UK Officers Who Responded To Nowak Stabbing Now Face Investigation
I had a lengthy post here giving what was known at the time about the stabbing of Henry Nowak, an 18‑year‑old British university student, by Vickrum Digwa, a 23-year-old British Sikh, in Southampton, UK. At the time, although policy required that the circumstances of the stabbing, Digwa's arrest, and Nowak's treatment by local police be investigated by the Independent Office for Police Conduct, the IOPC was leaking to the UK Guardian that this would be perfunctory:
The Guardian understands the IOPC has found no indication of any disciplinary or criminal offence by the officers involved after six months of inquiries, after it was referred to the watchdog in December. Hampshire police said of four officers involved, three remained on full duties and one has resigned.
But as of yesterday, things seem to have changed:
The two police officers who handcuffed Henry Nowak as he lay dying from stab wounds have been placed under investigation for gross misconduct by the police watchdog.
The Guardian has learned the two officers have been away from work because of threats they have received, which led to fears for their safety.
The officers could face dismissal from the Hampshire force if they are found guilty.
The decision by the Independent Office for Police Conduct to change the nature of their investigation and expand it comes after two meetings with the Nowak family and their lawyer. It also follows public anger about the case after video footage showed the officers disbelieving Nowak’s pleas that he could not breathe.
The IOPC had already been investigating since Nowak’s death in Southampton in December 2025. It had previously assessed that there was no indication police may have breached discipline guidelines and treated the officers as witnesses.
The BBC is more non-committal:
The IOPC said the investigation relates to potential failures by the officers to recognise Henry Nowak needed urgent medical help and the decision to arrest and handcuff him rather than provide first aid.
The watchdog added: "There's also an indication one of the officers may have breached the standard relating to authority, respect and courtesy, for appearing to dismiss Henry saying he had been stabbed."
The BBC revealed last week it took officers eight minutes to discover Henry's fatal stab wound, after arriving at the scene.
. . . "Two officers will now face gross misconduct investigations. There is clear evidence that public confidence in the force may have been seriously harmed by this incident, and that is a factor we must consider when assessing the evidence.
"The serving of gross misconduct notices does not necessarily mean that disciplinary proceedings will follow.
"At the end of our investigation we will decide whether any officers should face disciplinary proceedings."
The second Guardian link has more background:
Digwa has been convicted of Nowak’s murder and sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum of 21 years. Senior government law officers are appealing against the sentence on the basis it is unduly lenient.
The Hampshire force will not suspend the two officers and said: “The officers are currently away from the workplace. If they return, they will be placed on directed duties that do not involve any contact with the public.”
It declined to comment as to whether the reason the two officers were away from the workplace was because of threats.
On one hand, if the authorities are now appealing the sentence as unduly lenient, sombody's worried about the black eye this case has given them. On the other hand, the officers themselves are being treated very leniently, certainly by US standards. In my earlier post, I cited an AI summary of typical US police department policy:
Under the Fourteenth Amendment, if U.S. officers take a person into custody (by handcuffing them), they assume a legal duty of care for that person’s safety and well-being.
In the U.S., acting with such severe negligence would strip officers of qualified immunity, exposing them and their municipality to catastrophic civil rights lawsuits under 42 U.S. Code § 1983.
Had this specific tragedy occurred under U.S. jurisdiction, standard accountability protocols would immediately trigger:
1. An Internal Affairs (IA) or independent state-level investigation for a critical use-of-force/in-custody death.
2. Immediate termination of the officers for violating the department's mandatory Duty to Intervene and Medical Aid policies.
3. A presentation of the case to a grand jury by local or federal prosecutors for potential charges of reckless endangerment or manslaughter.
As far as I've been able to determine, in the UK, the "legal duty of care" when putting someone in handcuffs is less clear, and the policies (such as the Metropolitan Police) are windy and ambiguous:
Any intentional application of force on another person is an assault. The use of handcuffs, as with any use of force must be justified. Justification is achieved through establishing not only a legal power to use handcuffs, but also clear objective grounds that the officer or member of police staff's actions were reasonable, necessary and proportionate.
Any objective review of the Nowak case would establish pretty quickly that handcuffing Nowak was neither reasonable nor necessary nor proportionate. I suspect, however, that the officers will receive more lenient treatment than they would in the US, and they likely will not face criminal charges. The authorities are going to have to tiptoe very carefully around this issue, especially given the reality on the ground that attacks on white Brits by members of migrant communities are an everyday occurrence.



