Finch cleared of conduct breach over child rape case comments
By Andy Mitchell - Local Democracy Reporter 26th Jun 2026
Leader George Finch is understood to have had his code of conduct breach quashed by a Warwickshire County Council standards panel.
An external investigation, led by private solicitor Claire Ward of Birmingham-based law firm Anthony Collins, found that Cllr Finch had fallen foul of the county council's code of conduct by publicising comments that "could have jeopardised" a child rape case.
The judgement came as a result of at least eight complaints related to the content of Cllr Finch's letter to the Home Office, Warwickshire Police and county council chief executive Monica Fogarty that he published across social media platforms on August 3, 2025. Carrying the official crest of Warwickshire County Council, it still remains live on his X and Facebook profiles.
Cllr Finch's challenge to that verdict resulted in hearing in front of a panel of three of his peers – Cllr John Waine (Reform UK, Bulkington & Whitestone), Cllr Yousef Dahmash (Con, Hillmorton) and Cllr Richard Dickson (Lib Dem, Kenilworth St John's) – at Shire Hall on Wednesday (June 24) and the Local Democracy Reporting Service understands that he was cleared of any wrongdoing.
Warwickshire County Council has yet to confirm the outcome or state whether it will.
Cllr Finch is facing a second external investigation having taken responsibility for creating and posting social media posts that defamed a political rival, while Warwickshire Pride has submitted a separate complaint about his statement that Warwickshire libraries "have been promoting contested gender ideology".
This hearing related to Ms Ward's finding that Cllr Finch had published information that he accepted "had been told confidentially to him in his capacity as leader" about a child rape case that happened in Nuneaton.
Her ruling detailed that while he "did attempt to obtain permission" from Ms Fogarty and then-chief constable of Warwickshire Police Alex Franklin-Smith, "this did not amount to formal compliance".
"Publicly releasing such details could have jeopardised the ongoing prosecution, caused undue distress to the victim and undermined community cohesion," wrote Ms Ward.
"While transparency remains vital for public confidence, in this instance a more measured and confidential approach was required."
Ms Ward's report was then considered by the council's most senior legal official, monitoring officer Sarah Duxbury. Any changes or recommendations made by her ahead of the hearing are not yet known.
The panel's first job was to decide whether the hearing should take place behind closed doors, voting two-one in favour of Cllr Finch's argument that it should not be held in public.
The leader insisted he would "prefer this meeting to be in the public domain" but said that items he planned to raise could cause "reputational damage or harm to the council or people within the panel".
The panel deliberated that element privately for approximately 20 minutes without Cllr Finch in the room.
Altogether, the public and private parts of the whole hearing are known to have taken more than three-and-a-half hours to get through. It initially convened at 2pm with Cllr Finch seen leaving Shire Hall just after 6pm when he declined to field questions.
Cllr Finch was also approached in light of the information that he had been cleared but was unavailable. Cllr Waine and Cllr Dahmash were also unavailable, while Cllr Dickson said it would not be appropriate for him to comment prior to the council either publishing its verdict or confirming that it does not intend to.
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