British police have charged an officer with the hijack and murder of 33-year-old Sarah Everard, whose vanishing a week ago has started outrage and fears among ladies about their wellbeing.
Constable Wayne Couzens, 48, who guarded diplomatic buildings, will show up in court on Saturday. Everard vanished while heading back home from a companion’s home in south London on March 3.
The Metropolitan police had affirmed that a body found in a wood outside London was that of the missing lady.
Her case has prompted an overflowing of personal accounts by ladies of their own encounters and fears of strolling roads alone around evening time, and a mission for activity to address this.
“The investigation continues obviously,” Assistant commissioner Ephgrave told columnists. “I might want to utilize this chance to energize anybody that figures they may have helpful data to give, to get in contact with us.”
He had said before in the day that he comprehended the hurt and outrage started by the case. “Those are suppositions that I share actually,” Ephgrave said. “I additionally perceive the more extensive worries that are being raised appropriately about the wellbeing of ladies out in the open spaces in London and furthermore somewhere else in the country.”
Home Secretary (interior minister) Priti Patel said she would do everything she could to protect ladies and young ladies following the clamor that has followed Everard’s vanishing.
“Each lady and young lady ought to be allowed to walk our roads without the smallest dread of provocation, misuse or brutality,” she said on Twitter.
Be that as it may, police have been reprimanded by coordinators of an arranged “Recover These Roads” vigil on Saturday close to where Everard was most recently seen, after officials said it couldn’t take place because of Coronavirus limitations.
A lady in her 30s, who media said was the accomplice of Couzens, was delivered on police bail in the wake of having been kept on doubt of helping a guilty party.