Dame Cressida Dick ‘to get two more years as head of Scotland Yard’

Dame Cressida Dick to get two more years as head of Scotland Yard: Priti Patel prepares to offer contract extension to Met Police chief despite string of controversies

Priti Patel is said to be arranging the extension and Sadiq Khan is supportive of itBut it hasn’t been finalised and there are fears Dame Cressida could turn it downAny move to keep her at the helm is likely to prove controversial after blunders



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Dame Cressida Dick is expected to be offered another two years as chief of the Metropolitan Police despite being blamed for a series of blunders, reports say.

Home Secretary Priti Patel is said to be arranging the extension while London Mayor Sadiq Khan is reportedly supportive of the move.

But it has not been finalised and there are fears Dame Cressida could turn down the £230,000-a-year role.

A source told MailOnline there was ‘no alternative’ to her and senior figures want to ‘use the time to make sure other candidates are ready’.

Any move to keep her at the helm is likely to prove controversial following a series of blunders recently.

She was panned for her officers’ heavy handling of the Sarah Everard vigil following the death of the 33-year-old at the hands of former Met policeman Wayne Couzens.

Scotland Yard was also slammed for its actions over the murder of Daniel Morgan in 1987, which has remained unsolved despite at least four police investigations.

Meanwhile the murder rate among teenagers has also soared, hitting 23 already this year and on course for a record annual death toll. 

Dame Cressida Dick is expected to be offered another two years as chief of the Metropolitan Police despite being blamed for a series of blunders, reports say

Home Secretary Priti Patel (left) is said to be arranging the extension while London Mayor Sadiq Khan (right) is reportedly supportive of the move

Reacting to today’s news, a spokesman for pressure group Reclaim These Streets told MailOnline: ‘We are disappointed that there seems to not be any accountability for her failing the women of London.

‘However we aren’t surprised… Until there are real consequences for ineptitude, we stay in the same patterns that are rife with racism and misogyny.’   

Despite Dame Cressida’s various controversies, Ms Patel and Mr Khan have have decided she should stay in the role, the Evening Standard reports.

It is believed there will be a formal announcement this month if Dame Cressida accepts the offer.

Another two years would mean she will have served as commissioner for twice as long as predecessor Lord Hogan-Howe.

The controversial police chief’s five-year contract ends in April but she is understood to want an extension in the top police job.

But there have been demands for her to step down and not be given any further time in the job. The Guardian reported last month a decision was ‘imminent’. 

The Met chief has been caught up in a string of controversies including her handling of the Operation Midland scandal, her force’s woeful security operation at the Euro 2020 final and allegations of a ‘cover up’ culture at Scotland Yard.

In June, an official report branded the Met ‘institutionally corrupt’ and accused Dame Cressida of trying to thwart an inquiry into the unsolved murder of private eye Daniel Morgan. She has rejected the key findings.

Former Tory MP Harvey Proctor, who lost his home and job over the Met’s disastrous Operation Midland probe into spurious child sex abuse allegations, said last month: ‘She is a disgrace and should have resigned long ago.

‘It is time for her to go because of Operation Midland, not to be seeking any extension to her employment at the Met.’

Mr Proctor, who received £900,000 from the Met in compensation and legal costs over the fiasco, added: ‘I hold her culpable for her role in a severe waste of public funds which severely impacted a number of lives, including mine.’ 

Met assistant commissioner Neil Basu (pictured) is tipped to replace Dame Cressida when she stands down

Dame Cressida, 60, who was formally made a dame commander by Prince Charles this year, has indicated she was ‘happy’ to remain in the top job.

Speaking after the ceremony at St James’s Palace, she said: ‘I’m very focused on my job, I love my job, it’s a huge honour.’

The Mail has learned that a significant number of serving senior officers are deeply unhappy with Dame Cressida’s ‘hands off’ leadership style and her ‘head in the sand’ response to criticism of her and her inner circle. 

Dame Cressida’s apparent determination to secure a contract extension poses a potentially tricky political problem for Mr Johnson, who may not want to be seen to be ousting Scotland Yard’s first female chief. 

He was criticised in October 2008 when, in one of his first acts as London mayor, he fired gaffe-prone Met commissioner Sir Ian Blair – one of Dame Cressida’s remaining cheerleaders.

The PM dodged questions about her future in a radio interview last month.  

Met assistant commissioner Neil Basu is tipped to replace Dame Cressida when she stands down.

Cressida Dick: The scandals on her watch 

Shooting dead of Tube passenger in 2005

Cressida Dick was Gold Commander in charge of the operation which resulted in an innocent man being shot dead on July 22, 2005.

Surveillance officers searching for those responsible for the failed terror attacks the day before shot Brazilian electrician Jean Charles de Menezes after he entered Stockwell underground station.

Two years later the Met was found guilty of a series of errors around the tragedy, although Dame Cressida was exonerated.

She continued to support her officers saying they had acted in accordance with information they had at the time. Sources have described the control room where the ill-fated operation was run as ‘utterly chaotic’.

Surveillance officers searching for those responsible for the failed terror attacks the day before shot Brazilian electrician Jean Charles de Menezes

 ‘Culture of cover up’ over fantastist Nick 

Operation Midland resulted in the targeting of high-profile individuals after a fantasist falsely claimed he was the childhood victim of a paedophile ring.

Taking the preposterous claims of Carl Beech – aka ‘Nick’ – at face value, Met officers searched the homes of former Tory MP Harvey Proctor, Lord Bramall the former chief of defence staff, and Lady Brittan, widow of the former Tory home secretary Leon Brittan.

Operation Midland collapsed in March 2016. No charges or arrests were made. Beech was later convicted of fraud and perverting the course of justice and sentenced to 18 years in prison.

An inquiry by retired high court judge, Sir Richard Henriques, found more than 40 failings in the police operation.

A subsequent damning report revealed that the Met had delayed implementing most of the reforms and Dame Cressida, who had been briefly involved in the original operation as assistant commissioner, faced pressure to resign.

Sir Richard later called for a criminal investigation into five detectives and said confidence in the criminal justice system had been damaged.

Amid allegations of a Met cover-up, Home Secretary Priti Patel is under mounting pressure to instigate a series of new independent inquiries into Midland.

Dame Cressida is not out of the woods on this one. In a bombshell interview in the Mail in February, Lady Brittan threw the book at the Met over its ‘culture of cover up and flick away’ under the Commissioner, who has repeatedly defended Steve Rodhouse, the serial bungling senior officer in charge of Midland. Further developments on the Midland scandal are expected in the coming weeks.

Easy ride for eco mob 

In 2019, much of Britain was amazed as thousands of climate change protesters brought central London to a standstill.

Roads around Parliament Square, Waterloo Bridge, Oxford Circus and Marble Arch were blocked for days but the police seemed powerless to intervene. 

Dame Cressida later said that Extinction Rebellion came in larger numbers than expected and used new tactics, but admitted police should have responded quicker.

In 2019, much of Britain was amazed as thousands of climate change protesters brought central London to a standstill

Axe death corruption 

In 1987, private detective Daniel Morgan was found dead in a car park with an axe embedded in his head.

No one has ever been convicted over his killing.

Last month, the Met was described as ‘institutionally corrupt’ and Dame Cressida herself was personally censured for obstruction following an eight year independent inquiry.

She was named as one of those responsible for delaying the panel’s access to the police database. 

Last week Mr Morgan’s brother Alastair called on her to resign.

In 1987, private detective Daniel Morgan, pictured, was found dead in a car park with an axe embedded in his head

 Gun cop abducts and murders Sarah Everard 

When PC Wayne Couzens pleaded guilty last week to the murder of Sarah Everard, Dame Cressida described his actions as a crime that had ‘sickened, angered and devastated’ the Met.

Couzens, a former diplomatic protection officer, abducted Miss Everard, 33, from a south London street in March.

It later emerged 12 police officers allegedly failed to investigate previous incidents of indecent exposure by Couzens. 

A key question, which Dame Cressida needs to answer, is how was an individual like Couzens accepted into the Met. What vetting did, or didn’t, take place?

She also faced criticism over whether the Met acted in a ‘heavy-handed’ manner arresting women at a vigil for Miss Everard on Clapham Common. 

A report by Sir Thomas Winsor, the chief inspector of constabulary later concluded that Met officers had acted ‘lawfully, sensitively and proportionately’.

She also faced criticism over whether the Met acted in a ‘heavy-handed’ manner arresting women at a vigil, pictured, for Miss Everard on Clapham Common

Questions over her top brass 

Dame Cressida has made a number of highly questionable senior appointments since taking charge of the Met four years ago.

She brought Sir Stephen House out of retirement to be her deputy three years after he stepped down as Chief Constable of Scotland after a series of controversies.

He is seen as her key enforcer and protector, as is Helen Ball, another key ally who is one of her assistant commissioners.

Ms Ball has been by accused by Harvey Proctor of blocking legitimate complaints about Operation Midland.

Incredibly Dame Cressida also promoted a senior officer found guilty of bullying at Essex Police, Deputy Assistant Commissioner Matthew Horne, to be head of professional standards.

Selfies taken beside bodies

After the sickening, random murders of sisters Bibaa Henry, 46, and Nicole Smallman, 27, in a park in Wembley last June, Dame Cressida admitted there was ‘much more to be done’ to improve trust in the force.

Officers were not sent out to look for the women, pictured, until 36 hours after they were last seen alive. 

Even more appallingly, two police have also been charged over taking selfies with the women’s bodies when they were supposed to be guarding the crime scene.

The women’s mother, Mina Smallman, a retired archdeacon, said police had ‘made assumptions’ about her daughters because they were black.

Last week, Danyal Hussein, 19, was convicted at the Old Bailey of the women’s murders.

Sisters Bibaa Henry, 46, and Nicole Smallman, 27, were murdered in a park in Wembley last June

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