Police are considering whether to investigate the funding of the lavish refurbishment of Boris Johnson’s official Downing Street flat following a complaint by lawyers acting for the Labour Party.
In a letter to Scotland Yard, the solicitors said there was a “reasonable suspicion” that the Prime Minister had broken anti-bribery laws, which the force was “duty-bound” to investigate.
The Metropolitan Police confirmed they had received the letter and it was being considered by officers from its Central Specialist Crime Command. Downing Street has denied the allegations.
Labour’s complaint followed the release last month of an exchange of WhatsApp messages between the Prime Minister and Tory donor Lord Brownlow.
They showed that Mr Johnson discussed a proposal by the peer for a “Great Exhibition 2.0” at the same time as requesting his help with the £112,000 revamp of his official residence.
Ministerial records showed that two months later, Lord Brownlow attended a meeting with the then culture secretary Oliver Dowden to discuss the exhibition plan.
In his letter, seen by The Guardian, Gerald Shamash, of the law firm Edwards Duthie Shamash, said that despite inquiries by the Electoral Commission and Lord Geidt, Mr Johnson’s adviser on ministerial interests, there were still matters that were “uninvestigated and unconsidered”.
It went on: “It is respectfully suggested that the known facts and the clear, sensible inferences to which some of those facts give rise, create such reasonable suspicion that, were the suspect anyone other than the Prime Minister, the Metropolitan Police would rightly consider itself duty-bound to investigate.
“Indeed, if anything, the fact that the suspicion arises in relation to someone in such a high office makes it more, not less, important in the public interest that these matters are investigated.”
A spokesman for the Met said: “A letter was received and acknowledged on Friday February 4. It is being considered by officers from the Met’s Central Specialist Crime Command. No investigation has been opened.”
In response to the claims in the letter, a No 10 spokesman said: “These allegations are categorically untrue and a clear misrepresentation of the facts.
“Lord Brownlow, separate to his work for the emerging Downing Street Trust, put proposals (for a great exhibition) from the Royal Albert Hall, the national institution and charity, to the Prime Minister.
“This was passed to the lead department, DCMS (Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport). It is a matter of public record that no project was taken forward by the Government.”
Lord Brownlow is a trustee of the Royal Albert Hall Trust and an ambassador of the hall’s 150th anniversary.
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