Dame Cressida: First female Met head dogged by criticism over force’s standards
Her resignation came less than six months after her contract was extended by two years.
Dame Cressida Dick’s decision to resign as commissioner of the Metropolitan Police came after a tumultuous period for the force in which its culture and standards were repeatedly called into question.
The resignation came less than six months after her contract as the head of the UK’s largest police force was extended by two years, a role she described as being the “greatest honour and privilege of my life”.
The first female, and openly gay, commissioner served more than 30 years in uniform.
Originally from Oxford, Dame Cressida was educated at the city’s university, graduating from Balliol College.
In 1995 she transferred to Thames Valley Police as superintendent operations at Oxford and, subsequently, spent three years as area commander.
After taking a career break to study for a Master’s degree in criminology at Cambridge University, she returned to the Met in June 2001.
Dame Cressida, who was the UK police lead for hostage negotiation, was appointed director of the force’s diversity directorate and head of the racial and violent crime taskforce before moving to the specialist crime directorate in 2003.
She was thrust into the public eye in 2005 when she was in charge of the operation that led to the fatal shooting of Brazilian Jean Charles de Menezes, who was wrongly identified as a potential suicide bomber.
A jury later cleared Dame Cressida of any blame in his death.
In February 2007, she was promoted to deputy assistant commissioner and was later made the Met’s first female assistant commissioner in 2009.
Her work also included leading the re-investigation into the murder of Stephen Lawrence and the police response to the killing of Lee Rigby.
After leaving Scotland Yard in January 2015 to become a director general at the Foreign Office, she returned as commissioner in 2017 and was made a dame in Theresa May’s resignation honours in 2019.
Speaking on BBC Radio 4’s Desert Island Discs that same year, she said her image was “a bit different” and described her sexuality as “one of the least interesting things” about her, adding: “I happen to love Helen, she’s my partner, on we go.”
She stepped into the role of commissioner in the aftermath of the Westminster terror attack, in which Pc Keith Palmer was stabbed to death as he carried out his duties on March 22 2017.
But her tenure became overshadowed by a wave of scandals.
During her term, the Met continued to face criticism over the relationship between police and black Londoners, although she repeatedly denied the force was institutionally racist.
The force faced controversy and accusations of alleged racial profiling following a series of high-profile incidents filmed and shared online. However, she defended the use of stop-and-search powers to take hundreds of weapons a month off London’s streets.
She also had to oversee the fall-out from the disastrous Operation Midland, a multimillion-pound investigation which saw detectives duped by false claims of a VIP sex abuse ring made by fantasist Carl Beech.
Dame Cressida had been responsible for supervising the senior investigating officer who said allegations made by Beech, which were subsequently shown to be false, were “credible and true”.
In October 2019, she made a public apology for mistakes in the police investigations.
Two months later, she was referred to the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) but was later cleared.
The conduct of police officers at crime scenes also came under intense scrutiny in the wake of the murders of sisters Bibaa Henry and Nicole Smallman in Wembley, north-west London, in June 2020.
Former Met constables Deniz Jaffer and Jamie Lewis were jailed for two years and nine months each last year for taking photographs of the sisters’ bodies and sharing them with friends and colleagues on WhatsApp.
In March 2021, public confidence was shaken when one of the force’s armed officers, Wayne Couzens, was found to have kidnapped, raped and murdered marketing executive Sarah Everard, days after he had indecently exposed himself in a fast food restaurant – prompting a national debate about sexual violence, the safety of women and trust in the police.
The Met was heavily criticised for its handling of a vigil held in Miss Everard’s memory and to raise awareness of the dangers faced by women on the streets.
Months later, the family of a private investigator, who was killed with an axe 34 years ago, said they were set to sue the Metropolitan Police over his unsolved murder.
Daniel Morgan died in the car park of the Golden Lion pub in Sydenham, south-east London, on March 10 1987, and a string of unsuccessful investigations into his death have been mired with claims of corruption.
In June, an independent report accused the Met of institutional corruption over its handling of the case, saying it had concealed or denied failings to protect its reputation.
Over the summer, officers were then hit with criticism over the security of Wembley Stadium during the final of the Euro 2020 championships, which saw thousands of ticketless fans storm the venue.
Dame Cressida later defended their actions, stating she “did not accept” that the policing operation failed.
In December, inquest jurors found that “fundamental failures” by the police were likely to have contributed to the deaths of three victims of the serial killer, Stephen Port.
Basic errors by detectives left Port free to carry out a series of murders as well as drug and sexually assault more than a dozen other men in Barking, east London, between June 2014 and September 2015.
The force then came under scrutiny for its initial decision not to investigate allegations of lockdown-breaking parties at Downing Street – with some claiming it indicated politicians and those in power were being shown preferential treatment. But since then more than 100 fines have been issued.
Despite months of speculation and calls for her resignation from some critics, particularly in the aftermath of another scandal to hit the Met surrounding the revelations that racist, misogynist and homophobic messages were exchanged by officers, the sudden announcement on February 10 that she was stepping down came as a shock to many.
Earlier in the day, she had insisted she was still the right person for the job as she fielded questions from listeners during a phone-in on BBC Radio London.
The series of disturbing messages exchanged by a group of officers, primarily based at Charing Cross police station, were published by the IOPC as part of an investigation into behaviour in the team between 2016 and 2018.
Some 14 officers were investigated as a result, with two found to have a case to answer for gross misconduct.
One was sacked and another resigned before he would have been dismissed.
Another two had already left the force while, in some of the other cases, the IOPC found “no further action should be taken”.
When asked if she should step down amid an outcry over the behaviour, she said: “I have absolutely no intention of going and I believe that I am, and have been, actually for the last five years, leading a real transformation in the Met.”
She told rogue officers to “get out now, otherwise we will find you” and said she was “seething angry about the whole thing” and there was “no place in the Met for sexism or racism or homophobia, for abuse of trust or for bullying”.
Mayor of London Sadiq Khan had said his continued trust and confidence in Dame Cressida hinged on how she addressed the culture at the force and her plan to win back the trust of the public.
But Dame Cressida released a statement which said: “It is with huge sadness that following contact with the mayor of London today, it is clear that the mayor no longer has sufficient confidence in my leadership to continue.
“He has left me no choice but to step aside as commissioner of the Metropolitan Police Service.”
In a swipe at political leaders during her final days in office in April, she warned against the “politicisation of policing”, saying this is “a threat not just to policing but to trust in the whole criminal justice system”.