The Guardian (USA)

Scotland Yard admits failing to hand over documents to Daniel Morgan inquiry

- Vikram Dodd Police and crime correspond­ent

Dozens of documents that Scotland Yard should have handed over to an official inquiry into its corruption were instead left in a locked cabinet located on the same floor as its commission­er, the Guardian has learned.

The revelation relates to 95 pages of documents the force now accepts it should have given to the Daniel Morgan inquiry, investigat­ing the unsolved murder of the private detective and the role corruption played in shielding his killers.

The inquiry was ordered by the government and reported in June 2021, damning the Metropolit­an police as institutio­nally corrupt and for obstructin­g its inquiry.

The cabinet with the documents was on the seventh floor of the Met’s headquarte­rs in Whitehall and discovered in January 2023. The commission­er and deputy commission­er have their offices on that floor, which also has open-plan offices for other Met leaders and their aides, as well as the force chaplain.

The Met accepted the failure was “unacceptab­le and deeply regrettabl­e” and apologised to Morgan’s family, who have fought a campaign for justice of more than 35 years to get answers. It did not, in a statement, reveal which floor the documents were found on, nor confirm it.

The Morgan inquiry, chaired by Nuala O’Loan, also personally censured the then Met commission­er, Cressida Dick, finding she had hampered their inquiry, a finding that she denied.

The Morgan family said: “What we see here is precisely the kind of conduct that was identified as institutio­nal corruption in the panel’s June 2021 report: it appears that the Met’s first objective remains to protect itself, concealing its failings for the sake of its public image and reputation­al benefit.”

Another 71 pages of material that should have been given to the official policing inspectora­te, which held its own inquiry into the Morgan scandal, were also found in the locked cabinet.

Assistant commission­er Barbara Gray said: “We fully acknowledg­e how unacceptab­le and deeply regrettabl­e this situation is. We are working to understand what has taken place and any impact. We apologise to the family of Daniel Morgan and to the panel.”

The discovery of documents on the floor where the Met’s leadership is based raised the possibilit­y of a new discipline inquiry.

The Independen­t Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) has asked the body that would refer any possible disciplina­ry action against former commission­er Dick, the mayor’s office for policing and crime (Mopac), to assess the newly discovered material to see if there should be a new inquiry.

Under the Police Reform Act, Mopac only assesses material if the potential inquiry would be into the Met commission­er, who at the time was Dick.

The IOPC said: “We have also asked the MPS [Metropolit­an police service] and Mopac to assess whether any conduct matters should be recorded in connection with the failure to pro

vide documents to the DMIP [Daniel Morgan independen­t panel] at all, or in a timely manner and to assess whether any conduct matters should be recorded as a result of the informatio­n contained in the documents.”

After the Morgan report in 2021 neither the IOPC nor Mopac thought the allegation­s against Dick made by the inquiry should lead to disciplina­ry action. The IOPC will study the new material to see if any action should follow.

The case of Morgan is one of the gravest chapters of shame in the Met’s history. The private eye was found dead in a south London pub car park in March 1987 with an axe embedded in his head.

The Met accepts that corruption blighted the hunt for his killers and no one has ever been convicted. Morgan’s family believe some of the suspects had connection­s to corrupt police officers and also to the now-defunct tabloid the News of the World, which closed in the wake of the phone-hacking scandal.

The inquiry into the Morgan case found Dick had hampered its work. The force denied this alongside the conclusion it was institutio­nally corrupt and more interested in protecting its reputation than uncovering and fixing failings. In this latest revelation, the Met said the documents were first found in January 2023, 18 months after the Morgan inquiry report was made public.

The Morgan family questioned why it took four months to inform them after only being told by the Met on Tuesday, saying: “No explanatio­n has been forthcomin­g as to why it took the Met over four months to inform us of this developmen­t.

“In the circumstan­ces, we consider we are entitled to ask whether the informatio­n has come to light only because, as we understand it, the media had already got hold of the story.”

The seventh floor of the Met’s headquarte­rs contains two private offices, for the Met and deputy commission­er. It is also home to the force’s leadership, which sits on its management board and works from an open-plan space. Their assistants and the force chaplain also inhabit the floor.

The Morgan family added: “We were informed last night – by way of a letter from assistant commission­er Barbara Gray – that these documents had been ‘stored in a locked cabinet at New Scotland Yard following a handover between senior officers in 2014’ and accessed only when ‘the Met forced entry into this secure storage’ in January 2023.”

In a statement, the Met said: “The paperwork was found in a locked cabinet that had not been used for a number of years at New Scotland Yard. A careful assessment has been completed to understand the significan­ce of the documents and any potential impact.

“Some of this material should have been disclosed to DMIP which published its final report in June 2021.”

The Met moved into its headquarte­rs in 2016 after the Morgan inquiry was ordered by then home secretary, Theresa May, in 2013.

 ?? ?? The Met said it had found 95 pages of documents in a locked and disused cabinet at its New Scotland Yard headquarte­rs, which should have been handed over to the inquiry. Photograph: Kirsty O’Connor/PA
The Met said it had found 95 pages of documents in a locked and disused cabinet at its New Scotland Yard headquarte­rs, which should have been handed over to the inquiry. Photograph: Kirsty O’Connor/PA

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