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A former police officer who leaked details of the Milly Dowler investigation to the Sun has been jailed for 18 months.
A former police officer who leaked details of the Milly Dowler investigation to the Sun has been jailed for 18 months. Photograph: David Levene/The Guardian
A former police officer who leaked details of the Milly Dowler investigation to the Sun has been jailed for 18 months. Photograph: David Levene/The Guardian

Ex-policeman who leaked Milly Dowler information to the Sun is jailed

This article is more than 9 years old

Simon Quinn made £7,000 from tips over a decade while he worked as a detective constable at Surrey police

A former police officer who leaked details of the Milly Dowler investigation to the Sun newspaper has been jailed for 18 months.

Over the course of more than a decade, Simon Quinn, 43, made £7,000 from tips to the tabloid while he worked as a detective constable at Surrey police.

Quinn, of Horsham, West Sussex, was arrested in April 2013 and pleaded guilty at Kingston crown court last October to committing misconduct in public office.

The court heard that, between November 2000 and January 2011, he passed on information to a journalist about murder inquiries, including the investigation into the death of 13-year-old Dowler.

Before resigning in 2011, he also supplied details of cases involving celebrities, both as victims and suspects.

Following his Old Bailey sentencing today, Detective Chief Superintendent Gordon Briggs said: “Quinn is the ninth police officer, and the 27th public official, to have been convicted for passing confidential information acquired in the course of their duties to journalists for financial gain.

“Trust and confidence in the police service is undermined when police officers behave in this way and the public interest is harmed. Their dishonest actions merit criminal convictions.

“It is the role of a police officer to serve and protect. Leaking sensitive and confidential information is an abuse of the trust the public hold in us.

“Victims of crime need to have complete confidence that they will get the support and help of the police and be treated with sensitivity and confidentiality.”

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