Serving Met officer Hussain Chehab admits to child sexual offenses

A Metropolitan Police officer stands watching ahead of a protest march against the Islamic revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) in central London, on January 21, 2023. (Photo by Justin TALLIS / AFP) (Photo by JUSTIN TALLIS/AFP via Getty Images)

PC Hussain Chehab, 22, worked as a Safer Schools officer while committing some offenses he admitted to (Picture: AFP via Getty Images)

A serving Met officer is facing jail after pleading guilty to child sexual offenses – including four counts of sexual activity with a teenager.

PC Hussain Chehab, 22, was arrested when the family of a 16-year-old told police she had ‘been in a relationship’ with him, which they believed began in 2019 when she was 15.

He joined the Met in March 2020 and was attached to the North Area Command Unit.

The force says a review of information provided prior to him joining has been carried out and ‘nothing was found that could have indicated his offending’.

A number of indecent images were found on Chehab’s devices after he was taken into custody on August 24, 2021.

Some of the image offenses were committed when he worked as a Safer Schools officer, attached to a secondary school in Enfield from May 2021.

The cop had been placed on restricted duties in a non-public-facing role following his initial arrest, but was suspended from duty when he was further arrested on 28 October.

Messages between Chehab and a 14-year-old girl engaging in sexual communication were later discovered and she provided evidence that they had entered into a sexual relationship in 2019 when she was just 14.

Following an investigation by Specialist Crime detectives, he was charged in September 2022.

He admitted child sexual offenses at Wood Green Crown Court (Picture: REX/Shutterstock)

On Tuesday, Chehab pleaded guilty at Wood Green Crown Court to four counts of sexual activity with a girl aged 13-15 between 1 March 2019 and September 2019.

He also admitted three counts of making indecent photographs of a child and one count of engaging in sexual communication with a child.

No verdict was recorded in a further four counts of making indecent photographs of a child and the judge ordered they be left to lie on file.

Chehab has been released on bail for sentencing at the same court on Friday, 17 March.

Meanwhile, an accelerated misconduct process ‘has been initiated and will be held as quickly as possible’.

The guilty plea comes as the Met struggles to retain public confidence – with officer David Carrick recently found to be one of the worst sex offenders in modern history.

The force has named Chehab’s crimes ‘sickening’ and says their thoughts ‘are with the young girls who he exploited and took advantage of for his own sexual gratification’.

Detective Chief Superintendent Caroline Haines, lead for policing in Enfield where PC Chehab served, has admitted the news may damage faith in the Met further.

But she said officers ‘continue to ruthlessly target those who corrupt our identity’.

‘Once the initial allegations against PC Chehab were made, he was immediately removed from his role while the investigation took place,’ she said.

‘We have worked closely with the school concerned, and Enfield local authority, to ensure that there were no further unreported safeguarding incidents or missed opportunities.

‘A review of the information provided to the Met prior to him joining as a police officer was carried out and nothing was found that could have indicated his offending.

‘Prior to commencing his role as a Safer Schools Officer he was also subject to further Child and Vulnerable Group Supervision vetting, in line with the current vetting standards for all those who work with children and young persons.

‘This news will of course cause considerable damage and concern, not only to the local community, but Londoners as a whole, who place their trust in police officers to go into our schools alongside their children every day and keep them safe.

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‘While no evidence has been found linking any of Chehab’s offending to his role, we are engaging with our local schools, community forums and independent advisory groups to reassure them following the damage his actions will have caused.’

Detective Chief Superintendent Haines added: ‘We have made it clear there is no place for the likes of PC Chehab in the Met and will take quick and immediate action to arrest and prosecute anyone who commits such abhorrent criminal acts, and will work to quickly remove them from the organization.’

Anyone with any information about a police officer or member of staff who works for the Met and is corrupt, abusing their position and power, can call the Anti-Corruption and Abuse Hotline on 0800 085 0000.

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

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