Key takeaways
- A freelance police station representative attends on the instructing firm’s instructions and reports back clearly — distinct from duty solicitor rota cover.
- Strong briefing, custody discipline, and structured notes drive repeat instructions and safer files.
- PoliceStationRepUK is a directory for discovery; it does not replace supervision, insurers, or retainers.
Questions this article answers
- What does a freelance police station representative actually do in custody?
- How does freelance cover differ from the duty solicitor route?
- What should firms and reps prioritise before, during, and after attendance?
Role in one sentence
A freelance police station representative is an accredited professional who attends a police station (or other investigative interview under caution) on behalf of an instructing firm, to support the client and feed clear information back to the lawyers running the file.
Before attendance
Good work starts before anyone reaches the custody suite. In practice, representatives review whatever the firm can provide: offence type, known allegations, bail status, vulnerability flags, and any prior correspondence with the police. They confirm logistics — station, custody suite, estimated arrival window — and how the firm wants updates (call, secure email, messaging policy).
If you are a firm, the quality of this handover directly affects outcomes. The briefing and disclosure article sets out what to send. If you are a rep, pushing politely for missing basics (offence summary, client details, risk notes) is not awkwardness; it is professional risk management.
At the police station
Once booked in, the representative’s work usually spans several parallel tracks:
- Private consultation with the client — taking a careful account, explaining the process in plain language, and identifying anything that affects how the interview should be approached.
- Liaison with the investigating officer — obtaining disclosure that is available at that stage, clarifying what the interview will cover, and understanding practical points (digital material, identification procedures, and similar).
- PACE and custody awareness — keeping an eye on welfare, appropriate adults, interpreters, and delays that might affect whether the interview should proceed or be re-timed.
- Supporting the interview strategy — aligned with the instructing firm’s approach. That might include no-comment advice, a prepared statement route, or answering questions — always within the boundaries of the representative’s accreditation and the firm’s instructions.
Nothing in this list replaces the judgment of the duty solicitor or solicitor on the record where they are involved. Many files use both: a freelance rep for attendance and a solicitor for ongoing case ownership.
After attendance
Firms rarely benefit from a verbal “it went fine” without structure. Strong representatives produce dated, factual attendance notes: what disclosure was seen, what was said at a high level (without unsafe speculation), bail or interview outcome, next dates, and any follow-up the firm must do immediately.
That is where handover discipline earns repeat instructions. It also protects the client when timelines matter — for example if the police propose a charging decision or a re-interview.
How PoliceStationRepUK fits in
PoliceStationRepUK helps firms find accredited representatives and helps reps present clear coverage areas and contact routes in one directory. It does not replace your professional retainer, supervision, or insurer’s requirements — but it does reduce friction when you need someone reliable at short notice. Browse the directory or use advanced search when you need cover.
Commercial reality for both sides
For firms, freelance cover is often about capacity: out-of-hours rotas, geographic gaps, or conflict situations where another panel member must attend. For reps, the work is competitive; reliability, communication, and note quality are how you stay on the speed-dial list. If you want to grow that pipeline, read how reps win repeat instructions.
General information for legal professionals in England and Wales — not legal advice. If you are unsure about a specific case, take advice from your firm’s supervisors and insurers.
