King meets police officers who dealt with Bedfordshire train crash

The King speaks with specialist officers and first responders who attended the scene after the Bedford train crash (Shane Anthony Sinclair/PA)
The King speaks with specialist officers and first responders who attended the scene after the Bedford train crash (Shane Anthony Sinclair/PA)
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The King praised British Transport Police (BTP) for their “remarkable efforts” keeping rail and underground networks safe after meeting officers who dealt with the Bedfordshire train crash.

Charles met a range of officers from various BTP units from firearms officers and dog handlers to drone specialists and others tackling violence against women and girls, when he opened the force’s new headquarters in central London.

As he unveiled a plaque to mark his visit Charles told the gathered staff including BTP’s Chief Constable Lucy D’Orsi about his experience of their work.

He said: “I’m very very pleased to be able to do this and, if I may say so, congratulate the whole of the British Transport Police…for remarkable efforts all the time all over this country.

“And I know from travelling for all these years what a difference they make.”

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The King unveiling a plaque during the official opening of the headquarters of the British Transport Police (Shane Anthony Sinclair/PA)

The head of state spoke to Pc Dave Sheldrick, the first BTP officer on the scene after two East Midlands Railway services collided on June 19 in Elstow, near Bedford, and other BTP staff involved in the incident including family liaison officers.

An interim report published by the Rail Accident Investigation Branch found Shaun Burton, the 60-year-old train driver killed in the 49mph crash, passed a red signal moments before the collision that injured 162 people, 102 of whom needed hospital treatment.

BTP is a national special police force responsible for policing the railway network, covering over 10,000 miles of track and more than 3,000 stations and depots across England, Wales and Scotland and it also polices London Underground, the Docklands Light Railway and other city metro and tram systems.

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The King speaks with specialist officers from the drone team and Lucy D’Orsi, Chief Constable of British Transport Police, as he officially opens the headquarters of the British Transport Police in central London (Shane Anthony Sinclair/PA)

Ms D’Orsi said to the King during her speech: “We know of your interest in our work and the challenges facing modern policing.

“We are particularly grateful for your understanding of the efforts we make every day to tackle violence against women and girls, keep passengers and railway staff safe, and keep the railway moving.

“The relationship between your family, the railway and British Transport Police stretches back more than 180 years, to Queen Victoria’s first rail journey in 1842.

“On alighting, she remarked that she was ‘quite charmed at the privacy and lack of dust’- perhaps one of the earliest endorsements of rail travel.”

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