On the language the two officers used in their messages was also revealed during the hearing, with both referring to the women as "dead birds".
According to
report, two police officers who shared photos on WhatsApp of the bodies of two
murdered sisters have been found guilty of gross misconduct.
PC Jamie
Lewis and PC Deniz Jaffer had admitted sharing images of the bodies of Bibaa
Henry, 46, and Nicole Smallman, 27.
Lewis was
dismissed from the Metropolitan Police at the pair's misconduct hearing, while
Jaffer was told he would have been dismissed if he was still serving.
The two
sisters were found dead in bushes in Fryent Country Park, in Wembley, London,
in June last year.
Lewis sent
a WhatsApp message which said: "Unfortunately I'm sat next to two dead
birds with stab wounds."
Jaffer
then sent a message in a WhatsApp group saying: "I'm here now I'll try to
take pictures of the dead birds."
The
officers had been assigned to protect the scene where the two women were
discovered.
Instead,
they breached the cordon to take "inappropriate" and "unauthorised"
photographs of the bodies, which were then shared on WhatsApp.
Jaffer
took four photographs and Lewis took two - and one of the images sent to a
female colleague had Lewis' face superimposed on to it.
The two
men also used a racially derogatory term for Pakistanis in messages about
other, unrelated police matters.
Assistant
Commissioner Helen Ball, chairing an accelerated tribunal in west London on
Wednesday, ruled that both men had committed gross misconduct.
"This
was hurtful, dishonest and unprofessional behaviour of the utmost
seriousness," she said.
"I am
sorry that our officers behaved in such a hurtful, disrespectful and criminal
way. Their actions are shameful."
The
tribunal - which neither of the men attended - ruled that the two officers
breached six established police standards, including confidentiality and
honesty and integrity, as well as authority, respect and courtesy.
The
hearing was also told that Lewis separately "responded with approval"
to another officer who stated he was going to be posted to a new location which
had fewer Asian people in, whom he referred to as "P****".
Lewis, who
did not use the term himself, replied: "Exactly."
Jaffer
also used the same racially derogatory term in a separate message on another
matter.
Speaking
outside the Old Bailey after the two officers' pleaded guilty to committing
misconduct in a public office, the victims' mother, Mina Smallman, called on
the force "to drill down and get the rot out once and for all".
"You
are not above the law, you are not going to be protected," she said,
before criticising Met Commissioner Dame Cressida Dick for her "shoddy way
of behaving and her response since all of this has come out".
The pair
have already been warned they face "lengthy" jail terms when they are
sentenced next month for misconduct in a public office.
The Met's
commissioner previously apologised to the family on behalf of the force.
"I
deeply regret that at a time when they were grieving the loss of their loved
ones who were taken in such awful circumstances, they faced additional distress
caused by the actions of two police officers," she said.
"What
former PC Jaffer and PC Lewis chose to do that day was utterly unprofessional,
disrespectful and deeply insensitive. I know that is the view of colleagues
across the Met who utterly condemn this behaviour."
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