The Home Office has published the final report and other
documents relating to Sir Tom Winsor’s review into the
circumstances surrounding the departure of Commissioner Dame
Cressida Dick.
Documents
Special commission on the
resignation of the Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis:
final report
PDF, 1.21
MB, 116 pages
HTML
Commissioner Accountability
Review - terms of reference
The Mayor of London, , said: “Londoners
will be able to see that this review is clearly biased and
ignores the facts.
“On the former Commissioner’s watch, trust in the police fell to
record lows following a litany of terrible scandals. What
happened was simple – I lost confidence in the former
Commissioner’s ability to make the changes needed and she then
chose to stand aside.
“Londoners elected me to hold the Met Commissioner to account and
that’s exactly what I have done. I make absolutely no apology for
demanding better for London and for putting the interests of the
city I love first. I will continue working with the new
Commissioner to reduce crime and to rebuild trust and confidence
in the police.”
Notes to editors:
- The Commissioner decided to step aside ahead of any statutory
process being commenced under the PRSA 2011.The Commissioner
resigning rather than facing the process for removal from her
post is what happened when then Mayor lost confidence in
Commissioner Ian Blair.
- The Mayor’s role under section 3 of the Police Reform and
Social Responsibility Act 2011 requires him to ensure that the
Met is both ‘efficient and effective’ and to hold the
Commissioner to account for the exercise of her functions and the
exercise of the functions of persons under her direction and
control.
- Following a series of devastating scandals including: the
murder of Sarah Everard by a serving police officer; the HMICFRS
inspection of the MPS’s counter-corruption arrangements and other
matters related to the Daniel Morgan Independent Panel; and the
overt racism, sexism, misogyny, homophobia and discrimination
exposed at Charing Cross Police Station public trust in the Met
Police plummeted to the lowest level on record in the first three
months of 2022. Significant issues of discrimination,
disproportionality performance and standards were also regularly
flagged to MOPAC. It was against this backdrop that the Mayor
lost confidence in the ability of the former Met Commissioner to
lead the deep-rooted change needed.