Daniel Morgan murder: Met admits failings and pays damages in settlement with family

Force had faced being sued over 1987 axe killing, with corruption and errors blamed for failure to convict perpetrators

The Metropolitan police commissioner, Sir Mark Rowley, has admitted the force prioritised its reputation in its handling of the Daniel Morgan murder case over 36 years, as a cycle of corruption, incompetence and defensiveness blighted the search for justice.

The admissions by Britain’s top police officer came as a settlement was announced on Wednesday, which both sides hope will end the Morgan family’s gruelling struggle after the 1987 unsolved murder of the private detective.

Rowley admitted liability for the Met’s errors and corruption, and will pay damages, declaring the family were fobbed off with “empty promises” as well as accepting “multiple and systemic failings”.

Morgan was found dead in March 1987 in a south London pub car park with an axe through his head. His family believe he was about to expose police corruption when he was silenced.

Rowley met the family last week and in his statement accepted their suffering had been made worse by having to fight the Met for justice. The commissioner vowed to root out corruption blighting the force he had inherited.

The Met has previously admitted that police corruption helped shield Morgan’s killers, and no one has been convicted of the murder.

The Morgan family accepted a financial settlement made by the Met after the force faced being sued and potentially embarrassing court hearings.

The family would have been armed with the findings of an official inquiry ordered by Theresa May when she was home secretary, which reported in June 2021. It found that Rowley’s predecessor, Cressida Dick, had obstructed the panel appointed by the government to investigate claims that corruption blighted the hunt for Morgan’s killers and that the Met had failed to root it out.

It also found the Met was institutionally corrupt, having placed protecting its reputation above uncovering embarrassing wrongdoing. The Met had rejected the key findings.

On Wednesday, Rowley struck a different tone, saying: “This case has been marred by a cycle of corruption, professional incompetence, and defensiveness that has repeated itself over and over again. Daniel Morgan’s family were given empty promises and false hope as successive investigations failed and the Metropolitan police prioritised its reputation at the expense of transparency and effectiveness.”

Morgan and his business partner at the time of his death, Jonathan Rees, ran an investigation agency called Southern Investigations. Rees later carried out extensive work for the News of the World, owned by Rupert Murdoch, which was shut down due to the phone-hacking scandal.

The Morgan family’s civil claim issued in December 2021 alleged misfeasance in public office as well as breaches of the Human Rights Act.

The claim dated back to alleged wrongdoing immediately after the 1987 killing, when one of the suspects was a detective who worked for a short period on the murder investigation, with police failings continuing through to recent years.

The Met announced in 2007 that the motive for the murder was probably that Morgan “was about to expose a south London drugs network possibly involving corrupt police officers”.

It is understood the Met paid £2.25m in costs and damages to settle the case, though the family and force have said the amount remains confidential.

Last Thursday, Rowley met the Morgan family at a mediation session in central London, which led to the agreement.

Rowley said: “I unequivocally and unreservedly apologise for the failure of the Metropolitan police service to bring those responsible for the murder of Daniel Morgan to justice. From the earliest stages, his family have been repeatedly and inexcusably let down by the Metropolitan police.

“No words can do justice to the pain and suffering that has been a feature of the family’s lives for more than three decades as they have fought for justice, a fight which no family should have to endure. Their tenacious campaigning has exposed multiple and systemic failings in this organisation.

“I have met with the family and listened to vivid and moving accounts of the devastating impact those failings have had on their lives. They have explained how their trust in policing has been eroded. The personal commitment I made to tackling corruption in this organisation when I took over as commissioner has never been stronger.”

Despite all the errors, corruption and the Met placing its reputation over the search for justice, as found by the 2021 inquiry, no officers faced action or any formal sanction.

The Morgan family join a list of grieving British families turned campaigners – from the family of Stephen Lawrence, to those caught up in the Hillsborough disaster – who fought the police and authorities for decades to get answers and a measure of justice.

In a statement issued through their lawyers, the Morgan family said: “The family of Daniel Morgan, deceased, proposed to bring civil claims arising out of his murder on 10 March 1987 and the ensuing investigations into that murder against the Metropolitan police commissioner. As a result of a formal mediation process in July 2023, the parties were able to agree a mutually satisfactory settlement of the proposed claims, including an admission of liability on behalf of the commissioner in respect of the conduct of his officers in response to the murder.”

In a Guardian interview in 2017, Morgan’s brother, Alastair – who spearheaded his family’s fight against the state for justice – said: “I’ve been in the wilderness. It has been horribly frustrating and painful for decades.”

He said he felt it was not only the Met that had failed his family, but other organs of the state that were supposed to hold it to account. He told the Guardian: “I had a duty to my brother, to my family and to society not to give up. What has emerged has vindicated me. It is worryingly corrupt, in ways that are subtle, but very powerful.”

Two sticky plaster strips were wrapped around the axe handle used to murder Morgan in an attempt to prevent fingerprint evidence being left behind. The last investigation into the murder ended in 2011, with the case against the accused collapsing in court before a jury could hear any evidence. That led to the then acting commissioner, Tim Godwin, admitting that police corruption in the first investigation had been a significant factor in the failure to bring to justice those responsible for the murder.

Godwin also said Morgan’s family were entitled to an apology for the repeated failure of the police to acknowledge this corruption.

It would take much longer – more than another decade – for the Met to finally reach a deal with Morgan’s family.

The Met said it still hoped to catch Morgan’s killers and a £50,000 reward announced in 2021 for information leading to a conviction remains on offer.

The force said a forensic review continues.

“We have not given up on this case. There still remains a possibility of solving this murder. Our work to make that happen will not stop no matter how much time passes.

“We also know there are people who hold vital information who have been unable for whatever reason to pass that to us.”

Anyone with information should contact CrimeStoppers anonymously on 0800 555 11.

Contributor

Vikram Dodd Police and crime correspondent

The GuardianTramp

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