Scottish Daily Mail

Met’s top cop dragged into Nick scandal

Chief had key role in VIP inquiry She tries to shift blame to her deputy

- By Stephen Wright Associate News Editor

THE Met’s most senior police officer has been dragged into the VIP sex abuse inquiry scandal after it emerged she had a key role in setting it up.

Just two weeks ago, Met Commission­er Cressida Dick rejected calls for officers involved in investigat­ing the claims by fantasist ‘Nick’ to face a criminal probe.

But yesterday it was revealed she had overseen the Scotland Yard investigat­ion in its early stages.

Then an assistant commission­er in charge of Specialist Crime and Operations, she received briefings on the allegation­s of an Establishm­ent paedophile ring and murders involving former PM Edward Heath, ex-Home Secretary Leon Brittan and two former heads of the security services.

She was in post when ‘Nick’, real name Carl Beech, was repeatedly by Met detectives before Operation Midland was launched in November 2014.

Miss Dick was also assistant commission­er – responsibl­e for overseeing the work of murder squads – when a senior officer, Det Supt Kenny McDonald, told a press conference a month later that the allegation­s made by Beech were ‘credible and true’.

Last night she declined to answer key questions from the Daily Mail about her role in the early stages of Operation Midland and apparently sought to shift the blame for the mistakes in the case to former deputy assistant commission­er Steve Rodhouse, who was the ‘gold commander’ of the probe.

She refused to state whether, as Mr Rodhouse’s boss, she had approved the inquiry’s setting up or raised concerns about the phrase ‘credible and true’.

She also declined to say if she had raised concerns with Mr Rodhouse about the running of a separate inquiry, codenamed Operation Vincente, into bogus rape allegation­s made against Tory peer Lord Brittan by a Labour activist.

In a statement, Scotland Yard said: ‘During the period that Cressida Dick was assistant commission­er Specialist Crime and Operations she was kept briefed on all significan­t investigat­ions within Specialist Crime and Operations.

‘However, individual decisions regarding how to respond to allegation­s, and other operationa­l decisions including press briefings, were and are always taken within the command structure, which in operations Midland and Vincente came under Steve Rodhouse.’

Last night former Tory MP Harvey Proctor, falsely accused of being a serial child killer by Beech, called on Home Secretary Priti Patel to order an investigat­ion by an outside force into the conduct of Operation Midintervi­ewed land officers. He said Miss Dick should not play a part in any investigat­ion into the operation.

Mr Proctor, who is suing the Met for £1million compensati­on over the case, which saw him lose his job and home, told the Mail: ‘Cressida Dick was Steve Rodhouse’s boss from November 2014 to January 2015 when he was the Gold Commander of Operation Midland. She oversaw the operation’s creation.

‘She must have known it involved the alleged murders of three children, their torture and sexual abuse by suspects including a former prime minister, home secretary, head of the Armed Forces, MI5 and MI6 and myself or, if she did not know about it, she should have done.

‘Either way her leadership skills and certainly her judgment is called into question.

‘Cressida Dick must recuse herself on any future decision involving Operation Midland.

‘The Home Secretary Priti Patel should establish a public inquiry into the Metropolit­an

‘Judgment called into question’

Police, its management and ethics, in the light of Operation Vincente and Operation Midland.’

Daniel Janner QC, whose father Lord Greville Janner was falsely accused of abuse by Beech, said: ‘The public must have confidence in the criminal justice system and the police.

‘The astonishin­g revelation­s that Cressida Dick was involved in the early stages of Operation Midland undermine this trust and in my opinion she has a conflict of interests in defending officers in the case.’

Scotland Yard launched Operation Midland to investigat­e claims by Beech that he had been sexually abused and tortured by a group of VIPs.

Beech, a 51-year-old convicted paedophile, also said he had witnessed three murders committed by members of the group, including Mr Proctor.

During the £2.5million probe, the homes of Lord Brittan, ex-Armed Forces chief Lord Bramall and Mr Proctor were raided.

In July, after Beech was jailed for 18 years over his lies, ex-High Court judge Sir Richard Henriques told the Mail that officers used false evidence to obtain search warrants for the raids.

But a fortnight ago, Miss Dick said it would be ‘completely improper’ to open a fresh probe into the officers’ conduct. Operation Midland closed without any arrests or charges in 2016.

 ??  ?? Chief: Cressida Dick has said officers should not be probed
Chief: Cressida Dick has said officers should not be probed

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