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History of the Metropolitan Police

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Thehistory of the Metropolitan Police in London is long and complex, with many different events taking place between its inception in 1829 and the present day.

Pre-1829 London policing

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Contemporary hand-coloured print showing a crowd of people in a large room with a skylight in the ceiling. A man stands in a dock on one side of the room with a larg table opposite, at which several man sit. Between them, in front of a fireplace, a group of men and women talk to each other. In the foreground and behind a metal railing another group look on or away, some talking among themselves. To the left in the foreground, a man leans on his stick looking pensive.
Caricature of Bow Street Magistrates' Court byThomas Rowlandson, 1808

Before the passing of theMetropolitan Police Act 1829, law enforcement among the general population in England was carried out by unpaidparish constables who were elected, and later appointed by the localjustice of the peace. In certain circumstances, such as serious public disorder, thearmy would intervene to support the local authorities;[1]yeomanry were extensively used for this purpose before police forces developed. Because this system of policing was largely unorganised and lacked a criminal investigation capability, the novelistHenry Fielding (who had been appointed a Magistrate in 1748) introduced the first detective force, known as theBow Street Runners, in 1753. Fielding's house at4 Bow Street had been established as a courtroom by the previous owner, in 1739.

Fielding's force was made up of eight constables who also investigated crimes handed over to them by the volunteer constables andwatchmen. Runners were identified by carrying atipstaff with theRoyal Crown on it, which had a compartment inside to store official identification and documents. In 1805 the Bow Street Horse Patrol, the first form of uniformed policing seen in the capital, was established alongside the Runners, later amalgamating into the Metropolitan Police in 1837.[2] Unofficial "thief-takers" operated independently from the Bow Street Runners, being employed by fee-paying members of the public to catch criminals and present them before a magistrate.[3]

By 1798, the year theMarine Police Force was established, salaried constables were being paid by local magistrates. The Marine Police was initially made up of 220 Constables assisted by 1,000 registered dock workers, and was responsible for preventing the theft of cargo on and around theRiver Thames. The London Marine Police Force is widely regarded[4] as being the first modern police force in the world, in the sense that they were not government controlled and were responsible for the prevention of crime. In its first year of operation 2,000 offenders were found guilty of theft from the docks. This success led to the enacting of the Marine Police Bill, which made it the first publicly fundedpreventive police force in the history of English policing.

The new police

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See also:Peelian principles
Carvedwhale bonewhistle dated 1821 and reportedly later used by a Metropolitan Police "Peeler". 8 cm long.

During the late 18th and early 19th century, theIndustrial Revolution witnessed an exponential expansion in London's size and economic importance.[5] It became clear that the locally maintained system of volunteer constables and "watchmen" was disorganised and inefficient in the deterrence, detection and prevention of crime. As a result, a parliamentary committee was appointed to investigate the current system of policing. UponSir Robert Peel being appointed asHome Secretary in 1822, he established a second and more effective committee, and acted upon its findings. Believing that the way to standardise the police was to make it an official paid profession, to organise it in a civilian fashion, and to make it answerable to the public, Peel put a bill beforeParliament, which passed as theMetropolitan Police Act 1829, givenroyal assent on 19 June 1829.[6] placing the policing arrangements for the capital directly under the control of Sir Robert Peel.[6][7]

A 1930s American police rattle of the type used by the early Metropolitan Police

Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Charles Rowan andSir Richard Mayne were appointed the new force's firstCommissioners and this has remained its highest rank, unlike other modern British police forces, which are led byChief Constables. The two Commissioners' original headquarters was nearGovernment, at 4Whitehall Place,[citation needed] with a back entrance onGreat Scotland Yard.Scotland Yard soon became established as a name for the force itself.[8] Once formed, the force became the third official non-paramilitary city police force in the world, after theCity of Glasgow Police and theParis Police. Due to public fears concerning the deployment of the military in domestic matters, Robert Peel organised the force along civilian lines, rather thanparamilitary. To appear neutral, the uniform was deliberately manufactured in blue, rather than red which was then a military colour, along with the officers being armed only with a woodentruncheon and arattle to signal the need for assistance. Until 1864, police officers also wore top hats, to complete the civilian look.[9] Along with this,police ranks did not include military titles, with the exception ofSergeant.[10] The original standard wage for a Constable was oneguinea (£1.05) a week. Recruitment criteria required applicants to be under the age of 35, in good health, and to be at least 5 ft 7 in (1.70 m). Working shifts lasted 12 hours, 6 days a week, with Sunday as a rest day. Until 1897, Metropolitan Police officers did not receive a boot allowance.

Joseph Sadler Thomas in uniform as first Superintendent of the Metropolitan Police's F (Covent Garden) Division between 1829 and 1833. Previously a parish constable forSt Paul's, Covent Garden, he later became Deputy Constable ofManchester City Police (1833–1839).

The civilian ethos also meant that the force did not routinely carry firearms, although Sir Robert Peel authorised the Commissioners to purchase fiftyflintlock pocket pistols for use in exceptional circumstances, such as those which involved the use of firearms. At the time,burglary (or "house breaking" as it was then called) was a common problem for police. "House breakers" were usually armed. It was then also legal (under theBill of Rights 1689) for members of the public who wereProtestants, as most were, to own and use firearms.[11]

19th century

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1829-1838

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Metropolitan Police patrols took to the streets on 29 September 1829, despite resistance from certain elements of the community who saw them to be a threat tocivil liberties.[12] The initial force consisted of twoCommissioners, eightSuperintendents, 20Inspectors, 88Sergeants and 895Constables.[13] Patrolling the streets within a seven-mile (11 km) radius ofCharing Cross, in order to prevent crime and pursue offenders.[14]

Between 1829 and 1830, 17 localdivisions each with a centralpolice station were established, with each division assigned a letter.[15] These divisions were:[16][17]

  • A (Whitehall)
  • B (Westminster[a])
  • C (St James's)
  • D (Marylebone)
  • E (Holborn)
  • F (Covent Garden)
  • G (Finsbury)
  • H (Whitechapel)
  • K (Stepney[b])
  • L (Lambeth)
  • M (Southwark)
  • N (Islington)
  • P (Camberwell)
  • R (Greenwich)
  • S (Hampstead)
  • T (Kensington[c])
  • V (Wandsworth)
Text on the poster reads: "The Press having misrepresented and vilified us and our intentions, the Demonstration Committee therefore consider it to be their duty to state that the grievances of us (the Working Classes) are deep and our demands just. We and our families are pining in misery, want, and starvation ! We demand a fair day's wages for a fair day's work! We are the slaves of capital - we demand protection to our labour. We are political serfs - we demand to be free. We therefore invite all well disposed to join in our peaceful procession on MONDAY NEXT, April 10 as it is for the good of all that we seek to remove the evils under which we groan."
Flyer for theChartist demonstration onKennington Common, 1848

On 28 June 1830, ConstableJoseph Grantham became the first member of the force to be killed in the line of duty, an incident described by the Coroner's Inquest as "justifiable homicide".[18] Other indications of the Constabulary's unpopularity of the time, were such nicknames as 'Raw Lobsters', 'Blue Devils' and 'Peel's Bloody Gang'. Officers were physically assaulted, othersimpaled, blinded, and on one occasion held down while a vehicle was driven over them.

1839-1859

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In 1840, as a result of thesecond Metropolitan Police Act the previous year, the MPD was expanded to a 15-mile radius from Charing Cross, theFoot Patrol, theHorse Patrol and the River Police were amalgamated with the Metropolitan Police (the last of the three as Thames Division), and the Bow Street Runners were disbanded (with its personnel moved to the Metropolitan Police). Peel had hoped the Met might also incorporate the City of London butanother 1839 Act confirmed an independentCity of London Police (CoLP), which survives until this day. The River Police was renamed Thames Division, expanding from its origins in London's commercial docks to cover the whole section of theRiver Thames within the MPD - this included the stretch along the south bank of theCity of London (since CoLP did not maintain its own river police) and originally stretched fromBrentford toBlackwall before later being extended eastwards to the Thames-Darent confluence.[19]

The Metropolitan Police was formed without detectives since that role had previously been undertaken by the Runners, but in 1842 it formed a new investigative force named the "Detective Branch". It initially consisted of twoInspectors, sixSergeants and a number ofConstables.[20] One of its first cases was theBermondsey Horror of 1849, in which a married couple, Frederick andMarie Manning, murdered Patrick O'Connor and buried his body under the kitchen floor. After going on the run they were tracked down by Detective Sergeants Thornton and Langley and publicly hanged outsideHorsemonger Gaol inSouthwark.[21]

One of the Metropolitan Police's priorities from the outset was maintaining public order, particularly theChartist demonstrations in 1839, 1842 and 1848. Sixty Met officers were also dispatched toBirmingham in July of that year where they were involved in the suppression ofChartist meetings leading to theBull Ring Riots.[22] The Met was also supplemented for public order purposes bySpecial Constables, first introduced by theSpecial Constables Act 1831, empowering Magistrates to appoint ordinary citizens as temporary police officers in times of emergency.[23] In 1834, the Act had been extended to allow citizens appointed as Specials to act outside of their Parish area.[23] They proved particularly valuable against the final Chartist demonstrations in 1848, when 150,000 Specials were sworn in to assist regular officers in preventing Chartists from reaching Kennington and then marching to Westminster.[23]

An 1850s Metropolitan Police 'Peeler'

When Sir Charles Rowan died, another army officer,William Hay, was drafted in to jointly run the force with Mayne. However, tensions between them meant that on Hay's death in 1855 a new system of a single Commissioner and twoAssistant Commissioners was established. In 1857 Matne was paid a salary of £1,883 (roughly equivalent to £191,100 in 2021),[24] and his two Assistant Commissioners were paid salaries £800 each,[25] approximately £81,190 in 2021.[24]

1860–1899

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In 1860, the Metropolitan Police also took on responsibility for the policing of theRoyal Dockyards and other royal naval bases between 1860 until 1934, includingPortsmouth, Chatham,Devonport, Royal Naval Air Station Pembroke, and theRoyal Woolwich Arsenal. It took some time to establish the standards of discipline expected today from a police force. In 1863, 215 officers were arrested for being intoxicated while on duty,[25] In 1872 there was a police strike, and during 1877 three high ranking detectives were tried for corruption.[26] Due to this latter scandal the Detective Branch was re-organised in 1878 byC. E. Howard Vincent, and renamed theCriminal Investigation Department (CID). This was separated from theuniformed branch, and its head had direct access to the Home Secretary, by-passing the Commissioner.[20]

Beaument Adams Revolver
Webley "Bulldog" Revolver

Following the deaths of officers by firearms on the outerdistricts of themetropolis, and public debate on arming the force, the Commissioner applied to the Home Secretary[when?] for authorisation to supply officers on the outer districts with revolvers. The authorisation was issued on the condition that revolvers would only be issued if, in the opinion of the senior officer, the officer could be trusted to use it safely and with discretion. From then, officers could be armed. The vast majority of this system had been phased out by the end of the 19th century, though the practice only wholly ceased in 1936 with the revocation of authorisation to carry revolvers on outer districts. The 1860s also saw the decommissioning of the flintlock pistols purchased in 1829. They were superseded by 622Beaumont–Adams revolvers firing the.450 cartridge, which were loaned to the police by the Army after theClerkenwell bombing. In 1883, officers were surveyed as to whether they wished to be armed. 4,430 out of 6,325 officers serving on outer divisions requested to the issue revolvers. The now obsolete Beaumont-Adams revolver was returned to stores for emergencies, and theBulldog 'Metropolitan Police' revolver was issued to officers on the outer districts who felt the need to be armed.

In 1865 three more divisions were created: W (Clapham), X (Willesden), and Y (Highgate[d]). F Division was abolished by the late 1860s and its territory merged into E Division. From 1869 onwards the Met's Divisions were grouped as Districts, each initially headed by a District Superintendent:[e]

  • No. 1 District - G, H, K, N, and Thames Divisions[f][g]
  • No. 2 District - D, E, S, X, and Y Divisions[h]
  • No. 3 District - A, B, C, T, and V Divisions[i][j]
  • No. 4 District - L, M, P, R, and W Divisions[k]

In March 1883, the MPS formed the Special Irish Branch to combat the threat of Irish terrorism. The "Irish" sobriquet was dropped in 1888 as the department remit was extended to cover other threats, and became known simply asSpecial Branch.[27][28] In 1884, the MPS replaced thehand rattles used by officers to signal for assistance since 1829 with "policewhistles".J.Hudson & Company of Birmingham supplied 7,175 whistles at the price of 11d each.

At the same time, the Metropolitan Police also replaced its police truncheons. In 1886, in quelling a riot between warring working parties inHyde Park, many truncheons were damaged or broken. Ross & Company supplied them withlignum vitae truncheons. Samples were sent off to be tested by the Royal Army Clothing Department, at a cost of 16 shillings per day. Thelignum vitae truncheons were found unsuitable and so in October 1886 the Metropolitan Police purchased £900 worth oflancewood and cocuswood for new truncheons. Important criminal investigations of the period included theWhitechapel murders (1888) and theCleveland Street scandal (1889).[29]

A depiction of a dense crowd being physically subdued by police in the street. Tall buildings are in the backround. In the forground, an officer in a long tunic and helmet wrestles a flag from a woman while men are on their knees shielding themselves from blows. Above them, a man raises a stick to strike someone. Other truncheons and sticks can be seen raised in background. To the right of the picture, people can be seen running away from police, two men carry a large marching drum above their heads as they do so.
A contemporary engraving fromThe Illustrated London News of Bloody Sunday in 1887

1886 also saw the creation of a new J (Bethnal Green[l]) and F (Paddington) Divisions.[30] On the night of 18 February 1887,PC 52206 Henry Owen became the first Metropolitan Police officer to fire a revolver while on duty, doing so after he was unable to alert the owners of premises on fire. The Metropolitan Police also continued policing demonstrations such as that by the unemployed inTrafalgar Square in 1887 which came to be known asBloody Sunday.[31] Officers on duty during thejubilee celebrations the same year were eligible for theQueen Victoria Police Jubilee Medal, with similar police-specific medals following for the jubilee of 1897 and the coronations in1902 and1911.[32]

20th century

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1900–1918

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By 1900, the service had grown to nearly 16,000 officers, organised into 21 divisions, responsible for law enforcement within an area of nearly 1,800 km2.[20] Detection of crimes was much improved whenSir Edward Henry, Commissioner from 1903 to 1918, set up a Fingerprint Bureau atScotland Yard in 1901, building onAzizul Haque andHem Chandra Bose's work with him in India.[33] A landmark case for the Met in forensic investigation was theStratton Brothers case of 1905, concerning a doublemurder inDeptford, committed by Alfred and Albert Stratton, the first murder conviction in the UK secured by fingerprint evidence.[34] Another important investigation of this period was that into the murdererHawley Harvey Crippen in 1910.[33]

Headline reads: "Police constable Tyler, who was murdered by alien terrorists at Tottenham, given a hero's funeral". Photos of the procession, dignitaries in attandance, and a photo of the officer's wife "for whom a fund is being raised."
TheDaily Mirror front page reporting the funeral of PC William Tyler, the Metropolitan Police officer killed during theTottenham Outrage, 1909
Sergeants Tucker and Bentley and Constable Choate, murdered while on duty on 16 December 1910

Two robberies byLatvian anarchists reopened the debate over arming the Metropolitan and City police forces. The first in 1909 led to the pursuit known as theTottenham Outrage, in which officers borrowed bystanders' guns and one officer was fatally shot by the robbers. The second inHoundsditch on 16 December 1910 led to the murder of threeCity of London Police constables and theSiege of Sidney Street by the Metropolitan and City police forces. In this siege the two forces were supplemented by a detachment ofScots Guards from theTower of London, authorised by Home SecretaryWinston Churchill who had come to see the siege in person.[35] The gang members were killed on 2 January 1911 and in the wake of the incident one thousand self-loadingWebley & Scott pistols were purchased by the Metropolitan Police. In 1914 the Bulldogs were withdrawn from service after thirty-one years' service and returned to stores. The Specials were also reorganised in 1912, scrapping the old system of anyone being liable to be appointed, instead they had to volunteer.[23]

During World War One theWomen's Police Service (WPS) andNational Union of Women Workers (NUWW) ran voluntary patrols to assist county and city police forces such as the Metropolitan Police, though they were not formally parts of these forces and had no power of arrest.[36] Policing ofRosyth Dockyard was added to the Metropolitan Police's remit in 1916, a role they held until 1926. Concerns over worsening pay and conditions led almost all Met officers to join astrike in 1918 and 1156 officers to join another in August the following year.

1919–1929

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Female full police officers first joined the Metropolitan Police in February 1919, although the then Commissioner, SirNevil Macready, insisted he did not want any “vinegary spinsters” or “blighted middle-aged fanatics” in its ranks.[36] The female police officers were distinguished from their male counterparts, who had wider authority, by the prefix 'woman' before their rank, such as "Woman Police Constable" and "Woman Police Sergeant". They were headed bySofia Stanley, who also designed the first women's police uniform, known as the Stanley uniform.[citation needed] Initial duties of female police officers included patrolling areas frequented by prostitutes, along with care and observation of female and juvenile detainees, deterring prostitution, helping prevent the deceitful practice of fortune telling, and looking after women attempting to commit suicide.[36] Female officers were allowed to go into brothels, nightclubs, and betting houses to observe and gather evidence of untoward behaviour, but at the first sign of crime being committed, they had to call in male colleagues. They were also not allowed to carry handcuffs unless instructed to by a senior officer.[37]

Sofia Stanley in NUWW patrol officer uniform - from 1919 to 1923 she led the Met's first official female patrols

1921 saw the addition of a new Z (Croydon) Division, carved out of parts of W Division, but the following year the post-war budget cutbacks known as theGeddes Axe led the Met to begin phasing out its dockyard divisions in 1923 (a process finally completed in 1934) and attempt to abolish its female officers after only four years.[38] Though it lost her her job, Sofia Stanley successfully fought this attempt and instead a cadre of twenty female officers was allowed to continue as a seed-bed for future growth. In the wake of theSex Disqualification (Removal) Act 1919 they were granted the power of arrest for the first time and posted to various areas of the Met, with Louise Pelling attached to Special Branch andLilian Wyles joining the Criminal Investigation Department as a statement-taker for sexual-offence cases, the CID's first attested female officer.[39] They worked early and late shifts, each of 7.5 hours, but until 1973 only one week of night shifts in contrast to three consecutive weeks of night shifts for men.[40] A policy was introduced in 1927 requiring women to leave the Metropolitan Police if they got married.

1930s

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In 1931,Marshal of the Royal Air ForceThe 1st Baron Trenchard wasappointed as Police Commissioner.[41] Lord Trenchard served as head of theMetropolitan Police until 1935 and during his tenure he instigated several changes. These included limiting membership of thePolice Federation, introducing limited terms of employment[42] and the short-lived creation of separate career paths for the lower and higher ranks akin to the military system of officer and non-commissioned career streams. Perhaps Trenchard's most well known achievement during his time as Commissioner was the establishment of theHendon Police College which originally was the institution from which Trenchard's junior stationinspectors graduated before following a career in the higher ranks.[43]

Trenchard gave the special constables their current name of theMetropolitan Special Constabulary (MSC) in 1934.[23] For a short period of time after the MSC was formed, Specials did not receive uniforms like that of a full-time policeman. Instead, they were issued with armbands which identified them as Special Constables, along with being issued a truncheon and a whistle. Trenchard also standardised the issue of pistols among divisions with the division size determining the number of firearms (with thirty-two rounds per pistol) issued: ten pistols with 320 rounds of ammunition were issued to each divisional station; six pistols with 192 rounds to each sub-divisional station; three pistols with 96 rounds to each section station. In 1936, just after his term as Commissioner, the authorisation to carry revolvers on outer districts was revoked, and at the same timeCanadian Ross rifles were purchased in the prelude to theSecond World War. In 1937 female Met officers were for the first time authorised to take fingerprints.[citation needed]

1939–1945

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WhenGreat Britain entered theSecond World War on 3 September 1939, the strength of the Metropolitan Police stood at 18,428, which was 900officers short of full strength. Due to the increased responsibilities of the police during war-time, three reserve groups were mobilised. The first consisted of 2,737 ex-police pensioners who were re-engaged, a second of 5,380Special Constables serving on a full-time basis for the duration of the war, and the third being 18,868 War Reserve Constables employed on the same basis as the Special Constables. After having remained stable for decades, crime rates in London soared during the war, posing a new challenge to police. The chaotic conditions of the City underaerial attack were followed by crime, such as looting, and theft of goods and foodstuffs for illicit sales as black marketrationed goods. This also fuelled the activities of criminal gangs who continued and expanded their activities after the war.

16 Met detectives were transferred to the Army to form its newSpecial Investigation Branch. As theBattle of Dunkirk raged,Scotland Yard issued amemorandum detailing thepolice use of firearms in wartime. The memorandum detailed the planned training for all officers in the use ofpistols andrevolvers, as despite the police being anon-combatant force, while the war was in progress they would be responsible for providing armed protection at premises deemed at risk from enemysabotage and would assist theBritish Armed Forces in the event of an invasion. Owing to these added roles, on 1 June 1940, 3,500Canadian Ross Rifles and 72,384 rounds of.303 ammunition were received from the military and distributed amongdivisions.Thames Division were allocated the smallest number of 61 rifles, and "S" Division the largest with 190. Fifty rifles were also issued to theLondon Fire Brigade and thePort of London Authority Police.

1945–1959

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The rise in criminality continued in the post-war period - by 1948 the number of recorded crimes in London had risen tenfold from the 1920s, to more than 126,000. By 1959 they had reached 160,000.[44] Having been waived during the war, the marriage bar on female officers was permanently abolished in 1946 and two years later the Police Federation, the rank-and-file staff association, opened its membership to women.[36]

On the night of 2 November 1952,Derek Bentley and Christopher Craig set out to break into the confectionery manufacturers Barlow & Parker inCroydon. Bentley and Craig were spotted climbing up a drain pipe to gain access to the roof by a member of the public, who called the police. The first officer to arrive on scene wasDetective SergeantFrederick Fairfax; by this time both Bentley and Craig had hidden behind the lift shaft. DS Fairfax gained entry to the roof and apprehended Bentley, but while doing so was shot in the shoulder by Craig. Upon armed uniformed officers arriving, Constable Sidney Miles was shot dead by Craig. After trial, Bentley was sentenced to death and hanged on 28 January 1953, whilst Craig was remandedat Her Majesty's Pleasure and released from prison in 1963.

DS Fairfax, PC Norman Harrison and PC James McDonald were all awarded theGeorge Cross for their roles in the incident, whilst Constable Robert Jaggs was awarded theBritish Empire Medal and Sidney Miles a posthumousQueen's Police Medal for Gallantry. In the aftermath of the shooting, 15% of firearms in service with the Metropolitan Police were found to be defective, leading toSpecial Branch andRoyalty Protection Officers being armed with an early version of theBeretta automatic pistol. The 1950s also saw the Metropolitan Police's first women officers to receive George Medals for courage, SergeantEthel Bush and Kathleen Parrott, who had been separately attacked by a sex offender whilst on a decoy duty in 1955.[citation needed]

Since 1951, in common with all members of U.K. police forces, officers can receive thePolice Long Service and Good Conduct Medal after 20 (formerly 22) years of duty.[45]

1960–1978

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Before the 1970s, police forces often called for assistance from the Metropolitan Police because of their detective experience. The last case of this kind was when the now defunctBuckinghamshire Constabulary called upon the MPS to help in the investigation of theGreat Train Robbery.[46] In 1965 the last of the Met's territorial divisions was formed and named Q (Wembley[m]) in 1965, formed out of part of X Division.[47] In 1966 three male Metropolitan Police officers were murdered onBraybrook Street byHarry Roberts and two other occupants of a vehicle who had been stopped for questioning. The force enlistedNorwell Roberts (its firstWindrush generation black officer) in 1967, followed by its first black female officerSislin Fay Allen the following year.[36] 1968 saw the abolition of the groupings of divisions known as Districts, ninety-nine years after their formation.[48] The end of the 1960s also saw the Met's old alphabetical Divisions renamed Districts and Sub-Divisions renamed Divisions.[15]

Metropolitan Police Officers in Hyde Park, 1976

London saw many protests during the 1950s and 1960s, turning violent on more than one occasion, with police clashing with violent protesters and making newspaper headlines. The Metropolitan Police realised it needed a unit specifically trained for public order duties and in 1961 formed theSpecial Patrol Group (SPG), whose officers received higher training in public order policing than ordinary officers on the beat. From 1973 until the 1990s the Metropolitan Police also faced the London facet of theProvisional IRA bombing campaign, involvinga large number of bombings.[49] This also included theBalcombe Street Siege from 6 to 12 December 1975, in which Provisional IRA members took a couple hostage in their home, while on the run from police.[50]

On 1 February 1971,Karpal Kaur Sandhu, born inZanzibar but of Indian heritage, joined the Metropolitan Police and thus became the Metropolitan Police's (and Britain's) first female Asian police officer.[51] This was before India itself had female police officers (the first female police officer in India wasKiran Bedi in 1972).[51] In 1973, the separate Women's Department was fully integrated into the Metropolitan Police.[36] Female police officers did not get equal pay with male police officers until 1974.[citation needed]

Twelve officers in the Obscene Publications Branch were imprisoned for corruption in connection with bribes paid byJames Humphreys (pornographer).[52]

In theSpaghetti House siege on 18 September 1975 alleged members of theBlack Liberation Army attempted to commit an armed robbery at the Spaghetti House restaurant to gain publicity for their cause. However, the robbery was discovered by the Metropolitan Police, and the would-be robbers initiated a siege by taking hostages.[53] In 1976 the first Woman Chief Superintendent was appointed to take charge of a subdivision.[54] In 1977 Dee O’Donoghue became the first female traffic officer.[54]

Met Police officer in 1974 wearing a blue shirt which was phased out in the 1980s.

The 1970s also saw frequent allegations ofinstitutional racism against the Metropolitan Police, such as the case of theMangrove Nine in 1970 and theNotting Hill Carnival disturbances on 30 August 1976, triggered by Metropolitan Police officers attempting to arrest an alleged pickpocket at the Carnival and leading to over 100 officers admitted to hospital.[55] The late 1970s also sawOperation Countryman investigate allegations of endemic corruption in the 1960s and 1970s. It concluded that there had been corruption at many levels. Only eight prosecutions were brought but several hundred officers retired or resigned as a result.

1979–1985

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Brixton Riot 1981

TeacherBlair Peach was knocked unconscious in April 1979 during a demonstration in Southall by the Anti-Nazi League against a National Front election meeting taking place in the town hall, dying the next day in hospital. Police brutality was never proven to be a contributory factor in his death, but it was claimed that he had fallen to a blow from a rubberised police radio belonging to the Met's Special Patrol Group, one of many accusations of brutality which ultimately led to its disbandment and replacement by theTerritorial Support Group in 1986.[56][57] In 2010, a police report was disclosed that stated that it was likely a Metropolitan Police officer "struck the fatal blow" and attributed "grave suspicion" to one unnamed officer, who it says may also have been involved in a cover-up along with two colleagues.[58]

1979 also saw Nicola Grey became the Met's first female dog handler.[54] Prior to this, women were prohibited from being dog handlers since rules stated that an officer should have a wife who could look after a puppy while the officer went to work.[citation needed] The Met was heavily involved in negotiations during the 1980Iranian Embassy siege, though these were terminated after six days and theBritish Army'sSpecial Air Service (SAS) stormed the building.[59] A 1985 reorganisation established eight Areas made up of a total of 67 Divisions and Sub-Divisions, reduced to 62 spread over five Areas in 1995.[15][60]

During the early 1980s, the Met began Operation Swamp which was implemented to cut street crime by the use of thesus law which legally allowed officers to stop people on the suspicion of wrongdoing. Tensions rose within the black community after a black youth was stabbed, leading tosevere rioting on 11 April 1981.[61] Later that year a report issued byLord Scarman stated that the Metropolitan Police were having problems regardingracial discrimination.[62]

In 1983, Metropolitan officers arrested serial killerDennis Nilsen.[63] The following year WPCYvonne Fletcher was murdered outside the Libyan Embassy.Rioting erupted again in Brixton on 28 September 1985, sparked by the shooting of Dorothy Groce by police seeking her son Michael Groce, who was believed to be hiding in his mother's home, in relation to a suspected firearms offence. He was not there at the time, and Groce was part-paralysed by the bullet.[64] A week later, while tensions among the black community were still high,riots broke out at the Broadwater Farm estate in Tottenham, north London, after the mother of a black man whose house was being searched died of a heart attack during the operation. During the riot, PCKeith Blakelock was murdered. Blakelock's murder remains unsolved.[65]

1986–1992

[edit]

Metropolitan Police officers worked with the British Transport Police and neighbouring forces to arrest and convictJohn Duffy and David Mulcahy, for 18 rapes of women and young girls at or near railway stations in London andSouth East England and murdering three of their victims between 1982 and 1986.[66] In 1986 Met officers also secured the conviction ofKenneth Erskine for a series of attacks in Stockwell on elderly men and women, breaking into their homes and strangling them to death.[67] In March 1987 private investigatorDaniel Morgan was murdered inSydenham (south east London), in March 1987. He was said to have been close to exposing police corruption, or involved with Maltese drug dealers. Morgan's death has been the subject of several failed police inquiries, and in 2011 it was at the centre of allegations concerning the suspect conduct of journalists with the British tabloidNews of the World. This unsolved murder has been described as a reminder of the culture of corruption and unaccountability within the Metropolitan Police Service[who?]. An independent enquiry in 2021 concluded that the Metropolitan Police were "institutionally corrupt" in its handling of the investigation into the murder of Daniel Morgan and that the force had placed protecting its reputation above the investigation.

Metropolitan Police officers assisted the British Transport Police during the 1987King's Cross fire[68] and the 1988Clapham Junction rail crash.[69]

Poll Tax Riot, 1990

The official title was changed from "Metropolitan Police" to "Metropolitan Police Service" as part of the "PLUS Programme" in 1989, under the then CommissionerSir Peter Imbert, following the presentation of a report entitled "A Service for Change: Report on the Corporate Identity of the Metropolitan Police" to the service's Policy Committee byWolff Olins corporate identity consultants in August 1988.[70] TheMetropolitan Police Marine Policing Unit assisted in the aftermath of the 1989Marchioness disaster,[71] whilst in 1990 the Service was faced with thePoll tax riots.[72] There was a great deal of media coverage of the 1992killing of Rachel Nickell, after which a policesting operation against innocentprime suspect Colin Stagg was criticised asentrapment.Robert Napper, who committed a double murder in 1993, was convicted of themanslaughter of Nickell in 2008.

1993–1999

[edit]

From 1993, a series of operations failed to convict themurderers of Stephen Lawrence, despite substantial evidence. The resulting MacPherson inquiry found that the Met was "institutionally racist".[73] Tensions with the Black community also led to athird Brixton riot in 1995, arising from a large protest outside Brixton police station over the death of a local man in police custody - three police officers were injured and a two-mile exclusion zone was set up around Brixton. Later reports showed that the male in custody died of heart failure, said to be brought on because of difficulties restraining him.[74]

1999 was a full year for the service, including the murder ofJill Dando, the1999 London nail bombings,[75] the fatalshooting of Harry Stanley 100 yards from his home by Metropolitan police officers in contentious circumstances, the dropping of the prefix "Woman" from female officers' ranks and theMacpherson Report, which stated thatinstitutional racism existed in the service.[76] In the two decades before 2010, over 50 serving MPS officers died in service, with eight being murdered or fatally injured by an assailant.[77]

1999 was also the year in which theMetropolitan Police District was finally made coterminous with Greater London and the old system of areas and divisions gave way to a system of oneBorough Operational Command Unit (BOCU) for each of the thirty-two post-1965London boroughs, each commanded by aChief Superintendent (or aCommander for the City of Westminster), an arrangement which lasted until 2018.[78][79]

21st century

[edit]

2000–2009

[edit]
Metropolitan Police Service officers in Soho, London, 2007

The service continued to be overseen directly by the Home Secretary until 2000, when the newly createdGreater London Authority was given responsibility to oversee the force, through theMetropolitan Police Authority. The MPA is made up of members appointed by theMayor of London and theLondon Assembly, and several independent members. Parts of the Met district outside Greater London, such asEwell,Loughton andWaltham Cross. were removed and added to the forces of surrounding counties. The Metropolitan Police Commissioner is still appointed by the Home Secretary.[80] Thames Division was renamed the Marine Support Unit in 2001 and then theMarine Policing Unit in 2008.[81]

In an attempt to control crowds during the 2001 May Day protest, the service employed the tactic of "kettling", and were criticised for detaining bystanders for long periods of time.[82] That year,the dismembered body of a young boy believed to have been between the ages of four and seven was found floating in the River Thames, and named by police asAdam in the absence of a confirmed identity. During the investigation, a police commander and a detective chief inspector met withNelson Mandela.[83] The case was never solved.[84] An internal report in 2002 arising fromOperation Tiberius found that "Organised criminals were able to infiltrate Scotland Yard at will by bribing corrupt officers". Demonstrators protesting against theHunting Act 2004 outside thePalace of Westminster in 2004 were involved in violent confrontations with Metropolitan Police officers.[85]

The Metropolitan Police worked to a major incident plan to provide co-ordination, control and forensic and investigative resources after the7 July 2005 bombings in 2005,[86] though in the aftermath ofmultiple attempted attacks two weeks later officers mistookJean Charles de Menezes for a suspected terrorist as he boarded a train and shot him dead in a deployment ofOperation Kratos.[87] In 2006, officers from the Met and other forces foiled aTransatlantic aircraft bomb plot,[88][89] whilstOperation Trident officers also made the Met's largest ever seizure of firearms after a series of raids in Dartford, Kent named Operation Mokpo.[90] Met bomb disposal officers defused atwo car bombs in central London in 2007, with the perpetrators subsequently investigated and convicted. A 2007 cold case review of Stephen Lawrence's murder found a tiny speck of Lawrence's blood on a jacket belonging to Dobson and one of Lawrence's hairs on trousers belonging to Norris, leading to the conviction of Gary Dobson and David Norris on 3 January 2012.[91] The pair were sentenced to life imprisonment, with a minimum term of 15 years 2 months for Dobson and 14 years 3 months for Norris.[92]

The Met deployed some of their specialist riot vehicles, similar to this one pictured, to the 2009 G-20 protests

Following high-profile controversies involving high-ranking black officers, including allegations of racism made byTarique Ghaffur – the highest ranking Asian officer in the Met – against commissionerIan Blair, theNational Black Police Association boycotted the Met in 2008 for racial discrimination. The Met once again used the "kettling" technique to contain large numbers of demonstrators during the2009 G20 London summit protests. A bystander namedIan Tomlinson died from internal bleeding after he was hit with a baton and pushed to the ground by an officer of the Territorial Support Group.[93] The jury at the inquest into Tomlinson's death returned a verdict of unlawful killing and the officer who pushed Tomlinson was later acquitted of manslaughter. Following a separate incident, a sergeant in the Territorial Support Group was suspended after being filmed striking a woman's face with his hand and her leg with a baton, but he was later cleared of any wrongdoing.[94]

2010–2014

[edit]
Metropolitan Police officers overseeing the "Protest the Pope" rally on 18 September 2010

The Met oversaw preparations forPope Benedict XVI's 2010 visit, the first state visit to the UK by a pope.[95] 201 people were arrested during the2011 London anti-cuts protest, and 66 were injured, including 31 police officers, as up to 500,000 people demonstrated in central London against planned public spending cuts. It was described as the largest protest in the United Kingdom since the15 February 2003 anti-war protests and the largest union-organised rally in London since the Second World War. The Met'sOperation Minstead concluded after 12 years on 24 March 2011 with the conviction of the Night Stalker. Delroy Grant raped and assaulted elderly victims over a period of 17 years from 1992 to 2009 across south London, Kent and Surrey. He was found guilty of 29 charges, including burglaries, rapes and sexual assaults, but officers linked him to over 200 different offences during the 1990s and 2000s.[96] Grant was given four life sentences and ordered to serve a minimum of 27 years in prison.[97] The 2006–2011News International phone hacking scandal partly revolved around allegations that some Met officers accepted payment from journalists in exchange for information.[98]

Around 5,000 Metropolitan Police officers were deployed to police the wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton at Westminster Abbey on 29 April 2011. In advance of the event, assistant commissioner Lynne Owens said: "People who want to come to London to peacefully protest can do that but they must remember that it is a day of national celebration". Approximately one hundred people were pre-emptively arrested in advance of the wedding and were detained without charge for the duration of the wedding, with the apparent aim of suppressing protest. Other protestors were arrested on the day of the wedding; some were detained at railway stations on arrival. The Metropolitan Police said that one million people were present in London to watch the wedding procession.[99] On 4 August the same year,Mark Duggan was shot by Metropolitan Police Service officers,[100] triggering a series of public disturbances, initially in theTottenham but spreading into many other areas of London and including instances of arson andlooting. Dozens of officers were injured and the Met launched Operation Withern to investigate the disturbances.[101] Also in 2011 the Home Office asked the Met to support the Portuguese Police with a review and subsequent investigation into thedisappearance of Madeleine McCann in Portugal four years earlier, which becameOperation Grange.[102] Home office provide special funding for the operation which up until September 2017 cost £11.1 million.[103]

The2012 Summer Olympics were the largest ever police deployment in the UK, including up to 10,500 Met officers deployed during the busiest days.[104] The Met also established Operation Yewtree that year to investigateallegations against Jimmy Savile; in 2013 their findings on Savile were published in a joint report withNational Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children calledGiving Victims a Voice.[105] Yewtree expanded to investigate allegations of sexual abuse unrelated to Savile and led to the convictions ofMax Clifford andRolf Harris, amongst others.[106] Other celebrities were arrested and repeatedly bailed for months before being told they would not be charged. As a result, then-Home SecretaryTheresa May proposed that bail time be limited to 28 days.[107] The 28-day limit came into effect in April 2017.[108]

In June 2013, the Met were exposed for sending an undercover officer to smear the friends and family of Stephen Lawrence.[109] The following year it was revealed more than 4,600 children had beenstrip searched by the Metropolitan Police in the preceding five years, with the youngest being ten years old. This was out of a total of 134,000 strip-searched. A charity described the number of younger children searched in this way as being "disturbing".[110] In October 2013 the Met, English Transport Police, City of London Police, and Transport for London jointly launchedProject Guardian to reduce sexual harassment on public transport and increase reporting of sexual offences.[111] The following month officers from the Met's human trafficking unitarrested two suspects inLambeth who were alleged to have enslaved three women in a house for over 30 years.[112]

In September 2014 it launched the largest investigation since the 2005 bombings and attempted bombings after thedisappearance of Alice Gross.[113] That year it also launchedOperation Midland after Carl Beech, then known publicly under the pseudonym "Nick", alleged that he had been the victim of aVIP paedophile ring and that he had witnessed them murder three boys decades earlier. Detective Superintendent Kenny McDonald issued a statement in which he said that they believed Beech's allegations were "credible and true" but the probe was closed after 16 months when no evidence was found to corroborate the claims.[114] A report byRichard Henriques detailed numerous failings by the Met and found that those accused were victims of false allegations, prompting then-CommissionerBernard Hogan-Howe to apologise to them.[115] Hogan-Howe called for the Met to change their approach to such allegations and no longer automatically believe complainants.[116] Beech was convicted of charges related to lying to the police in July 2019 and was sentenced to 18 years in jail.[116]

2015–2019

[edit]
This section needs to beupdated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(March 2021)

In 2015, former Metropolitan Police Special Branch officer Peter Francis revealed that the MPS has spied on several former and servingLabour MPs includingHarriet Harman,Peter Hain,Jack Straw,Diane Abbott,Jeremy Corbyn,Bernie Grant,Ken Livingstone,Tony Benn,Joan Ruddock andDennis Skinner. In response, Peter Hain stated: "That the special branch had a file on me dating back 40 years ago to anti-apartheid and anti-Nazi League activist days is hardly revelatory. That these files were still active for at least 10 years while I was an MP certainly is and raises fundamental questions about parliamentary sovereignty."[117]

Met Police at a protest, 2018

In 2017, the Metropolitan Police stated that they would not investigate low level crimes and crimes where finding a suspect was unlikely, though serious crimes like violent offences would still be investigated. The Metropolitan Police justified this due to recent budget cuts under theUnited Kingdom government austerity programme, but it was criticised in the press as giving the "green light" to thieves.[118] 2017 also sawCressida Dick became the first female Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police Service, a position often described in the media as the most senior police officer in the country,[36] andNew Scotland Yard reopen in its new site at theCurtis Green Building.[119]

2017 also found the Met involved in countering and investigating terror attacks inWestminster (in which PCKeith Palmer was killed)[120] and onLondon Bridge and Borough Market, as well as its officers using riot shields to protect firefighters from falling debris during theGrenfell Tower fire.[121] The devastating fire led to an extensive forensic and criminal investigation involving around 250 Met officers.[122] Commander Stuart Cundy said "I would like to reassure everybody that we will be looking at all criminal offences that might have been committed by any individual or any organisation."[123] In 2018, itsCounter Terrorism Command led the investigation into achemical agentincident inSalisbury,Wiltshire, in which two couples were hospitalised over the course of three months.[citation needed]

2020–present

[edit]
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This sectionneeds expansion. You can help byadding missing information.(March 2021)

On 3 March 2021,Sarah Everard disappeared in South London. On 10 March, she was found dead in Kent. On 12 March, Met PCWayne Couzens was charged with kidnapping and murdering her. On 13 March, he was remanded in custody and - pleading guilty - was sentenced on 30 September the same year.[124] The Met were criticised for their reaction to a vigil-turned-protest for Everard which were held on 13 and 14 March.[125] The vigils - in which hundreds of people gathered in close proximity - were illegal due to laws implemented to reduce the spread ofCOVID-19.[125] The actions of the police were supported byHer Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire & Rescue Services (HMICFRS), who had been asked to investigate the actions of the police. Their review, published on 30 March, found that the police had "reacted appropriately and were not heavy handed" and were "justified" in their stance with respect to the Covid regulations, saying that the risks of transmission were "too great to ignore".[126]

The HMICFRS report also said "Condemnation of the Met’s actions within mere hours of the vigil – including from people in positions of responsibility – was unwarranted, showed a lack of respect for public servants facing a complex situation, and undermined public confidence in policing based on very limited evidence."[127] They also said that the police response was a "public relations disaster" with a "materially adverse effect on public confidence in policing"; the review added, "We acknowledge that a more conciliatory response might have served the force's interests better."[128][129][130][131] HMICFRS also concluded that the Met had incorrectly interpreted coronavirus-related restrictions due to legal confusion, and that not all demonstrations during a Tier 4 lockdown are unlawful.[128][129] Awhistleblower alleged that the reviewers had demonstrated a pro-police and anti-protestor bias while compiling the report, with the reviewing panel composed almost entirely of police officers.[132] Four members ofReclaim These Streets took legal action against the Metropolitan Police, claiming that their human rights to freedom of speech and assembly had been breached in connection with their attempt to organise the vigil. The case was heard in January 2022, and a judgment delivered on 11 March 2022 said that the Met's decisions in the run-up to the event were "not in accordance with the law".[133] The Met has said it will appeal against the judgment.[134]

In March 2021, PC Ben Hannam was found guilty of belonging to neo-Nazi groupNational Action.[135] In June 2021, an independent panel inquiring into the 1987murder of Daniel Morgan released their report. The report branded the Metropolitan Police "institutionally corrupt" and personally censured its current Commissioner,Cressida Dick, for obstruction of the investigation, leading to calls for her resignation.[136]

In March 2022, Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire & Rescue Services issued a report which was critical of the Met in respect of the measures it takes to tackle corruption. The report included the comment: "Its [the Met’s] apparent tolerance of the shortcomings we describe in this report suggests a degree of indifference to the risk of corruption."[137]

In July 2023, the Met reached a financial settlement with the Morgan family.[138] The settlement and the earlier reports reinforced concerns that misconduct investigations and internal accountability mechanisms within the Met remained insufficiently robust.[139] Following the report, the Met committed to make structural reforms.[140]

On 23 January 2025, HMICFRS announced that the Met would be removed from the "Engage" enhanced‑monitoring status and return to routine monitoring. The decision was based on demonstrated improvements in areas including faster emergency response times, better performance on cases involving exploited children, and improved professional standards.[141]

According to a 2025 press release, improvements included over 86% of 999 calls answered within 10 seconds (77.6% more than the previous year), increased staffing of child protection and domestic‑assault teams, and 500 additional officers deployed to neighbourhood policing.[142]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Later known as Chelsea.
  2. ^Later known as Bow.
  3. ^Later known as Hammersmith.
  4. ^Later Tottenham.
  5. ^Later by aChief Constable (1886–1933), then aDeputy Assistant Commissioner (1933–1946), and finally aDeputy Commander (1946–1968) until their abolition in 1968.
  6. ^From 1886 also J Division.
  7. ^A, B, C, F, T, and V Divisions by 1933.
  8. ^From 1965 also Q Division.
  9. ^From 1886 also F Division.
  10. ^G, H, K, N, J, and Thames Divisions by 1933.
  11. ^From 1921 also Z Division.
  12. ^Later known as Hackney.
  13. ^Also known as Brent, Harrow or Bushey.

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[edit]
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  124. ^Sarah Everard; Wayne Couzens appears in court charged with murder
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Further reading

[edit]
  • Douglas G. Browne,The Rise of Scotland Yard: A History of the Metropolitan Police (London: George G. Harrap & Co., 1956).
  • Clive Emsley,The English Police: A Political and Social History (London: Routledge, 1996).
  • Gary Mason,The Official History of the Metropolitan Police (London: Carlton Books Ltd, 2004).
  • Laurence Thompson,The Story of Scotland Yard (New York: Random House, 1954).
  • Basil Thomson,The Story of Scotland Yard (London: Grayson & Grayson, 1935).
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