Scottish Daily Mail

OPERATION SAVE CRESSIDA

Damning emails show top officer’s priority was to protect Met chief from the fallout of ‘Nick’ fiasco

- By Glen Keogh and Stephen Wright

SCOTLAND Yard launched an extraordin­ary spin operation to ensure the Metropolit­an Police chief Cressida Dick was not ‘pulled into’ the scandal over its VIP abuse probe.

The Mail today reveals bombshell emails detailing how Dame Cressida was shielded by her colleagues.

The messages also reveal that Britain’s top police officer reacted with fury after Home Secretary Priti Patel ordered an independen­t review of the Met, following criticism over the disastrous Operation Midland.

Miss Patel repeatedly refused to publicly back Dame Cressida yesterday. Today’s revelation­s will pile further pressure on the beleaguere­d Commission­er.

Earlier this week, Lady Brittan – whose homes were raided during Operation Midland as she grieved for her late husband – condemned a ‘culture of cover-up’ at the country’s largest force.

Last night Dame Cressida’s deputy Sir Stephen House issued a statement claiming there was ‘no cover-up and nor has there been one’. However, documents obtained by the Mail under Freedom of Informatio­n laws show how the Met scrambled to limit criticism before the publicatio­n of former High Court judge Sir Richard Henriques’s review into the Midland shambles in 2019.

It can now be disclosed that detectives continued their notorious investigat­ion for three months after senior prosecutor­s suggested it should be abandoned. Their advice was based on a leading psychologi­st’s evaluation of their star witness, ‘Nick’ – later revealed to be serial liar Carl Beech, since jailed for perverting the course of justice.

The expert had cast ‘serious doubt’ on Beech’s claims – and the Crown Prosecutio­n Service told three senior detectives in December 2015 that the psychologi­st’s testimony meant the investigat­ion had been ‘fatally undermined’. Despite this, the probe into innocent high-profile figures, including the late Lord Brittan and former MP Harvey Proctor, continued until the following March. D-Day hero Lord Bramall was cleared a month after police received the CPS’s damning indictment of Beech’s claims.

Operation Midland bosses, including former deputy assistant commission­er Steve Rodhouse, now face calls to explain why their investigat­ion continued in the face of such damning advice. Dame Cressida, who sanctioned the creation of Operation Midland in November 2014, had moved to a job at the Foreign Office by the time of the CPS interventi­on.

The emails obtained by the Mail span the days prior to the Met’s planned release of an unredacted version of Sir Richard’s report on October 4, 2019. On October 2, senior officers and the

Met’s media team were discussing lines to issue to the Press alongside the report.

Dame Cressida’s deputy Sir Stephen – brought to the Met as troublesho­oter-in-chief after retiring from Police Scotland following a number of controvers­ies – asked Matt Horne, head of profession­al standards, whether a ‘call between Cress and H [Sir Richard] should now go ahead’.

Astonishin­gly, Mr Horne was appointed by the Met after being found guilty of misconduct in his former role as deputy chief constable of Essex Police. He had pushed a chief superinten­dent into a desk during a disagreeme­nt and later hurled a stress ball at his throat.

‘My concern,’ Sir Stephen wrote, ‘is that it is crucial that Cress is not pulled into this and a heated phone call may frustrate that imperative.’

The next day, the Mail revealed that the Home Secretary was ordering a review of the Met’s conduct by Her Majesty’s Inspectora­te of Constabula­ry.

In an email to senior officers and media advisers that morning, Dame Cressida described the move as ‘very irritating’. She insisted she welcomed an ‘independen­t’ view of the force – but reiterated that officers could not be investigat­ed again after they were cleared by the policing watchdog.

The investigat­ion ordered by Miss Patel, completed last March, found that Scotland Yard’s bosses were more concerned with ‘restrictin­g access’ to Sir Richard’s report than learning lessons from it. It added that the Met had ‘initially not done enough to learn the lessons from the Henriques report’.

Earlier, as the force braced itself before Sir Richard’s report was published, Sir Stephen was sent a note from Rebecca Lawrence, chief executive of the CPS, regarding advice on Operation Midland.

A summary of a December 2015 meeting between three

Scotland Yard detectives and CPS lawyer Sally Walsh in London, the note referenced the report of psychologi­st Bernice Andrews, an expert in historic child abuse, who had interviewe­d Nick.

Professor Andrews’ report had only been commission­ed by the Met eight months after raids on the homes of Lord Brittan, Lord Bramall and Harvey Proctor.

The meeting summary said: ‘We commenced by discussing the “elephant in the room”, namely Professor Andrews’ report to the effect that, in the absence of corroborat­ion, “there must be serious doubt about the reliabilit­y of Nick’s memories”.’

The note added: ‘The police felt this was helpful in that it showed that we would be unable to rely on Nick’s account alone in any prosecutio­n but [name redacted] and Sally [Walsh] were clear that this report has fatally undermined the enquiry. We suggested that it should now be abandoned.’

Last night Mr Proctor, who lost his home and job as a result of the botched investigat­ion, said: ‘This cover-up of the faults and misconduct within Operation Midland from 2014 to 2016 amongst the most senior officers at the Met is despicable.

‘Rather than allocate blame they have conspired to protect the very officers responsibl­e for criminalit­y and ineptitude by shielding them from media observatio­n and from the very justice system they have taken oaths to uphold.

‘Had the Met done what the CPS told them to do in December 2015, Field Marshal Lord Bramall would not have had to suffer a further month of torture before he was finally no further actioned and I would not have had to suffer for a further three months.’

Other emails show how the Met tried to gain support from the Mayor of London and the CPS when drafting informatio­n to issue to the public. In one email to Mr Horne, he was asked whether Sadiq Khan or his deputy ‘would be prepared to say publicly that they believe we have struck a good balance’.

The Metropolit­an Police last night issued a lengthy statement – from Sir Stephen House, rather than Dame Cressida – addressing recent criticism.

The deputy commission­er said: ‘There have been calls for further inquiries or investigat­ions to take place. However, Operation Midland is without doubt one of the most scrutinise­d investigat­ions in policing history. There is no cover-up and nor has there been one.

‘I want to say clearly that [the Met] is truly sorry for the harm caused by the mistakes made... and we fully understand why many of those people directly affected by the lies of Carl Beech and the investigat­ion which followed remain deeply unhappy. The Commission­er and I have met Lord Bramall and Lady Brittan which has allowed us to apologise in person and to better understand how they feel.

‘I want to reassure you that the lessons that have been learnt are being acted upon and that we are absolutely determined to keep making progress in implementi­ng those lessons.’

In china, the tyrannical communist regime has blocked the BBc. In Burma, the military junta is taking news stations off the air. Even in this country, critics of our buccaneeri­ng media want to restrict its freedoms.

But while tyrants around the globe smother dissenting voices, Britain should be immensely proud of its free and unshackled Press.

By poking its nose into places where it is not wanted, the Fourth Estate in this country has persistent­ly exposed corruption, wrongdoing and incompeten­ce that might otherwise have gone unnoticed and unpunished.

time and again, the Mail – spurred on by you, our magnificen­t readers – has played its part.

this week, in that spirit of righting grievous wrongs, we have dropped fresh bombshells about Scotland Yard’s probe into a mythical VIP paedophile ring – one of British policing’s most disgracefu­l chapters.

today, we reveal damning new facts. Even after prosecutor­s called for operation Midland to be abandoned, blasting carl Beech as unreliable and untrustwor­thy, the costly witch-hunt continued.

and when the scandal broke, the Metropolit­an Police’s shameful first instinct was to launch a spin operation to protect commission­er cressida dick from being tainted.

to restore public faith, Priti Patel must order a public inquiry to find out what went wrong. the Met’s rancid augean stable needs cleaning out. the task will require a gigantic shovel.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Email from head of Crown Presecutio­n Service refers to meeting where Operation Midland was described as being ‘fatally undermined’ – but it wasn’t shut down for a further three months
Email from head of Crown Presecutio­n Service refers to meeting where Operation Midland was described as being ‘fatally undermined’ – but it wasn’t shut down for a further three months
 ??  ?? Deputy commission­er’s email aimed to protect his boss after the report by ‘H’ – Sir Richard Henriques
Deputy commission­er’s email aimed to protect his boss after the report by ‘H’ – Sir Richard Henriques
 ??  ?? Rather than welcoming a planned investigat­ion into the Met, revealed by the Mail, Dame Cressida calls it ‘very irritating’
Rather than welcoming a planned investigat­ion into the Met, revealed by the Mail, Dame Cressida calls it ‘very irritating’
 ??  ?? Grilling: Priti Patel and Dame Cressida Dick
Grilling: Priti Patel and Dame Cressida Dick

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