Officer went to taproom on duty and got ‘so drunk he couldn't walk straight’

A police officer who went to a taproom while on duty was “so intoxicated that he could not walk straight”, a panel for professional standards has been told.

Former detective constable Sean Brierley went to Gravity Well Taproom on the evening of July 2, 2025. He had been told a suspect at Leyton police station was not yet available to be interviewed.

In video footage from the east London bar, the Metropolitan Police officer can be seen ordering three glasses of white wine over two hours, according to the panel ruling.

CCTV showed Mr Brierley “unsteady on his feet”, “staggering” and “off balance” when he returned to the police station later that evening, the panel heard on February 12. A custody sergeant gave evidence that Mr Brierley had “smelt drunk” and other staff reported his speech had been “slurred”, the ruling said.

Summarising her findings, panel chair Commander Katie Lilburn wrote: “The fact that the former officer was so intoxicated that he could not walk straight meant that he was unfit to deal with a prisoner in custody, which was the purpose of him being at the police station.”

Want to see more of the stories you love from the Irish Mirror? Making us your preferred source on Google means you’ll get more of our exclusives... To add Irish Mirror as a preferred source, simply click here.

The panel heard that Mr Brierley’s colleagues had been so concerned about his state that they had arranged a welfare check at his home later that night.

Officers who attended his address at about 12.20am “found him lying in his bed in a pair of boxer shorts, with the duvet pulled off him” and said he “looked very disoriented and was staring at the ceiling in a glazed manner,” the ruling said.

Mr Brierley told the officers he was okay but did not ask why they were there or make any attempts to cover his body or sit up in bed, the panel heard.

Commander Lilburn added: “I found that the former officer’s actions were intentional, deliberate, and planned. He chose to go to the Taproom and consume alcohol when he was on duty.

“Being intoxicated whilst on duty in a police station and in a custody suite, with the attendant risks, is especially dangerous,” the commander said.

The panel concluded Mr Brierley’s actions amounted to gross misconduct and he would have been dismissed had he not left the force.

AI Article