A police inspector's error, an official apology – yet the false narrative continues
The following statement from an Inspector of police is untrue.
I had previously received two unsolicited calls from someone who informed me that they were a triage nurse working with Dyfed-Powys police.
The inspector's statement relates to a request that I made to try and understand the reason for those calls.
In the apology from the police it stated:
Key fact: I did not visit any doctor in Barry. My doctor was based in Ammanford.
The police apologised, but did not offer any explanation as to why the triage nurse phoned me.
"There's clearly been some confusion and an error has been made on the part of Insp. Davies."
The correspondance between the Inspector and me is here.
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The triage nurses report is here
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In this example a mental health tag has been added.
In this example a mental health tag has been deleted at the end of the report.
In this example the police admit I am not known to mental health services.
And then stated: "Which would suggest that they no longer reside in this area, and have not resided here for some time."
The officer would know the date we last resided in Ammanford from the other police records.
The facts behind their baseless allegations could have been easily checked with my doctor in Ammanford.
The real reason that we are not known to mental health services is because we do not have mental health issues.
In this example the police state that my websites suggest mental health issues.
In this example the police state that the trafficking and gassing are the result of both parties' mental health.
After reading the storm report issued by police officers in Barry suggesting that I had mental health issues, I took action to prove the claim false.
On the 2nd January 2019, I visited my doctor in Ammanford and explained what had happened.
He wrote me a letter stating that I was not receiving any treatment for any mental health issues.
The doctor that I saw was Mr. D. Richards at Brynteg surgery in Ammanford.
Despite this documented proof, the police are still promoting this untrue narrative.
The police could have contacted my doctor, which would have been a sensible way forward.
Extract from an email dated 5th January 2026:
On the 30th August 2018, I attended a voluntary interview at Ammanford police station, with my solicitor present.
There was no mention of mental health issues then.
The Police and Criminal Investigations Act 1984, code C, paragraph 11.17 and annexe E mandate that if a suspect is "mentally vulnerable" or "mentally disordered", an appropriate adult must be called and present for the interview, before the interview can proceed.
No appropriate adult was present, and the reason was that I am fortunate enough not to have any mental health issues.
Police interview extract
Questions that need to be asked:
Given the seriousness of my allegations that were backed with audio recordings, why was this matter not taken seriously?
If I did have mental health issues, how would that account for the disturbing noises recorded at the property, by myself and nine others?
Given the fact that I was only one of ten people who recorded noises at that property, why did the police choose not to speak to any of the others?
This man is one of the people who made recordings at the property. He is willing to speak to the police.
College of Policing APP (Mental Health): Mental ill health does not equate to unreliability, officers must not make assumptions that discriminate against victims or witnesses.
Equality Act 2010 (section 15): Treating someone unfavourably because of something arising in consequence of disability is discrimination, unless objectively justified.
YJCEA 1999: Mental health conditions qualify a person as a "vulnerable witness" entitled to special measures, not exclusion from the justice system.
European Convention on Human Rights
B v DPP 2009
Dismissing evidence based on mental health assumptions may violate rights to fair treatment.
Recent cases that held the police to account:
Lancashire Constabulary V L Darby 2024
Naiomi Hunte and Fiona Holm Inquest 2024