Stephen Rimmer

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Stephen Rimmer was (from November 2007 - February 2009) the Director of Prevent and of the RICU counter terror propaganda unit, part of the Office for Security and Counter-Terrorism set up by the Home Office, Foreign and Commonwealth Office and the Department for Communities and Local Government. He was succeeded by Debbie Gupta.

Background

A biographical note issues at a Prevent meeting in Aberdeen in January 2009 notes:

Stephen Rimmer joined the Home Office in 1984 and worked in a variety of policy posts there and in Northern Ireland Office until 1993. Having been involved in the Prison Service bid to run Strangeways Prison after the 1990 riot, he was Deputy Governor there for two years, before working in the Cabinet Office as Director of the Central Drugs Co-ordination Unit until 1998. He subsequently became Governor of first Gartree Prison in Leicestershire (an all lifer establishment) and then Wandsworth Prison (a large Victorian local prison).
He became Director of Policing Policy in the Home Office in January 2002, with responsibility for all areas of police policy work other than the Standards Unit. He joined the Metropolitan Police Service in October 2005 as a member of its Management Board and as Director of Strategy, Modernisation and Performance. In November 2007 he returned to the Home Office to become Director of the Prevent Strategy, and of the Research Information and Communications Unit, within the Office for Security and Counter Terrorism.[1]

Phonehacking

In 2009, Rimmer advised against a review of the Metropolitan Police's phone-hacking investigation by [[Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary. In an email on 13 July 2009 to Richard Westlake, the private secretary to Home Secretary Alan Johnson, Rimmer wrote: "My own advice on this remains that there are insufficient grounds to do so … and that the Met would deeply resent what they would see as 'interference' in an operational investigation which could, of course, be revived at any given time."[2]

In advice to Johnson the following day, wrote that a review "could lead to accusations that … following recent exchanges with John Yates, we do not have full confidence in the MPS".[2]

SOCA

While serving as Director General of the Home Office’s Crime and Policing Group, on 7 August 2013, Rimmer was appointed as interim chair of the Serious Organised Crime Agency, following the resignation of Sir Ian Andrews.[3]

Resources

Notes

  1. 'Speakers', TACKLING NEW PRIORITIES PREVENTING VIOLENT EXTREMISM IN OUR COMMUNITIES, Thursday 22 January 2009, Richard Donald Suite, Pittodrie Stadium, Aberdeen
  2. 2.0 2.1 Nick Davies, Nicholas Watt and Vikram Dodd, Phone-hacking inquiry was abandoned to avoid upsetting police, The Guardian, 6 September 2010.
  3. SOCA interim Chairman announced, Home Office, 7 August 2013.