A racist police sergeant who regularly called a junior officer a c**t “deliberately ignored” his pleas to respond to a deadly knife attack just 700m away, a police misconduct hearing has found.

Kirsten Treasure “chose not to react” despite PC Nathan Munday repeatedly warning her the stabbing was taking place just minutes away from Addington police station, the panel ruled.

Father-of-three Andrew Else died after being stabbed more than 200 times by Ephraim Norman during a frenzied attack outside John Ruskin College in Selson Park Road on the night of April 24, 2014.

The disgraced sergeant was today dismissed without notice from the Metropolitan Police force after the three-person panel found her guilty of gross misconduct in her failure to respond to the stabbing.

RELATED:  'Racist' police sergeant Kirsten Treasure ignored murder of Andrew Else 700m away 'because she didn't know where it was'

She was also found guilty of using “shockingly offensive” language about colleagues and members of the public - including referring to the Olympic athlete Mo Farah as a "coon" while policing the London Marathon.

Summing up the case against Sgt Treasure, commander Julian Bennett said: “We found she deliberately ignored what PC Munday said and chose not to leave as promptly as she should have done.

“She did hear what PC Munday said to her and chose not to react it.”

RELATED: 'Racist' police sergeant Kirsten Treasure, accused of ignoring murder of Andrew Else, 'bragged about being untouchable'

Delivering the panel’s final verdict, which came after 8pm this evening following hours of delay for deliberations, the commander said: “No other outcome could meet the seriousness of the findings in this case. Therefore Sgt Treasure is dismissed from the Metropolitan Police service without notice.”

During the two-week hearing, which heard evidence from 11 former members of her team, Treasure was found to have breached multiple police professional standards, although she was not found guilty of all of the allegations.

In a submission made before the panel delivered its verdict, Sgt Treasure’s lawyer Ben Summers asked the panel to consider a number of favourable character references of his client, including one from Croydon borough commander Andy Tarrant.

He implored that “after 14 years of service of the kind you have read about, if the panel could find a way to retain her service to the people of London, we would invite the panel to do that”.

RELATED: 'Racist' police sergeant ignored calls about murder just 700 metres away because she was 'focussed on paperwork'

Mr Summers added: “In relation that allegation [Mr Else’s murder] she maintains she did not hear Nathan Munday and had she done so she would have deployed immediately.”

But the panel did not agree, although it found that “there was nothing to suggest that an immediate response would have resulted in the victim’s life being saved”.

Commander Bennett added: “We are acutely aware of the tragedy of Andrew Else’s murder, nothing that will arise from this hearing will lessen [his widow Clare’s] sense of loss."

For a full report of Sgt Treasure’s misconduct hearing visit croydonguardian.co.uk next week.