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Christian Officer Barred From Policing For Expressing Concerns Over Radical Islam, Wins Settlement

admin June 23, 2026

A Christian police officer in the UK has reached a settlement with a county police force who suspended him after he expressed concerns over radical Islam. 

Luke Salmons, who formerly worked as a community support officer for the North Yorkshire Police, sat in several diversity, equality and inclusion training sessions, in which race, religion and culture were discussed. External trainers and police personnel led the sessions, in which open discussion and questions on challenging topics were encouraged. 

During one session centered heavily on Islam, the trainers began walking up and down the aisles, chanting, “Islam is a religion of peace,” Salmons said.

Salmons told Fox News Digital that the session “kind of stopped being a training course and became more of something like indoctrination really.”

During another session, Salmons was instructed by a police sergeant who was Muslim. Salmons asked for the sergeant’s opinions on the war in Gaza, and on Islamist terrorism and Hamas as well as his thoughts on jihadism. According to Salmons, the discussion was respectful yet robust. The sergeant invited Salmons to discuss his questions further over coffee.

Two days later, Salmons was suspended. In a meeting, an inspector told him “I don’t like your beliefs” and stated that she did not want him on the team, Salmons said.

“She took me in a room, deliberately said to me, ‘I don’t like your beliefs,’ which indicates to me that she was meaning my Christian beliefs, which is discrimination towards me and my faith, which in itself is gross misconduct,” Salmons said.

The North Yorkshire Police then investigated his conduct, during which Salmons was isolated from his colleagues. The investigation continued for about eight months until April 2025, when Salmons resigned. 

After his resignation, Salmons was found to have committed gross misconduct by a disciplinary panel. The panel concluded that his conduct was discreditable and his “political” and “religious” beliefs that he expressed did not align with the police force’s policies. 

Salmons was effectively barred from policing again, as his name was placed on the Police Barred List.

“I resigned not because I had done anything wrong, but because the silence, the delay and the pressure became unbearable for my wife and children,” Salmons said in a press release published by the Christian Legal Center (CLC), the firm representing him in his case. 

“I believed I was on safe ground when the training sessions invited open discussion,” Salmons continued. “I quickly discovered that questioning Islam is now treated as wrong-think within North Yorkshire Police. I felt pushed out.”

Andrea Williams, CLC chief executive, warned that the police force’s backlash was not about misconduct. 

“Luke was explicitly invited to speak openly in what was presented as a safe space, only to be suspended, investigated, and driven out for doing exactly that,” Williams said. “This was not about misconduct; it was about control and driving out any opposing beliefs.”

Salmons appealed the gross misconduct claim, highlighting the “inconsistencies in witness evidence, reliance on hearsay, and the failure to distinguish between respectfully asking questions and expressing extremist views,” a CLC press release reported. 

A chief constable overturned the decision after reviewing the appeal. The constable in the decision, concluded that Salmons’ behavior was not gross misconduct. His name was taken from the barred list and the misconduct finding was overturned. 

“You have on a number of occasions engaged in discussions, or provided feedback, primarily in training settings which have at times made people feel uncomfortable and unsettled,” the chief constable said. “I do not, however, find that this represents a breach amounting to gross misconduct of any of the Police Staff Standards of Professional Behavior.”

Supported by the CLC, Salmons filed suit against North Yorkshire Police after the appeal, claiming that he faced religious discrimination, harassment and violations of freedom of speech and religion.

On June 5, CLC announced that they had reached a confidential settlement. Although the settlement favored Salmons, Salmons noted that the police force never issued an apology and had not reinstated him to his former position

Salmons said that the process “devastated” him and his family as they lived in “total uncertainty” for months while his reputation was being “shredded in secret.” 

“The most frightening moment was being told I was effectively banned from policing for life,” Slamons said. “I have always served the public with integrity, and to be told that asking honest questions made me unfit to be an officer was crushing.”

Williams said the “rise and influence of Islam in our institutions is rapid and alarming.”

“Luke’s case should concern everyone,” Williams said. “It exposes how ‘inclusivity’ training within the police has, in practice, become a vehicle for enforcing a narrow ideological orthodoxy, where only approved views are permitted and lawful questioning is punished.”

Williams continued, saying that the “message this sends is chilling: that Islam and prevailing secular orthodoxy is now treated as beyond question, while Christians and others are subjected to disproportionate scrutiny and sanction simply for asking reasonable questions during training.”


Decision Magazine, founded by Billy Graham in 1960, works through its website and monthly magazine to communicate the Gospel, as well as inform and challenge readers about key cultural and Biblical issues. Decision is also a Contributing Publisher to Harbinger’s Daily.

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