London Mayor Sadiq Khan has rejected a report by the former head of the police watchdog Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire and Rescue Services (HMICFRS) that
Dame Cressida Dick “felt intimidated” by Khan into quitting as the head of the Metropolitan Police earlier this year.
Referring to Dame Cressida, the London mayor added that “on the former Commissioner’s watch, trust in the police fell to record lows following a litany of terrible scandals.” According to him, “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.”
Dame Cressida, for her part, responded to Winsor’s findings by saying that she regrets “this report was necessary,” but that she hopes “it will help create a sounder foundation” for her successors.
“Sir Tom has written a highly detailed and forensic account of the circumstances surrounding my departure. He found the mayor did not follow due process, and at times his behavior was oppressive, unreasonable, entirely unacceptable and unfair,” Dick pointed out. She described Winsor’s report as “an opportunity for others to reflect on how City Hall functions and is held to account.”
The remarks followed the release of the 116-page report, in which Winsor, in particular, argued that in February, Khan had given Dick "an ultimatum" to attend a meeting where she was supposed to convince him about her plans for the police force, otherwise he would release a statement "making it clear that he no longer had trust and confidence" and would begin the "statutory process" to remove her.
Winsor also argued that Dame Cressida was “intimidated by this process into stepping aside,” and that “the commissioner felt that, in the interests of Londoners and the Metropolitan Police, she had to ‘step aside’, as a prelude to her eventual resignation.”
The ex-HMICFRS chief also claimed that hours before Dame Cressida announced her resignation, communications between the mayor's chief of staff and the Met Police head of corporate services were "unjustifiably politically brutal."
Winsor alleged that City Hall had given Dame Cressida 30 minutes to make a decision on whether she would step down or not.
“For any public servant - least of all one so senior and long-serving - to be given under an hour to decide whether to resign or to challenge the mayor's position was entirely unacceptable,” he underlined.
Dick, who officially left the Met in April, announced her decision to stand down in February, admitting that she had "no choice" but to resign after Khan lost "confidence" in her.
The move came amid criticism from the London mayor following a series of scandals related to the Met Police. The rows included the kidnap and murder of
marketing executive Sarah Everard by London policeman Wayne Couzens and two Metropolitan police officers taking and sharing photos of murdered black sisters Bibaa Henry and Nicole Smallman “for their own amusement.”