Scotland Yard’s cyber crime unit investigating Croydon Labour

LABOUR SELECTION SCANDAL: ‘Day of shame’ as Information Commissioner and Met Police confirm investigations into allegations of vote-rigging in Croydon East selection. EXCLUSIVE by STEVEN DOWNES

Croydon Labour is subject to a criminal investigation over allegations of vote-rigging in a parliamentary selection, in what has been described as the latest “day of shame” for the party locally.

Scotland Yard has confirmed to Inside Croydon that its special cyber crime unit is conducting an active investigation into Labour’s Croydon East selection, which was abruptly halted last November when complaints were made that the local party’s membership lists had been tampered with.

Inside Croydon reported last week that the selection process had been re-started, but with one of the four short-listed candidates, Unison union official Joel Bodmer, no longer in the contest. “Bodger” issued a barely credible statement claiming that he had “withdrawn” from the contest in order to spend more time with his family.

Withdrawn: Joel ‘Bodger’ Bodmer is out of Labour’s Croydon East contest

When they halted the selection process four months ago, Labour submitted a report to the Information Commissioner’s Office. “Organisations have a responsibility to ensure the data they process is accurate,” an ICO spokesperson said, confirming that they were also “making enquiries” into the Croydon Labour situation.

And today, a Metropolitan Police spokesperson told Inside Croydon, “We have received allegations of computer misuse in relation to an internal selection process for a political party in Croydon during October and November last year.

“The Met’s Cyber Crime team are investigating and enquiries are ongoing.”

The police declined to say whether anyone had been questioned as part of their investigation.

Carole Bonner, who was installed last year by London Labour as the interim chair of the Croydon East CLP, did not respond when contacted today by Inside Croydon for comment.

But then Bonner – a former councillor in Croydon who worked closely with discredited former council leader Tony Newman – and the other unelected Croydon East CLP officers, secretary Melanie Felton and treasurer Mark Henson, have been entirely uncommunicative with local members for almost six months, since the first complaints of attempts to fiddle the membership lists.

At the start of this month, Labour confirmed that an internal investigation had found that there had been an attempt at electoral fraud in Croydon East.

It had been alleged that one candidate had somehow been given early access to the vital membership lists to begin canvassing members for their support, while other candidates filed formal objections when it emerged that the members’ data that they were provided with was full of errors.

No comment: Labour official Carole Bonner

On one list, 71 members had their home address changed compared to a list from earlier in 2023; 26 had their phone number changed; 40 members had been given a “new” email addresses – potentially very handy when it comes to remote voting in a tightly contested selection…

Despite being formed in October 2023, Croydon East CLP has never yet held a meeting, either in-person or via Zoom. The selection meeting is expected to finally take place, at Coloma girls’ school in Shirley, this Saturday, when the three candidates will address the CLP’s members in person.

The parliamentary selection contest, involving around 600 members in the CLP, is an internal Labour matter. But it has been suggested that tampering with membership lists and voting rights potentially to favour one person seeking to become an MP could be a form of fraud once known as “obtaining pecuniary advantage by deception”.

The confirmation that the local Labour Party is subject to criminal investigation will do little to reassure grassroots members, who have endured years of highly questionable conduct by officials and senior figures, several of whom were also involved in the financial collapse of the local council.

“This is yet another day of shame for Croydon Labour Party and those mismanaging the party locally for years,” one senior figure told Inside Croydon.

“Decent Labour members in Croydon are being let down time and again by those who fail to act honestly and accountably. Croydon Labour is straining its relationship with its members and voters to breaking point.”

Read more: Labour admits serious breach of private data in Croydon East
Read more: #TheLabourFiles: MP Reed, Evans and the Croydon connection
Read more: Croydon Labour’s ‘hidden primary’ will choose a new MP


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About insidecroydon

News, views and analysis about the people of Croydon, their lives and political times in the diverse and most-populated borough in London. Based in Croydon and edited by Steven Downes. To contact us, please email inside.croydon@btinternet.com
This entry was posted in 2024 General Election, Croydon East, David Evans, Steve Reed MP and tagged , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

5 Responses to Scotland Yard’s cyber crime unit investigating Croydon Labour

  1. derekthrower says:

    Are Croydon Labour going to have their previous exploits in computer hacking taken into consideration with this latest act of internal corruption adding to their shame in the London Borough of Croydon

  2. Alison Smith says:

    Obtaining pecuniary advantage under the Theft Act was replaced by the Fraud Act 2006 .. but still dodgy as fudge though!

  3. Kevin Croucher says:

    It sometimes seems that these people treat the Labour party as a private club run for the benefit of themselves and their mates. The ordinary members and the voting public are just regarded with contempt.

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