Deployment of undercover officers into protest movements back in the spotlight after spy in Reclaim the Streets was prosecuted under his false identity.
City-wide car crime crackdown.
77% of those polled by BBC London think the Met are doing a good job.
Wandsworth Council report finds only eight riot officers were available in the area and back-up took two hours to arrive.
List includes footballs, shaving foam and a magic wand.
What's been happening around town this weekend.
And that was without any of those damn riots.
Official Secrets Act brought into play.
There's a new man in charge of the Met. Who is he, and is he right for the job?
One carnival goer spotted a bobby getting into the spirit of things.
Policy of not using cautions, whatever the offence, described as a "blanket ban" by lawyers and may have been unlawful.
Met target troublemakers in the run-up to Notting Hill.
Photos of recovered stolen goods go online in an attempt to find the owners.
News that Boris's deputy was briefed about new developments in the phone hacking investigation, days before the Mayor's infamous comment, raises serious questions.
Student fees protests cost £7.5m, but the Met also spent £6.5m protecting embassies and half a million bloody quid on Tony Blair.
Around 2,000 officers and 1,000 PCSOs are expected to go in the wake of budget cuts.
It wasn't the Murdochs, but watching Sir Paul Stephenson, John Yates and Dick Fedorcio give evidence was quite an eye-opener.
Mysterious bags dumped in car parks, investigations into the Met and the death of a whistleblower. Seriously, who called John le Carre?
109 aggravated trespass charges dropped following the Fortnum & Mason sit-in, as police admit to misleading protesters.
This really is an über shitstorm. Another senior Met officer goes, and Boris Johnson experiences a very tense press conference.
We try to make sense of the whole bloody mess so far: what's happened, who's involved and whether any of it matters (hint: it does).
Mayor's Question Time today focused on the Met and phone hacking. We were a bit shocked at the levity and political point-scoring.
Police contact families of victims after finding their personal details in investigator's files.
And the rest of the day's news...
Londonist
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