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Cressida Dick named new Metropolitan Police Commissioner - first woman ever to head Scotland Yard | Cressida Dick named new Metropolitan Police Commissioner - first woman ever to head Scotland Yard |
(35 minutes later) | |
Cressida Dick has been named the new Metropolitan Police commissioner. | Cressida Dick has been named the new Metropolitan Police commissioner. |
She is the first woman to take the role, and succeeds Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe. | She is the first woman to take the role, and succeeds Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe. |
Ms Dick will move from her current post as a director general at the Foreign Office after Home Secretary Amber Rudd made the announcement, following consultation with London mayor Sadiq Khan. | |
The Met has more than 43,000 officers and staff, and Ms Dick will oversee its £3bn budget over a five-year fixed-term contract. | |
She was one of four candidates, whittled down from six applicants, the Home Office said. | |
In 2005 Ms Dick was "gold commander" during the operation in which the Brazilian electrician Jean Charles de Menezes was killed by Met firearms officers. | |
Despite her role coming under scrutiny, she retained the faith of senior officers resulting in her three-year leadership of national police counter-terrorism operations until she was put in charge of murder squads, gun teams and child abuse inquiries in a Scotland Yard reshuffle. | |
She had responsibility for some of the most sensitive inquiries including phone hacking and the re-investigation of the Stephen Lawrence murder that ended in the conviction of two of the teenager’s killers, nearly 20 years after the first botched inquiry. | |
Popular among the rank-and-file, Ms Dick unsuccessfully sought the top police job in Northern Ireland after her move from the anti-terror role. She then took the Foreign Office job. |