Met Police boss sacked over drugs test launches appeal

Commander Julian Bennett outside a Metropolitan Police misconduct hearing at Palestra House, south-east London on 31 JulyImage source, PA
Image caption,

Cdr Julian Bennett pictured outside a Metropolitan Police misconduct hearing last year

  • Published

A senior police officer has launched an appeal after he was sacked for failing to provide a sample for a drugs test when he was accused of smoking cannabis.

Former Met Police Cdr Julian Bennett, who served in the force from 1976, was found to have committed gross misconduct by failing to provide a urine sample for a drugs test, on July 21 2020.

A hearing before the Police Appeal Tribunal is due to take place on Friday, with Mr Bennett appealing against both the gross misconduct finding and his sacking.

In October, a disciplinary panel rejected a claim by his former flatmate that he had used cannabis daily before breakfast.

But it found that he had breached professional standards when he refused to provide a sample for a drugs test after being called in to do so in the presence of an assistant commissioner.

He offered to resign on the spot instead, and asked for a meeting with then-Commissioner Dame Cressida Dick.

Mr Bennett said he had been taking CBD (cannabidiol) to treat facial palsy and was worried the sample would come up positive for an innocent reason.

By failing to provide the sample, Mr Bennett was found to have breached force standards for honesty and integrity.

His lawyers argued that while he had always admitted refusing to provide a sample, the panel found him guilty of a lack of integrity that he had not been accused of.

This meant that the misconduct finding was not permissible, they said.

Mr Bennett wrote the force's drugs strategy for 2017-21 as a commander for territorial policing.

The document, called Dealing With The Impact Of Drugs On Communities, set up plans to raise "awareness of the impact of drug misuse".

He chaired misconduct panels over several years and Freedom of Information requests showed he presided over 74 police misconduct hearings involving 90 officers between June 2010 and February 2012.

Two officers were dismissed for drug misuse, the figures showed.

Listen to the best of BBC Radio London on Sounds and follow BBC London on Facebook, external, X, external and Instagram, external. Send your story ideas to hello.bbclondon@bbc.co.uk, external