Met Police complains it should be easier to fire bad officers

Met Police complains it should be easier to fire bad officers as he reveals he has ‘over 500’ staff on restricted duties amid standards probes

  • Sir Mark Rowley said that ‘several hundred’ Met officers have been suspended
  • READ MORE: Devastating review says the Met Police is ‘institutionally racist’ 

The Met Police Commissioner has complained it should be easier to fire bad officers as he reveals he has ‘over 500’ staff on restricted duties. 

Sir Mark Rowley also told The News Agents podcast said that ‘several hundred’ of his officers have been suspended following investigations into police standards.

He said it was was with a ‘heavy heart’ that he chose not to describe the Met Police as institutionally racist after Baroness Louise Casey’s damning review into the force’s culture and standards.

The Casey Review, published in March, found the force to be institutionally racist, misogynist and homophobic in the wake of a series of scandals, including the murder of Sarah Everard by a serving officer and Pc David Carrick being unmasked as a serial rapist.

Asked how many Met officers are currently being investigated over sexual and domestic abuse claims, Sir Mark told the podcast’s co-host Emily Maitlis: ‘It’s many hundreds.

Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley said it´s not as easy as it ought to be´ to rid the force of bad police officers 

Pictured: General view of New Scotland Yard, the headquarters of the Metropolitan Police

Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley with Baroness Louise Casey before answering question from the London Assembly police and crime committee at City Hall in east London 

‘I don’t have the number at the top of my head – but it’s many hundreds.’

On how many Met officers have been suspended as a result of these investigations, he added: ‘We have well over 500 who are restricted and several hundred who are suspended.

‘So, I’ve said we need to get rid of hundreds of people.

‘If you look back over the last few years, the Met has been sacking 50 people a year. So clearly, the answer is going to be a lot more than that.

‘So, it’s going to be hundreds of people we need to remove from the organisation who are a serious challenge at the same time as creating a stronger, healthier, better trained organisation that’s more resistant to this in the future.’

READ MORE: Frontline officers hit out after their own chief constable becomes first in England to say their force is ‘institutionally racist’ 

He told The News Agents’ co-host Jon Sopel ‘it’s not as easy as it ought to be’ to rid the force of bad police officers.

Sir Mark added: ‘So, something that most people would have no reason to know is that police officers aren’t under normal employment law in most respects.

‘They’re under something called police regulations, in terms of how performance is managed, or how misconduct is investigated and dealt with, it is more bureaucratic, slower, more difficult than normal employment law.

‘And so actually these issues are significant, and I’ve asked the Prime Minister and Home Secretary to look at this, and the Mayor has asked them to look at it as well.’

On the need to improve the reputation of the Met, Sir Mark said it is his ‘mission to deliver more trust, less crime and high standards’.

He added: ‘I would much rather be talking about the trust of the public and tackling crime with them full stop.

‘The fact I have to talk about standards and the fact alongside saying, I’ve got tens of thousands of fantastic men and women, I’ve got hundreds who shouldn’t be here, that’s professionally annoying, but that’s what I came back (to the force) to do.

‘Because we have to sort that out for our credibility.

Asked how many Met officers are currently being investigated over sexual and domestic abuse claims, Sir Mark told the podcast’s co-host Emily Maitlis: ‘It’s many hundreds’ (file photo)

‘And the vast majority of my colleagues, they’re up for that, which is why when we look at things like the Casey Report it was them who told that picture that they want tackled.’

Responding to the findings of the Casey review at the time, Sir Mark said he accepted the diagnosis of racism, misogyny and homophobia in the Met, but would not use the term institutional because it has become politicised and is ambiguous.

Addressing Baroness Casey’s assessment that the force is institutionally racist, Sir Mark told the News Agents ‘it’s a contentious phrase with a long history’.

He added: ‘And some people feel very, very strongly that unless you say that word, you’re not serious, I know that.

‘And it’s with a heavy heart, I chose not to use it.

‘But when I know that for a big proportion of people, it means something entirely different, which isn’t what she [Casey] means.

‘And that’s why I stood away from it, and I realise that’s contentious.’

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