TWISTED Met officers who took sick photos of two murdered sisters they branded “dead birds” while guarding their cordon have today been jailed.
PC Deniz Jaffer and PC Jamie Lewis took photos of slaughtered Bibaa Henry, 46, and Nicole Smallman, 27 – and the sisters’ mum has now blasted the ghouls who “de-humanised” the girls.
The vile officers took photos of their bodies in Fryent Country Park in Wembley, North West London, and shared them on WhatsApp.
Sickeningly, they superimposed Lewis’ face on one of the girl’s bodies and sent the image to a WhatsApp group of 42 colleagues.
Jaffer also messaged: “I’m here now I’ll try to take pictures of the dead birds.”
He took four photos in total while Lewis took two as they “stripped Bibaa and Nicole of dignity in death”.
Their vile actions also meant they assisted murderer Danyal Hussein, whose team tried claiming the scene had been compromised by the disgraced officers.
Jaffer and Lewis have now been jailed for two years and nine months after they admitted committing misconduct in a public office between June 7 and June 23 last year.
The girls’ mother Mina Smallman said both officers felt “untouchable” when they “dehumanised our children”.
She branded the “sacrilegious” act a “betrayal of such catastrophic proportion” adding: “From that moment on I had flashes, imagining what their bodies looked like.”
In victim impact statements, family members described the defendants as a “disgrace” to the police family and to mankind.
Mina Smallman said: “Jaffer and Lewis callously and without any regard for our dead girls’ bodies committed, to my mind, a sacrilegious act.
“We were told …the police officers whose task it was to protect and preserve the crime scene had, in fact, for their own amusement, took selfies, posing for pictures with our dead daughters.
“We were horrified. I had never heard of anything so macabre.
“Those police officers felt so safe, so untouchable, they felt they would take photos of our murdered daughters. Those officers dehumanised our children.
She added that the actions of the officers amounted to “pure misogyny”.
Their cousin also read a statement revealing she works for the Met Police but added: “For how long? I can’t be sure”.
Speaking outside court, the mum of the two victims, said she was “thrilled” the officers had been jailed and not received suspended sentences.
‘SACRILEGIOUS ACT’
She said: “We’ve been to hell and back again.
“So, we have not even dared to dream what it’s going to feel like not having this hanging over your head.”
She rejected the officers’ expressions of remorse, saying: “I bet they are sorry and tortured that they tortured their family.
“I bet they get stick everywhere. That’s not the same as feeling shame.
“They are more sorry that they got caught than what they did.
“This additional pain and suffering that we have gone through could have been avoided. It is heinous.
“I hope this sends a signal to the Met and all other police forces, and gives strength to those who are being abused and hearing language they detest to speak up and people will listen.”
The Old Bailey was told how the officers had been sent to guard the murder scene on June 5 last year at the inner cordon closest to the girls’ bodies.
They were instructed to remain at their posts and maintain the integrity of the scene but a female colleague saw them walking back and forth in conversation.
She later received a WhatsApp message from Jaffer containing four photographs of the bodies.
One of the images had the face of Lewis superimposed on it.
Neither officers were wearing clothing to protect evidence and would have needed to leave their post to get the vile pictures.
They were 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”.
‘DEEP REGRET’
Following their guilty pleas, the Met said it was taking “immediate steps” to put former the shamed cops before accelerated misconduct hearings.
Lewis was dismissed from the force in November and Jaffer, who already quit, would have been dismissed without notice if he was still a serving officer.
Met chief Dame Cressida Dick expressed “deep regret” over the “utterly unprofessional, disrespectful and deeply insensitive” behaviour.
She apologised to the sisters’ mum Mina, who has criticised her handling of the case.
The mum slammed the officers as “Despicable 1 and Despicable 2” following their pleas last month.
She said: “Our family’s grief was further compounded by the cordon officers who will now be known as Despicable 1 and 2 – any inner strength I had reserved had been torn away.”
Danyal Hussein, 19, slaughtered Bibaa and her half-sister Nicole in a “frenzied” and “savage” attack as they celebrated the former’s birthday in the park.
The teen knifed Nicole 28 times and plunged the blade so hard into Bibaa that it broke.
DOUBLE SLAUGHTER
They were discovered two days later after worried friends headed to the park to find them.
They were found lying with their limbs entwined in bushes.
A handwritten letter was discovered in Hussein’s bedroom that appeared to be an agreement between him and a “demon” signed in blood.
He promised to “sacrifice women in order to win the lottery and not to be suspected of the crimes he had committed”.
Investigators believe Hussein had undergone a “form of radicalisation” after being exposed to occult material on the dark web.
They also fear he would have slaughtered more women had he not slashed his hand while murdering the sisters.
The teen had been referred to anti-radicalisation programmes – including Prevent while he was attending Thomas Tallis secondary school in Kidbrooke.
He was jailed for life in October with a minimum of 35 years for murder.
The Metropolitan Police apologised to the family of Bibaa Henry and Nicole Smallman for the “shameful” and “utterly unprofessional” actions of Jaffer and Lewis for taking inappropriate photographs at the murder scene in Wembley, north London.
Assistant commissioner for professionalism Helen Ball said: “Our thoughts are once more with the family and friends of Bibaa Henry and Nicole Smallman. I am so sorry that during the most difficult time in their lives the actions of these two officers caused them so much additional pain and distress.
“Today former Pcs Jaffer and Lewis have been punished for their actions which were utterly unprofessional, disrespectful and deeply insensitive.
“All of us in the Met and wider policing are horrified by their shameful behaviour.”