-
Forwarding CVs ‘perfectly acceptable’, says Yates
As former police chief John Yates defends helping to find a job for Neil Wallis’s daughter, emails seen by Channel 4 News suggest the referring of friends for jobs was commonplace at the Met.
-
Should clubs pay more to police football matches?
Crime around professional football grounds increases on matchday, a fact which could determine how much clubs pay towards the policing of matches, according to a police report.
-
Nine now suspended in Scotland Yard racism investigation
A total of eight officers and a civilian member of staff are suspended by the Metropolitan Police amid claims of racism against the force.
-
More Met officers suspended over racism claims
Scotland Yard confirms 10 cases are being referred to the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) after fresh allegations of racist comments.
-
Met Police racism figures reveal 120 cases, one dismissal
Exclusive: As a senior Met Police officer says warnings of racism have fallen on “deaf ears”, Channel 4 News reveals 120 race-related cases over the past decade – and only one officer dismissed.
-
NoW man admits advising two candidates who became Met boss
A former News of the World executive tells the Leveson inquiry that he advised two former senior policemen on how to get the job of Scotland Yard commissioner.
-
Man ‘devastated’ over police race insults
A young black man who recorded a policeman using racist insults after he was arrested during last summer’s riots tells Channel 4 News he felt “devastated” to be addressed in such a manner.
-
Met’s public affairs chief Dick Fedorcio resigns
Scotland Yard’s head of communications quits after the police decide to launch disciplinary proceedings against him.
-
Riots report reveals Met failed to issue ‘red alert’
The final police report into the London riots shows the failure by officers to issue a “code red” warning delayed the response to violence in Tottenham, writes Home Affairs Correspondent Simon Israel.
-
Brooks and husband bailed after hacking arrest
Former News International chief executive Rebekah Brooks and husband Charlie are released on bail after they and four others were arrested on suspicion of conspiracy to pervert the course of justice.
-
FactCheck: Can Boris Johnson deliver on his election promises?
“The actual cash saving this year is nothing like £445. It’s £3.10, barely enough to buy you a pint of beer in a central London pub.”
-
Senior Met officer refused access to phone records
Former senior Scotland Yard officer John Yates refused to let other officers examine his phone records in a leak inquiry because he was ‘very well-connected’, the Leveson inquiry hears.
-
Police services could be privatised
G4S and other private companies have been asked to bid for contracts worth £1.5bn for services currently carried out by the police, including crime investigation and neighbourhood patrols.
-
From the horse’s mouth: Cameron did ride Brooks’ Raisa
A political row over links between David Cameron and News International deepens as the prime minister admits he did ride a former police horse which was on loan to Rebekah Brooks.
-
Parents not informed about Mark Duggan’s death, says IPPC
As an investigation finds that the parents of Mark Duggan were not told of their son’s death by either police or the IPCC, Simon Israel speaks to family members.