Met never asked me for lockdown party evidence,
says Dominic Cummings
Boris Johnson’s former aide identified as being
present at two events and mentioned six times in Sue Gray report
Peter
Walker Political correspondent
@peterwalker99
Fri 27 May
2022 14.41 BST
Dominic
Cummings, Boris Johnson’s former chief aide, was never contacted by police
seeking information about alleged lockdown-breaching parties inside Downing
Street during his time working there, he has said.
In a
Twitter exchange with a journalist, asked if he was one of the No 10 staffers
to receive a fixed-penalty notice (FPN) from the Metropolitan police over
illicit social events, Cummings replied: “No, didn’t even send a questionnaire
or email asking for evidence.”
The police
issued 126 fines to 83 people, including one to Johnson, in an investigation
which ended last week.
Because the
offences fell under the system of FPNs, they were dealt with entirely by
police, who investigated alleged breaches and issued fines, which could be
challenged in court, although none were in this case. Those involved were not
formally interviewed but sent written questionnaires.
Cummings
was Johnson’s most senior adviser until he was sacked in November 2020, and is
mentioned six times in the report into the gatherings, published on Wednesday
by the senior civil servant Sue Gray.
The report
identifies Cummings as present at two events considered in the report, one of
which is a gathering in the Downing Street garden on 15 May 2020, where
Cummings was pictured sitting with Johnson alongside a table with wine bottles
and a cheese platter. Gray described this event as a continuation of work
meetings, and it was not investigated by police.
However,
Cummings was also identified by Gray as attending at least part of an event on
18 June 2020 for which others were fined, a leaving event in the cabinet room
for a No 10 private secretary. This continued until after 3am, involving a
karaoke machine and what Gray called “excessive alcohol consumption” in which
someone was sick and “a minor altercation between two other individuals”.
Cummings
subsequently took again to Twitter to argue that while Gray considered 18 June
a single event in two parts, he considered them separate gatherings, adding: “I
was *not* at later one & far as Im aware *nobody* was fined for earlier
meeting in CAB room.”
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Cummings is
also cited by Gray as having raised written concerns about a “bring your own
booze” gathering in the No 10 garden on 20 May 2020, another event for which
people were fined.
Gray said
in her report she had “not found any documentary evidence” of Cummings’
worries. But in another tweet, he said this was a misunderstanding by Gray, and
that while he and another official, the then communications chief Lee Cain,
both raised concerns, only Cain did so in writing.

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