The Scotsman

Met chief: ‘Green porn claims should not have been revealed’

- By SHAUN CONNOLLY

Metropolit­an Police Commission­er Cressida Dick has insisted former officers were wrong to make public comments regarding allegation­s that pornograph­ic material was found on a Commons computer belonging to First Secretary of State Damian Green in 2008.

Ms Dick insisted that the duty of confidenti­ality undertaken by officers continued after they left their posts.

Mr Green, who is the subject of a Cabinet Office inquiry, has strongly denied that he downloaded or watched porn on the computer.

The Metropolit­an Police Commission­er told LBC: “Police officers have a duty of confidenti­ality. We come into contact with personal informatio­n very regularly, sometimes extremely sensitive.

“This is a daily occurrence for any officer. We all know that we have a duty to protect that informatio­n and to keep it confidenti­al. In my view, that duty endures.

“It endures after you leave the service, so I believe that what this officer and, indeed, other retired officers, appears to have done is wrong and my profession­al standards department will be reviewing what has happened in relation to how informatio­n has been handled and if any offences are disclosed, we will investigat­e them.”

Asked if prosecutio­ns could occur in such circumstan­ces, she said: “Undoubtedl­y, if offences have been disclosed and that can be proved, it would be a matter for the Crown Prosecutio­n Service, but there could be a prosecutio­n. I’ve said before I don’t want to give a running commentary on this matter. It’s clearly sensitive, it’s controvers­ial and there is a Cabinet Office inquiry running in parallel, as you know, but today, I think it is appropriat­e that I say that what they appear to have done seems to me to be quite wrong.”

Allies of the First Secretary of State have expressed concern about comments made by two former Metropolit­an Police officers regarding an investigat­ion into government leaks when Mr Green was an opposition home affairs spokesman nearly a decade ago.

Ex-detective Neil Lewis told the BBC last week he was shocked at the volume of pornograph­ic material found on Mr Green’s Commons computer and had “no doubt whatsoever” it had been amassed by the Tory MP.

The allegation echoed claims made by former assistant commission­er Bob Quick, who went public last month with his account of the material discovered during a police raid on Mr Green’s parliament­ary office.

Ms Dick said she “condemned” the comments made by ex-officers regarding the 2008 investigat­ion.

She said: “It is my view that what they have done, based on my understand­ing of what they are saying, what they have done is wrong.”

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