Mayor of London and Metropolitan Police Commissioner announce details of follow-up progress review following Baroness Casey Report
Dr Gillian Fairfield has been appointed to carry out an independent assessment of the Metropolitan Police’s progress following the 2023 report by Baroness Casey of Blackstock into its culture and standards.
The progress review to be led by Dr Fairfield has been jointly commissioned by the Mayor of London and the Metropolitan Police Commissioner. Holding an independent progress review was one of the 16 recommendations made by Baroness Casey so that Londoners can have confidence reform is taking place.
The progress review will provide Dr Fairfield with an opportunity to deliver an independent assessment of progress made in addressing Baroness Casey’s findings and recommendations, as well as the Met’s internal reforms under the New Met for London Plan to fix its foundations. It will also evaluate whether these improvements are embedded and likely to be sustained over the long term.
Dr Fairfield will bring extensive expertise and experience to this role, having previously been appointed by the Home Secretary to lead an independent review of the Independent Office for Police Conduct, as well as working with the NHS and in the youth justice sector.
A key focus of Dr Fairfield’s work will be to ensure that reform is taking place at the scale and pace necessary to address Baroness Casey’s recommendations, support the Met to deliver for Londoners and provide – where appropriate – new ideas to help with this work.
The Mayor of London, Sir Sadiq Khan, said: “Major cultural reform is underway within the Met. His Majesty’s Inspectorate confirmed earlier this year that significant improvements are being made as the Met exited special measures. This is down to the hard work of the Commissioner, Deputy Commissioner, Met officers and staff. Together, we’ve made huge strides bearing down on crime in our city and the Commissioner has started the biggest clear out of rogue police officers and staff in British policing history. However, the recent Panorama broadcast and Dr Daniels’ Report have highlighted that there is still a long way to go.
“I’m committed to following up on all of Baroness Casey’s recommendations which is why I've appointed Dr Gillian Fairfield to carry out an independent follow-on assessment of the Met. This will review progress around culture and standards, as well as identify areas that need renewed focus. The findings from the Casey review in 2023 were damning and we now need an honest and independent appraisal of how much has been done to address institutional racism, homophobia and misogyny.
"I’ve been clear that the Met must accelerate the pace of reform. Londoners and hardworking police officers and staff deserve a lasting transformation of Met culture - with no hiding place for officers who abuse their position of trust. As Mayor, I'll continue to support and hold the Met to account and will not be satisfied until Londoners have the police service they deserve – one that is trusted and delivers the highest possible service to every community in our city.”
Dr Gillian Fairfield said: “I am delighted to have been asked to carry out this independent review of progress against the recommendations in Baroness Casey’s review of the MPS in 2023. I will not shy away from confronting the enormity of the challenges faced by the Metropolitan Police Service as I take on this incredibly important piece of work anchored in restoring public trust and confidence in policing in London.
“Two and a half years have passed since Baroness Casey laid bare her findings. This Review is the next step. I have been appointed by the Mayor and MPS Commissioner to run this review independently and intend to do this without fear or favour. I intend the Review to be ruthless in its approach, calling out areas of concern but acknowledging good practice and achievements. I will focus on making practical and helpful recommendations. These will be designed to promote good practice and ultimately ensure the MPS are able to gain the trust and confidence of the London communities they serve.
“I will be creating numerous opportunities to talk to people directly affected, both by the issues Baroness Casey explored and any later issues that have manifested within the MPS since 2023. I want to encourage people to come forward and speak to me and to my team and to reassure them that they will be treated with sensitivity and in confidence.
“We will be launching a call for evidence and testimony in January. I aim to report back to the Mayor and the MPS in Summer 2026.”
Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley said: “We have made a huge amount of progress since the Baroness Casey review was published in early 2023. We have launched our New Met For London Plan, conducted the most extensive anti-corruption clear out in British policing history, published both our Children’s Strategy and Stop and Search Charter, added more officers to our public protection teams to keep women and girls safe and, vitally, driven down both violent and neighbourhood crime across the capital.
“These reforms have seen trust in the Met increase across the board – including among young Londoners and Londoners from Black and other ethnic minority backgrounds. They are more positive about their police service than the residents of other major cities.
“Whilst I am proud of the progress made by the officers and staff of the Met, none of us are complacent, we all want the very best for London and we do not claim that the job is complete. That is why I have appointed Dr Fairfield to carry out this review which provides an opportunity not just to look back on the changes that have taken place so far, but to also generate new ideas and identify opportunities to accelerate the good progress we have made to date.
“I look forward to welcoming Dr Fairfield to the Met and working with her and her team in the coming months.”
Baroness Casey of Blackstock said: “My Review into culture and standards in the Metropolitan Police Service made clear the enormity of the reform required to clean up the Met and restore the trust and confidence of Londoners.
“I welcome Dr Gillian Fairfield’s appointment to deliver this follow-up review which will seriously consider whether sufficient progress had been made.”
The Review will make a considered assessment which identifies positive progress, as well as identifying areas which require additional focus or acceleration, and making recommendations for action in such areas. As part of this, it will consider any recent incidents and reviews that speak to public trust and confidence that have emerged since the Casey review was published. Specifically, it will consider the following:
- Examine the progress made by the MPS and MOPAC to respond to Baroness Casey’s report with a focus on the report’s recommendations.
- Provide an assessment of the progress of the MPS’s wider reform with a focus on NMFL ‘fixing their foundations’
- Identify the areas of progress within the recommendations and those where acceleration is required.
- Assess progress and the extent to which the MPS’ internal reforms have fixed and are fixing the foundations, identifying areas where any serious concerns remain and making recommendations for action.
- Listen to and engage with current Met officers and staff, statutory partners and community representatives and the public to understand their experiences of, and confidence in, the MPS reforms.
- Consider what work should be prioritised given the wider context in which the MPS is operating and any barriers or opportunities which arise as consequence.
This review comes shortly after Met published its New Met for London 2 plan, which builds on the progress made fixing the foundations of the organisation and ensuring improvements are sustained for the long-term.
Notes to editors
Web page
Further information on the Review can be found at www.fairfieldindependentreview.org.uk
Dr Fairfield
Dr Fairfield was appointed as Chair of the Disclosure and Barring Service in 2018 and reappointed for a second term of office in 2022. She is also a member of the Armed Forces Pay Review Body, having been appointed in 2023 and was reappointed in July 2025 for a further three years.
In March 2023 Dr Fairfield was appointed by the Home Secretary to lead an independent review of the Independent Office for Police Conduct’s effectiveness, governance, accountability, transparency and efficiency. The Review’s final report was published in March 2024. During the course of the Review, Dr Fairfield and her team engaged widely with those with experience of crime and policing across England and met with: groups representing the perspectives of complainants and victims; national policing bodies and groups representing police officers and staff; a cross-section of police forces; key statutory IOPC partners; partners in Wales and the IOPC’s equivalents in Scotland and Northern Ireland. The Review found significant issues that needed to be addressed by the IOPC and the Home Office to: put the organisation on a sustainable footing; ensure it effectively delivers its remit; speed up its investigation processes; improve transparency; and, ultimately, improve public confidence in policing.
Dr Fairfield was appointed as a member of the Infected Blood Compensation Authority (IBCA) Board from October 2024 to October 2025.
In 2012 Dr Fairfield was appointed as a Board Member of the National Youth Justice Board for England and Wales. She chaired the Performance committee and was a member of the National Youth Justice Oversight Group.
Qualifying in medicine in 1981, Dr Fairfield worked in clinical, managerial and leadership roles across different sectors and specialties, in hospitals, general practice and public health. During her career, Dr Fairfield has held four NHS Chief Executive posts in both mental health and acute Trusts.
In 1997, she was awarded a British Medical Association Fellowship in public health to study managed care in the USA. In 1998, Dr Fairfield led on a review of prison health in England and Wales and was subsequently appointed to the post of Deputy Head of the national Prison Health Taskforce.
Progress
Since the Casey Review, the Met has made significant progress in delivering improvements against her recommendations:
- To consistently drive progress, the Met has created a dedicated Culture, Diversity and Inclusion Directorate;
- The Met has conducted the biggest anti-corruption clear out in history, removing around 1,500 officers who did not meet the Met’s standards;
- The Met’s Upstander work has produced results. Internal misconduct reports have trebled – from around 400 in 2021/22 to 1,400 in 2024/25 and there are 200 more officers who are specifically and proactively focused on uncovering wrongdoing;
- The Met now has one of the strongest entry vetting policies in UK policing and refusal rates have more than doubled since 2020-21.
- Published the London Race Action plan setting out how the Met will become an anti-racist organisation;
- Work with communities to launch the Stop and Search charter to improve how stop and search is carried out. Our shows that stop and search volumes have reduced by 42.4% from 209,130 to 120,486;
- Expanded public protection teams by 565 officers and staff, improving the service provided to victims of domestic abuse, rape and sexual offences and launched the V100 programme which has seen more than 100 convictions of some of London’s most dangerous men and led to 126 people being charged with 574 offences;
- These changes, alongside our success in driving down crime, has seen trust in the Met increase across the board. 81% of Londoners say the Met is doing a good or fair job locally, and 74% agree the Met is an organisation they can trust.