The police watchdog for England and Wales is overwhelmed, woefully under-equipped and failing to get to the truth of allegations, MPs have said.
The Independent Police Complaints Commission needs more resources and powers, the Home Affairs Select Committee report said.
IPCC chairwoman Dame Anne Owers welcomed the report, saying the body was struggling to meet expectations.
One in four officers faced complaints between 2011 and 2012.
The committee's chairman, Keith Vaz, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme that about 30,000 officers had faced complaints, which were mostly trivial and dealt with at a local level.
"What we would like to see is the IPCC concentrate on the really serious issues. When they have dealt with serious corruption cases, 45% of the corruption cases they have investigated have ended up with the Crown Prosecution Service," he said.
'Not yet capable'In a scathing report, MPs said the IPCC was overloaded with appeals. Serious police corruption cases were being under-investigated while resources went on less serious complaints, the report said.
"Police officers are warranted with powers that can strip people of their liberty, their money and even their lives and it is vital that the public have confidence that those powers are not abused," said the MPs.
"We conclude that the Independent Police Complaints Commission is not yet capable of delivering the kind of powerful, objective scrutiny that is needed to inspire that confidence."
MPs said the IPCC had too many former officers among its investigators and delegated too many complaints to the forces to investigate themselves, only to overturn the police's conclusions in a third of appeals.
The body lacked specialists capable of analysing crime scenes in the critical hours after an incident involving the police, they said.
"Compared with the might of the 43 police forces in England and Wales, the IPCC is woefully under-equipped and hamstrung in achieving its original objectives," said the MPs, adding that it was smaller than Scotland Yard's own internal investigations team.
The MPs say the government should provide ring-fenced funding for investigations affecting police integrity, such as the Andrew Mitchell Downing Street "plebgate" affair.
Mr Vaz said the IPCC needed to be able able to interview officers under caution.
"They need to be able to send their decisions back to local police forces and these decisions need to be binding," he said.
"They need to review on an annual basis the appeals that have come to them so they know that what they say is being put into effect. But more than that they need to take on more cases and deal with them from the start."
Hillsborough inquiryThe IPCC is currently trying to embark on its biggest ever investigation by examining allegations that police officers were involved in a cover-up of failings following the 96 deaths at the 1989 Hillsborough tragedy.
Parliament has passed legislation to give the body more powers for the massive inquiry and ministers are guaranteeing funding for extra investigators currently being recruited.
Dame Anne said: "This report recognises that we do not yet have the resources or powers to do all that the public rightly expects and needs from us.
"That is what we have been saying for a long time.
"Without that, we will continue to struggle to meet the legitimate expectations of complainants and of families who have lost someone in tragic circumstances.
"We are a demand-led organisation, and, as the committee's report shows, the demand for our services continues to grow. But all of this needs resources and powers."
A Home Office spokesman said: "Improving police professionalism and integrity are at the cornerstone of the sweeping reforms we are making to the police force, and the IPCC has a key role to play.
"We are already working to ensure the organisation has the powers and resources it needs to manage the challenges it is currently facing and we will shortly announce a package of new measures designed to further improve the public's trust in the police."
The watchdog was set up in 2004 after its predecessor was severely criticised in the report into the murder of Stephen Lawrence.
It also has powers to investigate complaints against the Serious Organised Crime Agency, Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs and the UK Border Agency.
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