted that councils were not properly instructed to retain necessary paperwork, questioning the competence of senior leadership teams. Baroness Anne Longfield will chair the inquiry, which aims to investigate child sexual abuse by grooming gangs, focusing on local cases and the backgrounds of offenders. The inquiry will have statutory powers and a budget of £65 million, emphasizing the importance of historical documents for evidence.
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