This is why Scotland Yard is in disgrace: bad policing and penny-pinching politicians | Duncan Campbell

Officers will be rightly criticised as Britain’s biggest force is put into special measures, but ministers betrayed the public too

The headlines, from the Times and the Mail to the Sun and the Guardian, all announce that the Metropolitan police – Britain’s biggest force, and progenitor of the mantra that we have the “best police in the world” – has been placed in “special measures”. Much like “institutionally racist” and “not fit for purpose”, the phrase has a formal ring to it. But what does it actually mean?

Earlier this year a former Met officer, Iain Donnelly, published a book about his time in the police entitled Tango Juliet Foxtrot, a title making use of the phonetic alphabet that translates as “the job’s fucked”. That sums up both what many serving officers currently feel and what Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary has just concluded.

The scandals that have engulfed the Met are familiar: the murder of Sarah Everard by a serving officer, Wayne Couzens; the bungling of the investigation into the murders of four gay men by Stephen Port; the pursuit of those falsely accused of sex crimes by the fantasist Carl “Nick” Beech; the callous sharing of photos of two murdered sisters, Nicole Smallman and Bibaa Henry, by two officers, leading to their jail sentences. All this compounded by the fact that Scotland Yard, in the words this week of the inspector, Matt Parr, “hasn’t always shown a great willingness to [learn from others].”

The latest charge sheet is a long one. It ranges from “a barely adequate standard of crime recording accuracy, with an estimated 69,000 crimes going unrecorded each year” to “a persistently large backlog of online child abuse referrals”. This all comes at a time when the Met is still waiting to find out who the new commissioner will be after Dame Cressida Dick’s departure from the role in February. How did we get to this state of affairs?

The warning signs have long been clear. Donnelly writes that the problems had been apparent for many years and came to a head with “the painful and horrible years when Theresa May was home secretary and then prime minister” and the impact of “losing 20,000 officers and 23,000 support staff” made itself felt. Attempts to remedy these shortages have been inadequate – and have come too late.

Apart from the cuts made by May, there have been other disastrous government decisions. More than 600 police stations in England and Wales, over half the total, have been shut down since 2010, disconnecting the police from the public on whose support they depend. Officers have disappeared from the streets. In the United States, radical voices critical of their own, much more violent and devious, police forces launched a “defund the police” movement, arguing that funds were better allocated to other agencies. Here the government has accomplished that unbidden.

Another former officer’s book, published only last year, is Rocking the Boat by Paul Wilson, one of the originators of the Black Police Association. This catalogues what happened to him when he suggested to Jeremy Paxman on Newsnight, after the inquiry into Stephen Lawrence’s murder, that the Met was indeed racist. He became something of a pariah for the last decade of his service. Do the government ministers responsible for the criminal justice system read any of these books?

One book that they might find it easier to get their hands on, Assault on Liberty, published in 2009, is an examination of what went wrong with the criminal justice system. Its author, a lawyer who had worked with Liberty, explained how “the police have clamped down on freedom of speech, restricted public demonstrations and stifled peaceful protest using an array of powers bestowed by a blizzard of legislation, hastily enacted by parliament”. Typical lefty lawyer? Er, no. Those are the words of Dominic Raab, now the justice minister and seemingly unaware of the fact that this is exactly what his own government now requires of the police under another new blizzard of legislation.

As we know from the extraordinary sight of bewigged barristers on picket lines, the courts system is also in chaos, and prisons are overcrowded and chaotic. We have a prime minister and a home secretary who like dressing up as police officers when a photo opportunity beckons, but seem incapable of tackling the real problems.

The Met, as the largest force in the country, comes under the greatest scrutiny; Greater Manchester, Cleveland and Gloucestershire face similar criticism from the inspectorate, without the national headlines. Some argue that this attention, and the extra pressures imposed on its officers by Covid, exacerbated existing problems. But it is half a century since Sir Robert Mark was appointed commissioner at the Met, at a time when some very special measures were required, mainly focused on widespread corruption. “I had served in provincial forces for 30 years, and though I had known wrongdoing, I had never experienced institutionalised wrongdoing, blindness, arrogance and prejudice on anything like the scale accepted as routine in the Met,” he recalled of his arrival at Scotland Yard. The inspectorate clearly feels that some things have not changed enough.

We Own This City is the title of the spectacular new television series about Baltimore police from the creators of The Wire. “If Baltimore cops don’t get complaints every day, they sure as hell ain’t policing,” is the bullish response of one of their officers to any attacks from outside. Few Met officers would either claim to “own” London, or use that justification for the criticism now directed at them. But, for all the opprobrium, they are right to suggest that much of the blame sits above their heads, with those of higher rank. Look also to a government and to a criminal justice team that is, to use the preferred jargon, not fit for purpose, institutionally inept and in great need of very special measures.

  • Duncan Campbell is a former Guardian crime correspondent and Los Angeles correspondent

  • Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a letter of up to 300 words to be considered for publication, email it to us at guardian.letters@theguardian.com


Contributor

Duncan Campbell

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Remember the Casey review next time Suella Braverman talks about ‘woke’ policing in the Met | Gaby Hinsliff
The countless victims of the Metropolitan police’s grotesque failures need radical reform unimaginable to this broken force, says Guardian columnist Gaby Hinsliff

Gaby Hinsliff

21, Mar, 2023 @10:40 AM

Article image
The police watchdog’s inaction over the VIP child abuse inquiry is a disgrace | Simon Jenkins
The Independent Office for Police Conduct has exonerated all involved with Operation Midland, says Guardian columnist Simon Jenkins

Simon Jenkins

07, Oct, 2019 @2:00 PM

Article image
After another violent murder in London, this is what needs to be done | Temi Mwale
The youth murder rate in the capital is rising alarmingly. A public health approach with a community-based strategy needs to be put in place, says social campaigner Temi Mwale

Temi Mwale

23, Apr, 2018 @2:32 PM

Article image
This anti-protest bill risks making the UK like Putin's Russia | David Blunkett
The proposed police and crime law is so badly drafted that it should unite people from across the political spectrum, says former home secretary David Blunkett

David Blunkett

02, Apr, 2021 @10:00 AM

Article image
The Met may close the Stephen Lawrence case, but it had better not forget it | Hugh Muir
The Met police’s darkest hour led to a safer country – for all, not just minority Britons. That progress should not be reversed, says Hugh Muir, associate editor of Guardian Opinion

Hugh Muir

11, Apr, 2018 @4:29 PM

Article image
No wonder so few people report rape. They are hung out to dry in court | Joan Smith and Claire Waxman
Fear of intrusive investigations and total loss of privacy make sexual assault victims less likely to make a complaint, say Joan Smith and Claire Waxman

Joan Smith and Claire Waxman

21, Mar, 2018 @3:20 PM

Article image
Cutting police homicide teams is the sure sign of a failing society | Kate London
The social system is crumbling when murders are rising but fewer officers are trying to solve them, says former homicide detective Kate London

Kate London

16, Jan, 2019 @4:05 PM

Article image
I served in the Met. The lack of progress on diversity is disgusting | Dal Babu
Leaders say the police force is 100 years away from reflecting London’s multiculturalism, says former chief superintendent Dal Babu

Dal Babu

21, Feb, 2019 @3:54 PM

Article image
Who will hold the police to account for racist acts that criminalise a community? | Afua Hirsch
When even ministers shrug off being stopped and searched for no apparent reason, nothing will change, says Guardian columnist Afua Hirsch

Afua Hirsch

30, Jul, 2020 @5:00 AM

Article image
The Met has made a big mistake in tying its reputation to Boris Johnson’s | Gaby Hinsliff
Unless the police answer outstanding questions surrounding Partygate fines, they risk losing the confidence of the public, says Guardian columnist Gaby Hinsliff

Gaby Hinsliff

26, May, 2022 @4:30 PM