How Elon Musk seized on baseless memo claim to fuel wave of misinformation
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Elon Muskās online attacks on former Labour Prime Minister Gordon Brown over grooming gangs draw on a baseless claim about a Home Office memo supposedly issued 17 years ago, research by BBC Verify has established.
A wave of social media posts ā including some amplified by Mr Musk ā allege that a 2008 Home Office document advised police not to intervene in child grooming cases because victims had āmade an informed choice about their sexual behaviourā.
But BBC Verify has carried out extensive searches of Home Office circulars issued across that period and found no evidence that any document containing this advice exists.
Brown ā who was prime minister in 2008 ā has called the allegations āa complete fabricationā and the Home Office says there āhas never been any truthā to them.
āInformed choiceā
Social media posts referencing a memo and using either the phrase āinformed choiceā or a variation like ālifestyle choiceā have circulated for several years with some gaining traction.
But that intensified dramatically since the start of the year, with posts repeating the claim generating tens of millions of views in the past week after Mr Musk amplified several of them on his social media platform, X.
In one post, which has received over 25 million views, Mr Musk alleged that āGordon Brown sold those little girls for votesā while reposting another user, June Slater, using words that were apparently a variation of the memo claim.
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The original unfounded claim about a Home Office circular to police seems to stem from an interview Nazir Afzal ā the former Crown Prosecution Service chief prosecutor for north-west England ā gave to the BBC on 19 October 2018. He now admits that he had not seen any such circular himself, despite apparently stating its existence as fact.
Speaking to BBC Radio 4ās PM programme, he told presenter Carolyn Quinn at the time:
āYou may not know this, but back in 2008 the Home Office sent a circular to all police forces in the country saying āas far as these young girls who are being exploited in their towns and cities we believe they have made an informed choice about their sexual behaviour and therefore itās not for you police officers to get involved inā.
Although the programme is no longer available to listen to on the BBCās website, a version has been uploaded to YouTube. BBC Verify has also accessed the programme through the BBCās in-house archives to confirm the audio is genuine.
The first post referencing Mr Afzalās claim appears to have been made one month after his interview, BBC Verify has found. But the first post to gain considerable traction was in July 2019.
Since then posts with versions of the claim have circulated occasionally on X and other platforms, with some posts from larger accounts in 2024 getting more attention, before intensifying massively in recent days.
Misinterpreted instructions
Speaking to BBC Verify, Mr Afzal clarified his position admitting that he has never seen any circular with the form of words that he used in his 2018 interview.
Instead he now says he was referring to police officers who had told him some officers had misinterpreted instructions in a circular sent by the Home Office.
Mr Afzal pointed us to Home Office circular 017/2008 which is about the policeās powers under the 1989 Childrenās Act.
However, the words āinformed choiceā do not appear anywhere in the text, nor is the circular about child grooming gangs.
It does contain, however, a section on how to judge significant harm to a child. āIt is important always to take account of the childās reactions, and his or her perceptions, according to the childās age and understanding,ā it reads.
It seems difficult to understand how any police officer could misconstrue this section in the way Mr Afzal described in his 2018 interview
He told BBC Verify he was āparaphrasing what I thought that meant to themā, when he gave his Radio 4 interview.
Asked how officers could have interpreted circular 17/2008 in this way, Mr Afzal said:
āYouāre right, it doesnāt stack up. It doesnāt give an excuse or explanation, but I canāt give you any other circular.ā
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BBC Verify also asked Mr Afzal if he could put us in touch with any of the officers that may have misinterpreted the circular in way he described, but he was unable to do this.
Mr Afzalās claim was not a one off. One year before his 2018 interview, Mr Afzal wrote an article for the International Business Times where he also stated the claim as fact:
āThe term āchild prostituteā was used extensively to describe them and it should be noted both that the Home Office in a circular to police in 2008 used that term and spoke of girls making an āinformed choiceā to engage in this behaviour. Parliament only finally removed the term from all laws a couple of years ago.ā
Despite interest in the claim going back several years we have been unable to identify any other individual who is able to provide evidence of any circular to this effect.
Home Office memos contain no reference to term
The purpose of the circulars ā or memos ā is to provide police forces with guidance, policy updates and administrative instructions.
The Home Office says all memos and circulars to police forces are published online in the National Archives. They are also kept in the library of the College of Policing website.
BBC Verify searched all the circulars for 2008 and could find no reference to āinformed choiceā or āchild prostituteā or any phrase similar to the one cited in the social media posts.
Of the 32 circulars listed on the National Archives website for 2008, only one ā 017/2008 ā falls under the category āchild abuseā. We have also searched circulars for 2007, 2009 and 2010 and found no references to āinformed choiceā. We also searched for other phrases in Mr Afzalās original statements and variations from later social media posts ā for example āget involvedā, āsexual behaviourā and ālifestyle choiceā ā and found no occurrences.
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There have been several Freedom of Information requests regarding a supposed memo or circular with the āinformed choiceā phrase, but no police force has found any trace of such a communication.
We were able to find a circular from 2009 that links to a webpage that further links to a document on child sexual exploitation released by the Department for Children, Schools and Families that mentions the phrase āinformed choiceā. It is not an instruction to police and the context it appears in is emphasising situations where local agencies might need to report sexual activity in order to protect children āunable to make an informed choiceā.
There were circulars in 2007 and 2010 that contained the phrase āchild prostituteā. The first was in connection with some technical changes to offences like ācontrolling a child prostituteā. The second again dealt with technical changes but this circular on prostitution also said: āIn short, any steps taken, whether relating to criminal proceedings or not, should be designed to protect the child from continuing sexual exploitation and abuse.ā
The term āchild prostituteā was taken out of the law in 2015 as it could imply that children could consent to abuse.
Circulars and memos are received by senior individuals in each police force, former Chief Constable of Norfolk Constabulary Simon Bailey told BBC Verify.
āThey wouldāve gone to crime registrars and the head of the crime and they wouldāve cascaded the guidance,ā he said.
If there was any doubt about how to interpret the guidance a force would have gone back to the Home Office to seek clarity, Mr Bailey added.
āAnd even going back 17 years, I cannot believe the Home Office wouldāve sent out a circular of that nature.ā
āNever been any truthā
In a statement to BBC Verify, the Home Office said it had never instructed police not to go after grooming gangs:
āThere has never been any truth in the existence of a Home Office circular telling police forces that grooming gangs should not be prosecuted, or that their victims were making a choice, and it is now clear that the specific circular which was being referred to does absolutely no such thing.ā
Jacqui Smith ā now Baroness Smith ā was the Labour Home Secretary in 2008. She told BBC Verify: āIt is categorically wrong that the Home Office or I instructed police forces not to prosecute grooming gangs or not to protect young girls.ā
A spokesperson for Gordon Brown said: āThere is no basis for such allegations at all. They are a complete fabrication. There is no foundation whatsoever for alleging that Mr Brown sent, approved or was in anyway involved with issuing a circular or statement to the police because it did not happen.ā
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āGot lost in translationā
BBC Verify has attempted to speak to those who repeated the claim on X and had their posts amplified by Mr Musk.
In one post, Mr Musk alleged that āGordon Brown committed an unforgivable crime against the British peopleā and shared a video clip from campaigner Maggie Oliver appearing on GB News.
In the clip, Ms Oliver alleged: āGordon Brown sent out a circular to all the police forces in the UK saying ādo not prosecute these rape gangs, these children are making a lifestyle choiceā.ā
Ms Oliver said that she based her claim on what Mr Afzal said:
āMy knowledge of this comes from what Nazir Afzal said publicly in 2018 in his BBC interview.ā
BBC Verify also reached out to June Slater, whose post was also amplified by Mr Musk. She told us she had not seen the memo, but her claim was also based on what Mr Afzal and Ms Oliver had previously said:
āI thought he was a reliable source as is Maggie Oliver.ā
Asked if he regretted the misinformation that had stemmed from his statements, Mr Afzal told BBC Verify:
āI regret that people have interpreted what I interpreted and that itās sort of got lost in translation.ā
BBC Verify also contacted the Police Federation, the National Police Chiefsā Council (NPCC) and the College of Policing about the alleged circular.
The NPCC referred us to the Home Officeās statement while the College of Policing said it was not aware of any circular.
āAllegations ignoredā
While there is no evidence for the existence of the circular, the performance of the police and other institutions in protecting victims and investigating abuse has been heavily criticised during this period.
Prof Alexis Jay ā who carried out the independent inquiry into child abuse ā said some victims would never recover from their experiences.
āWe heard time and time again how allegations of abuse were ignored, victims were blamed and institutions prioritised their reputations over the protection of children.ā
Additional reporting by Ned Davies and Lucy Gilder.
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