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HomeUK NewsLeicestershire officer committed gross misconduct over mushroom foraging report

Leicestershire officer committed gross misconduct over mushroom foraging report


Will JeffordEast Midlands

Louise Gather Mrs Gather with bright orange hair holding a large white mushroomLouise Gather

Louise Gather said she had not foraged any mushrooms on the day that she was reported

A police officer involved in a controversy sparked by efforts to sanction a woman for mushroom foraging has been found to have committed gross misconduct.

In November 2024, Louise Gather travelled from her home in Derby to Bradgate Park, Leicestershire, in search of magpie inkcaps – a rare kind of fungus.

The 39-year-old told the BBC she did not pick any mushrooms, but despite this, former PC Christopher Vickers later attended her property and issued a community resolution order.

However, the misconduct panel found he had issued the paperwork to her husband and then lied when updating an official police database – claiming to have spoken directly to Mrs Gather.

Louise Gather Magpie inkcaps a back mushroom with white spots and white stems Louise Gather

Mrs Gather had travelled to Bradgate Park in search of magpie inkcaps – a rare kind of fungus

The misconduct panel said he would have been sacked over the incident if he had not already left the force.

It was found Mr Vickers’s actions had been dishonest, deliberate, and had the potential to damage police confidence.

A report issued by Leicestershire Police following the hearing said the case could have caused Mrs Gather “significant” harm.

“She ultimately could have lost her job had the CR [community resolution] remained on her enhanced DBS checks,” the report added.

Community resolution orders are an informal agreement between a complainant and an alleged offender.

For one to be valid, the alleged offender should be spoken to directly, accept responsibility and sign the relevant paperwork.

The report concluded Mr Vickers did not follow this policy when issuing the resolution.

Mrs Gather previously said the order had included agreeing not to take items from the park in the future, and looking into Bradgate Park’s status as a designated site of special scientific interest (SSSI).

Picking mushrooms is illegal in sites of special scientific interest, which are protected areas of land or water.

At the time of the incident, Mrs Gather had said she felt the actions of Leicestershire Police had been “a bit excessive” – although this was not assessed by the misconduct panel.

The hearing, which took place on 29 October 2025, was told the force received a call from Bradgate Park Trust about a woman who was picking mushrooms at their park in Leicester on 8 November 2024.

On 25 November, Mr Vickers went to her home address and advised her husband that he would issue a community resolution, an informal agreement between a complainant and an alleged offender.

Her husband signed the relevant paperwork before the officer left.

PA Media Two male deer with large antlers on a grassy areaPA Media

Bradgate Park is protected as a site of special scientific interest (SSSI)

Following the visit, Mr Vickers put an entry on a police system stating that he had spoken to Mrs Gather, that she had admitted to the offence and that she had received the community resolution.

In response to the allegation, the former officer accepted his actions, but said he was intending to call Mrs Gather but had forgotten.

Concluding the report, the misconduct committee said Mr Vickers knew his actions did not align with police policy and were done “for his own convenience” and to avoid what he “perceived to be unnecessary work”.

Following the misconduct hearing, Mrs Gather told the BBC: “I did not personally instigate or pursue a complaint against the officer.

“The professional standards department asked for my version of events after the story was picked up by the press, when they realised that the officer had recorded a crime on my record without evidence or ever speaking to me.

“Leicestershire Police had already apologised, and the charge was removed from my record.

“I had no idea that records had been falsified or that the officer’s actions constituted gross misconduct.”



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