Met boss ‘sorry’ over false claim

Protesters clash with police near the Royal Bank of ScotlandThe Met said the officers were covertly deployed to identify potential criminals

A senior Metropolitan Police commander has apologised for giving false information to MPs over the 2009 G20 protests in London.

A month after the protest Commander Bob Broadhurst claimed no plain clothes officers were deployed in the crowd.

Scotland Yard has now admitted covert officers were used.

Mr Broadhurst told an MPs’ Home Affairs Select Committee the information was “true to the best of my knowledge at the time”.

“If you are running a huge operation like that you can’t know everything all the time”

Tim Godwin Acting Met commissioner

In 2009 he told a parliamentary committee: “We had no plain clothes officers in the crowd.

“It would have been dangerous to have plain clothes officers in the crowd like that.”

Commander Broadhurst was so-called ‘gold commander’ of the police operation on the day.

He told the latest hearing: “I first of all apologise. When I appeared before you I gave you information that appears to be inaccurate.

“At the time it was true to the best of my knowledge.”

He was supported at the hearing by acting Met commissioner Tim Godwin, who said: “If you are running a huge operation like that you can’t know everything all the time.

“In intelligence you don’t always know the source.”

Commander Broadhurst’s 2009 claim came under scrutiny after the unmasking of former undercover officer Mark Kennedy.

Mr Kennedy spent seven years posing as a green activist and reporting back to police.

He caused the trial of six men accused of conspiring to shut down Ratcliffe-on-Soar power station in Nottinghamshire to collapse after he said he would testify for the defence.

Police were heavily criticised after clashing with protesters at the 2009 G20 demonstrations.

Newspaper seller Ian Tomlinson died after being pushed over by a police officer, but no prosecution was brought.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

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