Met Police Officer Dodges Jail for Leaking Sensitive Info to Expose Force Racism
PC Matthew Olive Caught in Leak Scandal
PC Matthew Olive, 26, stood trial at Southwark Crown Court where he admitted four counts of misconduct in public office. The officer was found to have snooped through secure police databases, including COPA and FIMS, without permission. He then leaked CCTV stills, suspect briefings, and case files to freelance journalist Rebecca Tidy and ex-officer whistleblower Faye Osmund-Smith.
Some leaked documents ended up on social media under the anonymous account @DCEA2000, which Olive confessed to operating.
Whistleblower Claims: Fighting Racism and Homophobia
Olive defended his actions, saying he wanted to expose “discrimination of ethnic minorities by police officers.” He also cited his own experience of homophobic bullying at work. Linking up with Tidy and Osmund-Smith, Olive called it an “act of conscience” rather than criminal intent.
How Olive Leaked Police Data
Prosecutor Dickon Reid explained Olive’s abuse of police systems throughout 2023. He used FIMS, the forensic imagery database, and COPA, the case preparation system, to grab confidential info. He sent briefings and images via WhatsApp to Tidy and Osmund-Smith.
- On 24 May 2023, Olive shared private details on suspect Jayden Chirewa with Tidy, who was investigating an unreported arrest.
- On 21 June, he gave suspect info to Osmund-Smith, despite her no longer serving as a police officer.
Olive admitted telling Tidy he had to be “very sly” to get access and even joked about taking “pictures or pass on info” from the Police National Computer just because he was “bored and wanted to cause mischief.”
Social Media Leak Sparks Police Probe
The anonymous @DCEA2000 Twitter account’s police leaks caught attention, prompting an internal investigation. Olive was arrested on 14 September 2023. Forensic analysis of his phone revealed hundreds of conversations with Tidy and Osmund-Smith, confirming unauthorised data sharing.
Judge Frees Olive Despite Serious Breach
Despite the gravity of his offences, Olive walked free. The judge took into account his motives to expose injustice, his lack of personal gain, and his experience of internal bullying. He was spared jail.
Mixed Reactions Over Leak and Whistleblowing
The case has stirred a debate online. Some praise Olive for exposing institutional racism, while others worry it undermines data protection and public trust in the police. The incident highlights the clash between journalistic transparency and police operational security.
Neither Rebecca Tidy nor Faye Osmund-Smith faces charges as the investigation continues.