- Suzi Smith alleged that she saw Jonathan Coupland abuse his daughter
- The claim led to him being thrown in a cell and banned from seeing her
- Mrs Smith later admitted making the accusation up and was sacked
- But for several months until January 2014 she again worked with children
By
Paul Bentley: A social
worker who falsely accused an innocent father of abusing his
six-year-old daughter was allowed to continue working with vulnerable
children, it has emerged.
Suzi Smith alleged during a custody battle that she had seen Jonathan Coupland, 53, attack his child.
The
accusation – made while she was ‘really, really angry’ – led to him
being handcuffed in front of neighbours, thrown into a cell and banned
from seeing his daughter. The Daily Mail revealed the case in April, and
since then a disciplinary hearing has found Mrs Smith guilty of
misconduct and ruled that her fitness to practise is impaired.
But she was
not struck off or suspended. Instead, she was given a three-year caution
order, which means she can continue to work with the most vulnerable
children.
It has also emerged that she was allowed to continue working as a social worker after making the false accusation.
Last night,
Mr Coupland told of his anger that Mrs Smith was permitted to carry on
working with children. ‘I am shaking with rage,’ he said. ‘I feel
disgusted. It is unbelievable. I was arrested for sexually assaulting
the most precious thing in my life. Once you are tarred with that brush,
that is it. People where I live think I am a paedophile.
‘But
she was working with children again – the one place I would never want
her to work again. She even got a promotion. What has she got now? Just a
slap on the wrist. No parent or child should go through what my family
has gone through. No sanction will ever be strong enough for her.’
Mrs
Smith, 53, admitted making the ‘horrific mistake’ and was sacked early
last year from her job with Cafcass, the Children and Family Court
Advisory and Support Service, which represents children in the family
courts.
She
was jobless between February and June 2013, but from July 2013 until
January 2014, was employed by an agency to work with children for
Southampton City Council, where she dealt with issues of child
protection and adoption.
The
disciplinary hearing at the Health and Care Professions Council, in
Kennington, South London, was told she was even given a promotion and
did three other stints of agency work as a social worker for local
councils until January, when she had to stop working in the run-up to
her disciplinary case. Mr Coupland, from Spalding, Lincolnshire, raised
his daughter alone after splitting from her mother. The former painter
and decorator has fought a lengthy custody battle.
In
January 2012, Mrs Smith made a home visit and apparently clashed with
Mr Coupland. Subsequently, she wrote the damning case note while she was
‘really, really angry’.
She
claimed she had witnessed Mr Coupland stroking his daughter
inappropriately – which he has always denied and she now admits did not
happen.
Later,
Mr Coupland was arrested at home on suspicion of sexual assault and
questioned for about ten hours. He claims officers threatened to put his
daughter in temporary care before he begged them to place her with his
mother.
At the time of making that record Mrs Smith was in a mood
Mrs Smith husband Tim said
The
following day, Mr Coupland was told there would be no further action.
Mrs Smith had been interviewed by officers and retracted what she had
previously claimed.
Cafcass, which is funded by the Department of Justice, sacked Mrs Smith and paid Mr Coupland £86,000 in damages.
Mrs
Smith’s husband Tim, who represented her at the hearing, said she was
overworked when she made her initial record about Mr Coupland touching
his daughter.
‘She
immediately retracted that with the police,’ he said. ‘At the time of
making that record Mrs Smith was in a mood. She was working 14 hours a
day and had something like 40 cases on the go. There is no other
explanation apart from it was just a horrific mistake.’ Mrs Smith said
she had learned from what happened. ‘I have tried to establish a better
work-life balance to make sure I am not overworked and that each of my
cases get the attention they deserve,’ she told the hearing. She said
she was ‘taking time to do less work but more accurate work’.
Mrs
Smith has previously apologised to Mr Coupland and said she was put
under pressure by police to stick to what she initially wrote that he
had done. Panel chairman Stephen Fash said Mrs Smith had ‘overstated’
what she thought she had observed. The panel found she made the false
allegation, but did not do so dishonestly.
Lincolnshire
Police said officers were ‘duty bound to investigate’ Mrs Smith’s
allegation, adding: ‘It transpired that the allegation was not as
originally reported to us. The male was released without charge.’
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