Pubdate: Sat, 28 Apr 2007 Source: Independent (UK) Copyright: 2007 Independent Newspapers (UK) Ltd. Contact: http://www.independent.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/209 Author: Andy McSmith Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Brian+Paddick (Brian Paddick) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?207 (Cannabis - United Kingdom) 'SOFTLY SOFTLY' POLICE CHIEF TO QUIT THE FORCE A YEAR EARLY Brian Paddick, Britain's most senior openly gay police officer, has announced that he is quitting, a year earlier than expected. Deputy Assistant Commissioner Paddick has recently been caught up in a dispute over the killing of Jean Charles de Menezes by armed police at Stockwell tube station, south London, in July 2005. Comments he made to the Independent Police Complaints Commission contradicted the version of events given by the Commissioner, Sir Ian Blair. But a spokesman for the Metropolitan Police Authority denied that Mr Paddick had been given "gardening leave", and said that his early departure was "not unusual". He added: "He does not have to give reasons and we do not seek them." Mr Paddick, who joined the Metropolitan Police in 1976, when he was 18, will leave his UKP131,000-a-year post on 31 May, without having to work through the normal three-month notice period. His term of office was due to end in November 2008. It is now thought that he will write about a book about his police career, which was frequently a source of controversy. In July 2001, as police commander in Lambeth, he pioneered a new approach to enforcing the cannabis laws, under which people caught with a small quantity of the drug were let off with a warning rather than being arrested or cautioned. Critics accused him of turning Brixton into a magnet for "drug tourism", a claim he vigorously contested. He claimed that when drugs were so easily found anywhere in the UK, there was no motive for anyone to travel to Brixton to find them. In the six months from September 2001 to April 2002, during his tenure, robberies fell by 50 per cent in Lambeth, the highest drop anywhere in the UK. But he ran into trouble when he was identified as the blogger who styled himself "Brian: the Commander" in an anarchist chat room, and who wrote that "the concept of anarchism has always appealed to me". That earned him a ticking off from his superiors, but no disciplinary action. Almost at once, Mr Paddick was targeted by tabloid newspapers, who paid his former lover, James Renolleau, UKP100,000 for details of his private life. He was quoted as saying that Mr Paddick had taken cannabis "hundreds of times", that he had kept a stash of the drug at home "in a cubby hole next to the chimney", and that he had lived a reckless, promiscuous, gay lifestyle. Mr Paddick acknowledged that he and Mr Renolleau had been long-term lovers, and that Mr Renolleau was a cannabis user, but denied all the other allegations. But they led to him being removed from his post in Lambeth. He made an unexpected comeback in November 2003, when he made acting deputy assistant commissioner. During the inquiry into the shooting of de Menezes, a Brazilian who was mistaken for a suicide bomber, Mr Paddick told investigators that officers in Sir Ian Blair's office feared that an innocent man had been killed hours after the shooting. Sir Ian has maintained that they realised their mistake the following morning. A police spokesman said: "He has already got more than 30 years' service and so he can retire on a full pension. He requested to go before the end of his fixed term appointment and asked that the MPA waive the three-month notice period, which we agreed to do. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake