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Metropolitan Police — An Ongoing Audit

Metropolitan Police Service (London) · compiled 18 July 2026 · every item links to a primary source
2022placed in special measures
2025moved out of enhanced monitoring
2officers jailed for photographing murder victims
Child Q15-yr-old strip-searched at school

This is an evidence audit. Every finding carries a VERIFIED (regulator/primary source), DOCUMENTED (official stats or reputable press), or UNVERIFIED (advocacy only) label. Nothing here is alleged without a source link.

Regulators & inspectorate found fault

HMICFRS placed the Met in special measures and found it failing across most areas.

HMICFRS — special measures (enhanced monitoring)VERIFIED

Source: HMICFRS (inspectorate)

After a series of failures the Met was placed in special measures / an enhanced level of monitoring by HMICFRS in 2022 — one of only a handful of forces ever subjected to the regime. It remained under enhanced monitoring for more than two and a half years before being moved out in 2025.

Published: 18 July 2026

HMICFRS — failing in almost all areasVERIFIED

Source: HMICFRS inspection (2024)

A 2024 HMICFRS inspection found the Met 'failing in almost all work areas': inconsistent management of sex offenders (backlog of visits/risk assessments), weak handling of online child-abuse offenders, and inadequate crime investigation and offender management.

Published: 18 July 2026

HMICFRS — failing victims of child exploitationVERIFIED

Source: HMICFRS / Youth Justice Legal Centre

HMICFRS found that when children were reported missing the MPS often failed to assess the risk or harm they faced, and did not consistently pursue child-exploitation concerns. Documented in a joint briefing with the Youth Justice Legal Centre.

Published: 18 July 2026

Daniel Morgan Independent Panel — 'institutionally corrupt'VERIFIED

Source: Daniel Morgan Independent Panel (2021)

After an eight-year review, the Panel concluded the Met was 'institutionally corrupt' in the way it concealed or denied failings over the unsolved 1987 murder of Daniel Morgan, prioritising its reputation over the investigation. A later HMICFRS counter-corruption inspection examined whether lessons were learned.

Published: 18 July 2026

Charing Cross scandal — misogyny, racism, excessive forceVERIFIED

Source: IOPC investigation

An IOPC investigation into Charing Cross police station found a culture of discriminatory, misogynistic and racist behaviour, with officers making offensive comments and using excessive force. Multiple officers faced gross-misconduct proceedings.

Published: 18 July 2026

Officers photographed murdered sisters' bodiesVERIFIED

Source: Criminal trial / IOPC

Two Met officers were jailed (2 years 9 months each, 2021) for taking and sharing photographs of the bodies of murdered sisters Bibaa Henry and Nicole Smallman, and for mocking their relatives. The Independent Office for Police Conduct called it a violation of the women's dignity.

Published: 18 July 2026

VAWG — failing grade on Violence Against Women & GirlsVERIFIED

Source: HMICFRS VAWG inspection

An HMICFRS inspection of the police response to violence against women and girls found the Met (among others) failing to protect victims adequately — with issues including poor risk assessment and weak investigation of offences that disproportionately harm women and girls.

Published: 18 July 2026

IOPC investigates death of man in Met custody at RomfordDOCUMENTED

Source: BBC / IOPC (Apr 2025)

The IOPC launched an independent investigation after a 45-year-old man died in the Romford custody suite in April 2025; he was found unresponsive during a routine cell check and pronounced dead despite CPR, with CCTV and body-worn footage being reviewed.

Published: 18 July 2026

Met admits botched investigation into death of Edward Cornes; IOPC launches probeDOCUMENTED

Source: The Independent / IOPC (2026)

The Met admitted its investigation into the 2021 death of 19-year-old student Edward Cornes 'did not meet the high standards we expect' - his family allege lost evidence, uninterviewed witnesses and a homophobic approach; a 2023 review found 27 failings and the IOPC has launched an investigation (announced 15 July 2026).

Published: 18 July 2026

Met hired 5,000+ officers and staff without required vetting checksVERIFIED

Source: HMICFRS (terms of reference, 8 Jan 2026) / Reuters / Home Office

An internal Met review found the force recruited unsuitable people after failing to carry out required vetting checks; the Home Secretary commissioned an HMICFRS inspection (terms of reference published 8 January 2026), and Reuters reported more than 5,000 officers and staff were hired without proper checks between 2018 and 2023, with a further 17,000 unconfirmed.

Published: 18 July 2026

IOPC investigating 11 Met officers over fatal Wimbledon school crashDOCUMENTED

Source: BBC / IOPC (Apr 2026)

The IOPC is investigating 11 Metropolitan Police officers — including four serving officers and a former detective constable for possible gross misconduct — over the force's handling of the initial inquiry into the July 2023 Wimbledon crash that killed eight-year-olds Nuria Sajjad and Selena Lau.

Published: 18 July 2026

Corruption & accountability

Independent panels and the IOPC have documented institutional and cultural failure.

Daniel Morgan Independent Panel — 'institutionally corrupt'VERIFIED

Source: Daniel Morgan Independent Panel (2021)

After an eight-year review, the Panel concluded the Met was 'institutionally corrupt' in the way it concealed or denied failings over the unsolved 1987 murder of Daniel Morgan, prioritising its reputation over the investigation. A later HMICFRS counter-corruption inspection examined whether lessons were learned.

Published: 18 July 2026

Charing Cross scandal — misogyny, racism, excessive forceVERIFIED

Source: IOPC investigation

An IOPC investigation into Charing Cross police station found a culture of discriminatory, misogynistic and racist behaviour, with officers making offensive comments and using excessive force. Multiple officers faced gross-misconduct proceedings.

Published: 18 July 2026

Officers photographed murdered sisters' bodiesVERIFIED

Source: Criminal trial / IOPC

Two Met officers were jailed (2 years 9 months each, 2021) for taking and sharing photographs of the bodies of murdered sisters Bibaa Henry and Nicole Smallman, and for mocking their relatives. The Independent Office for Police Conduct called it a violation of the women's dignity.

Published: 18 July 2026

Panorama fallout: commissioner says corruption crisis may take a decadeDOCUMENTED

Source: The Guardian (Oct 2025, citing IOPC)

After BBC Panorama filmed Met officers calling for immigrants to be shot and dismissing a rape complaint, Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley conceded the corruption crisis could take 'a decade or more' to fix; nine officers were suspended and 11 placed under IOPC investigation.

Published: 18 July 2026

Race, racism & discrimination

From the 1999 Macpherson 'institutional racism' finding to Spycops, the 650-child strip-search data and a mocked anti-racism plan.

Charing Cross scandal — misogyny, racism, excessive forceVERIFIED

Source: IOPC investigation

An IOPC investigation into Charing Cross police station found a culture of discriminatory, misogynistic and racist behaviour, with officers making offensive comments and using excessive force. Multiple officers faced gross-misconduct proceedings.

Published: 18 July 2026

Child Q — strip-searched at school without safeguardingVERIFIED

Source: IOPC / Child Q safeguarding review (2022)

A 15-year-old Black girl (Child Q) was strip-searched by Met officers at her east London school in 2020 without an appropriate adult or warrant, after a racist suspicion she smelled of cannabis. The safeguarding review found it was unjustified, and linked it to racism. The Met accepted failings.

Published: 18 July 2026

Race Action Plan shake-up accused of mocking Black peopleVERIFIED

Source: The Guardian / policing minister (2026)

In March 2026 the Met was accused of insulting Black people and 'mocking the pain' after proposing to absorb its anti-racism strategy into a broader plan. The policing minister said the document 'gives the wrong impression' and forces pledged to review it.

Published: 18 July 2026

Disproportionate use of stop and searchDOCUMENTED

Source: MPS / independent analyses

The Met's use of stop and search has been repeatedly flagged as racially disproportionate: Black Londoners are stopped at several times the rate of white Londoners, a disparity the force has committed to addressing but which remains a live concern in community-trust reviews.

Published: 18 July 2026

Macpherson Report — 'institutional racism' (1999)VERIFIED

Source: Stephen Lawrence Inquiry (Macpherson, 1999)

The public inquiry into the failed investigation of Stephen Lawrence's racist murder found the Met 'institutionally racist' — a landmark conclusion that the force's culture produced discriminatory practice it had no effective strategy to address. It remains the reference point for every later racism finding.

Published: 18 July 2026

Undercover policing / 'Spycops' scandalVERIFIED

Source: Undercover Policing Inquiry (UCPI)

Undercover Met officers infiltrated political and environmental campaigns for decades, formed deceptive intimate relationships, and spied on the family of Stephen Lawrence. The ongoing Undercover Policing Inquiry has documented systemic deceit; in 2025 a new archive further exposed the scale of the operations.

Published: 18 July 2026

650 children strip-searched in two yearsVERIFIED

Source: Met data / Children's Commissioner (2022)

Met data revealed 650 children were strip-searched over a two-year period, the majority found innocent of the suspicions against them. The Children's Commissioner condemned the force's child-protection record; this followed the Child Q case and showed it was not isolated.

Published: 18 July 2026

Bianca Williams — stop-and-search gross misconduct; officers reinstatedVERIFIED

Source: IOPC / misconduct hearings (2023-2024)

Two Met officers were sacked in 2023 for the racist stop-and-search of athlete Bianca Williams and her partner (found to have lied about smelling cannabis). In 2024 they were reinstated on appeal — a decision widely criticised as undermining accountability.

Published: 18 July 2026

Independent report finds 'systemic' anti-black racism in the MetDOCUMENTED

Source: BBC / HR Rewired (Dr Shereen Daniels report, Nov 2025)

An independent review commissioned by the Met (Dr Shereen Daniels / HR Rewired) concluded the force has a structural problem with 'systemic' anti-black racism, maintained through 'a repeated institutional sequence' in its systems, leadership and culture.

Published: 18 July 2026

Largest-ever Stop & Search study finds acute racial disproportionalityDOCUMENTED

Source: MOPAC / King's College London (City Hall, Mar 2026)

Analysing every Met stop-and-search in 2023 (150,000+ records), MOPAC and King's College London found Black Londoners were 3.4x more likely to be searched than White Londoners as of Feb 2026, rising to up to 48x in 24 wards, equating to about 4,300 'extra' stops a year.

Published: 18 July 2026

Child Q: officer admits at misconduct hearing the strip-search should never have happenedDOCUMENTED

Source: BBC (June 2025)

At a gross misconduct hearing, the officer who carried out Child Q's 2020 school strip-search accepted she failed in her duties and that the search 'should never have happened', although she and two colleagues deny gross misconduct.

Published: 18 July 2026

Black children eight times more likely to be strip-searched, commissioner findsDOCUMENTED

Source: BBC / Children's Commissioner (22 Apr 2026)

A Children's Commissioner report (22 April 2026) found Black children in England and Wales were eight times more likely to be strip-searched than white peers, almost a third of searches involved children searched before, and 22 were carried out without an appropriate adult present.

Published: 18 July 2026

Deaths, shootings & custody

Failures surrounding the murders of Sarah Everard, Bibaa Henry and Nicole Smallman, plus deaths in custody, fatal shootings and the Angiolini Review.

Sarah Everard murder — serving officer abducted and killed herVERIFIED

Source: Court / Angiolini Inquiry

In 2021, serving Met PC Wayne Couzens used his warrant to kidnap, rape and murder Sarah Everard. The Angiolini Inquiry exposed systemic failures in vetting and in how the force handled earlier reports of Couzens's misconduct. The case triggered a national collapse in women's trust in police.

Published: 18 July 2026

Bibaa Henry & Nicole Smallman murders — slow responseDOCUMENTED

Source: Family statements / IOPC

Sisters Bibaa Henry (46) and Nicole Smallman (27) were murdered in Fryent Country Park in June 2020. Their family criticised the Met's initial response after they were reported missing. The subsequent officer-photo scandal deepened public anger at the force.

Published: 18 July 2026

Sean Rigg — death in custody, 'more than minimally' contributedVERIFIED

Source: Inquest / IOPC (2012-2019)

Sean Rigg died of a cardiac arrest after prone restraint at Brixton police station in 2008. The inquest condemned a 'catalogue of failings'; an IPCC investigation found the force 'more than minimally' contributed to his death. The IOPC later issued an unprecedented apology for investigation delays.

Published: 18 July 2026

Jean Charles de Menezes — wrongful shootingVERIFIED

Source: Stockwell / IPCC (2007)

The Met shot dead Brazilian electrician Jean Charles de Menezes at Stockwell in 2005 after a flawed counter-terror operation. The force was convicted of health-and-safety failings (19 alleged failures), fined and ordered to pay ~£560k costs; an inquest found the shooting 'unlawful'.

Published: 18 July 2026

Chris Kaba — shooting & paused misconduct caseDOCUMENTED

Source: IOPC / BBC (2022-2026)

Chris Kaba was shot dead by a Met firearms officer in Streatham in 2022. The officer was acquitted of murder; the IOPC then paused gross-misconduct proceedings, a decision his family called 'devastating' and which raised fresh questions about accountability for fatal force.

Published: 18 July 2026

Leon Briggs — death in custody, case collapsedDOCUMENTED

Source: IOPC / BBC (2013-2010s)

Leon Briggs, a 39-year-old Black man, died in 2013 after being restrained in Bedfordshire Police custody; the Met's role/associated misconduct proceedings drew scrutiny, and a misconduct hearing against officers collapsed. His death is cited in ongoing concerns about deaths of Black men in custody.

Published: 18 July 2026

Angiolini Review — systemic failings in deaths in custodyVERIFIED

Source: Angiolini Review (2017-2023)

The Independent Review of Deaths and Serious Incidents in Police Custody (Angiolini) exposed systemic failings in how police investigate and learn from deaths in custody — directly relevant to multiple Met cases (Sean Rigg, Jean Charles de Menezes and others) where accountability was found lacking.

Published: 18 July 2026

Coroner 'shocked' by Met firearms officers' evidence at Vasiljevas inquestDOCUMENTED

Source: INQUEST (28 Nov 2025) / Garden Court Chambers

A jury found the 2023 fatal shooting of Giedrius Vasiljevas by a Met firearms officer was lawful, but Senior Coroner Graeme Irvine raised significant concerns about the quality of officers' evidence; family lawyers alleged a 'wall of silence' as no other officer corroborated the shooter's account of seeing a gun.

Published: 18 July 2026

Violence against women & girls

Failings in investigating and protecting women and girls, from Worboys to the VAWG failing grade.

John Worboys — victims' investigation failings (Supreme Court)VERIFIED

Source: Supreme Court (DSD v Met, 2018)

The black-cab rapist John Worboys evaded capture for years due to police investigation failures. The Supreme Court ruled the Met breached victims' human rights by failing in its duty to investigate serious violence against women, establishing that police can be held liable.

Published: 18 July 2026

VAWG — failing grade on Violence Against Women & GirlsVERIFIED

Source: HMICFRS VAWG inspection

An HMICFRS inspection of the police response to violence against women and girls found the Met (among others) failing to protect victims adequately — with issues including poor risk assessment and weak investigation of offences that disproportionately harm women and girls.

Published: 18 July 2026

Ex-Met officer David Carrick given additional life sentenceVERIFIED

Source: BBC / Old Bailey court (Nov 2025)

Convicted rapist and former Met PC David Carrick received an additional life sentence after being found guilty of sexually abusing a 12-year-old girl in the 1980s and raping a woman; he is already serving 36 life sentences for 71 separate offences.

Published: 18 July 2026

Data integrity & investigations

Under-recording rape, fiddled crime figures, and the slow Grenfell criminal investigation.

Thousands of outstanding misconduct casesDOCUMENTED

Source: Home Office police-misconduct stats (YE 31 Mar 2025)

Nationally, 5,625 police misconduct cases were awaiting conclusion as at 31 March 2025. The Met has historically carried a large share of gross-misconduct matters, and repeated IOPC findings have highlighted failures to challenge discriminatory behaviour among officers.

Published: 18 July 2026

Grenfell — slow criminal investigation criticisedDOCUMENTED

Source: Grenfell Tower Inquiry / bereaved families (2024)

After the Grenfell Tower Inquiry found all 72 deaths were avoidable, bereaved families and survivors criticised the pace of the Met's criminal investigation as too slow. The investigation is the largest the Met has ever undertaken; up to 20 firms and 57 individuals were said potentially facing charges.

Published: 18 July 2026

Rape under-recording — 'no-criming' scandalVERIFIED

Source: HMICFRS / BBC (2014, 2019)

The Met was found to have under-recorded rape and serious sexual offences by 22-25%, and a whistleblower alleged hundreds of rapes were not recorded as crimes. Later HMICFRS audits found forces (including the Met) inaccurately recorded thousands of rape reports — only a handful of sampled cases were accurately recorded.

Published: 18 July 2026

Crime-data 'fiddling' — figures lost official statusVERIFIED

Source: UK Statistics Authority / HMICFRS (2014, 2018)

Allegations the Met understated sexual and other offences by misclassifying crimes led the UK Statistics Authority to strip police crime figures of their official status in 2014. HMICFRS's 2018 Crime Data Integrity inspection found continued accuracy problems in how the Met recorded crimes.

Published: 18 July 2026

Governance & misconduct

Volume of unresolved misconduct and vetting failures.

Thousands of outstanding misconduct casesDOCUMENTED

Source: Home Office police-misconduct stats (YE 31 Mar 2025)

Nationally, 5,625 police misconduct cases were awaiting conclusion as at 31 March 2025. The Met has historically carried a large share of gross-misconduct matters, and repeated IOPC findings have highlighted failures to challenge discriminatory behaviour among officers.

Published: 18 July 2026

Balance (for credibility)

The failure is not uniform — the Met was moved out of special measures in 2025.

Out of special measures (2025)DOCUMENTED

Source: HMICFRS (2025)

In 2025 HMICFRS moved the Met out of enhanced monitoring, judging it had made sufficient progress on the causes of concern. The force cites rising neighbourhood-policing visibility and improved vetting as evidence of reform — though the inspectorate notes serious work remains.

Published: 18 July 2026

More recent findings

Adverse findings added in ongoing audit updates that do not fall under the thematic groups above.

Met detective showed murder-scene photos for 'bragging rights'DOCUMENTED

Source: BBC (14 Jul 2026)

A misconduct hearing heard that Met detective sergeant Jason Grafham kept and showed colleagues crime-scene photographs from the 2005 murder of Sally Anne Bowman 'for entertainment and bragging rights', and made sexually inappropriate remarks to colleagues; he retired as the hearing began and denies keeping the photos.

Published: 18 July 2026

Met criticised over 'intrusive' Palantir AI toolDOCUMENTED

Source: BBC (28 Apr 2026)

The Met was criticised over a pilot of a Palantir-built AI tool that analyses officers' device data, which the Met Police Federation called 'intrusive'; hundreds of officers are being assessed for misconduct, with two arrested and two suspended after potential criminal activity was flagged.

Published: 18 July 2026

Met officer convicted of rapes and sexual assaultsDOCUMENTED

Source: BBC / Guildford Crown Court (Apr 2026)

Met PC Dion Arnold, who worked on domestic-abuse cases, was convicted at Guildford Crown Court of four rapes, two assaults by penetration and two sexual assaults against multiple women, abusing the trust placed in him as an officer; the Met said he would face a misconduct hearing.

Published: 18 July 2026

Met officers took photos of a dead body on personal phonesDOCUMENTED

Source: BBC (3 May 2026)

A misconduct hearing found Met PCs Billy Manning and Frankie Jordan used personal phones to photograph evidence including a dead body, with Manning keeping and later showing a picture of a dead man to colleagues at a training session; both received written warnings and the Met apologised.

Published: 18 July 2026

Woman groomed by predatory Met officer says payout brought no accountabilityDOCUMENTED

Source: BBC (2 Jul 2026)

A woman groomed by a predatory Met officer said that, despite a substantial payout from the force, she had received 'no truth or accountability', and that her nine-year battle with the misconduct system was 'far worse' than the abuse; the Met apologised and accepted its Professional Standards unit compounded her distress.

Published: 18 July 2026