A Norfolk police constable who was involved in a WhatsApp group where "grossly offensive" content was shared has been sacked.

Pc Daniel Comfort is among the six officers who have lost their jobs following a disciplinary hearing.

Following an investigation by the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC), the six officers from three forces were found to have committed gross misconduct and have been sacked, or told they would have lost their jobs if they had not quit already. 

The serving officers who have been dismissed are Pc Gary Bailey, of the Metropolitan Police Service (MPS), and Civil Nuclear Constabulary (CNC) Pc Matthew Forster. 

The former officers given dismissal notices are Pcs Joel Borders, Jonathon Cobban and William Neville, of MPS, and Norfolk Constabulary's Pc Daniel Comfort. 

All of them apart from Pc Forster, who is subject to different regulations, will be added to the College of Policing barred list preventing them from future employment with the police service. 

They were all found to have breached police standards of professional behaviour for discreditable conduct; authority, respect and courtesy; challenging and reporting improper conduct; and equality and diversity. 

An IOPC spokesman said: "We analysed more than 6,000 messages which included racist and homophobic comments, and derogatory remarks aimed at domestic abuse victims, people with disabilities, and women.

"Examples included comments about starving African children eating flies; references to 'filthy Feltham' in the context of the area’s diversity, 'grooming' of young foreign girls by buying them prawn balls, and the tasering of children and animals; use of offensive terms such as 'mong' and 'pikey', and the comment 'they only have to say yes once' in a clear reference to rape and/or sexual assault.

"A remark about 'dodgy' showers at Auschwitz prompted the response 'very popular tho. I heard people were queuing up to go in them'."

IOPC regional director Sal Naseem said: "The views expressed by these officers do not belong in a civilised society and as we have said before, social media cannot be a hiding place for them whether on a public platform or as part of a private group.

"Behaviour of this kind undermines public confidence in policing and the dismissal rulings send out a strong message that it will not be tolerated."

Cobban was found guilty of three counts of sending grossly offensive messages on a public communications network, while Borders was convicted of five charges after a Westminster Magistrates’ Court trial.

They were both sentenced in November to three months imprisonment but were bailed pending an appeal.