Ms Everard, 33, who grew up in York, was raped and killed by then serving Metropolitan Police officer Wayne Couzens. Couzens tricked her into thinking she could be arrested for breaking Covid lockdown rules as she walked home from a friend’s house in south London on March 3, 2021.
Ms Everard was a student at Fulford School before moving to London where she worked as a marketing executive.
In a statement issued by the force, Metropolitan Police commissioner Sir Mark Rowley said Ms Everard “should still be here”.
“What happened to her was a profound betrayal: of her, of her family and loved ones, and of every person who places their trust in policing,” Sir Mark said.
He said the fact that Ms Everard was killed by a serving police officer was “as devastating today as it was in 2021”. “It was an unthinkable abuse of power and a total violation of the values that the Met, and policing stands for.
“On the day I heard what he had done, I felt devastated for the immense harm his actions caused to the trust that underpins our relationship with the communities we serve.
“What he did shook policing to its core. It made decent, dedicated officers and staff across the country furious that one of our own could commit such a monstrous crime.
“We will always be deeply sorry: for the unimaginable harm done to Sarah, for the trauma endured by her family – who have shown extraordinary dignity in the face of unbearable grief – and for the profound damage inflicted on the trust Londoners should be able to place in their police service.”
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Couzens was given a whole-life jail term at the end of his Old Bailey trial in September 2021, and the powerful victim impact statement made by Ms Everard’s mother led to the unmasking of another predator hiding in the ranks of the Met.
One of the victims of David Carrick was moved to come forward and make a report to the police, which eventually led to his conviction as a serial rapist.
The cases led to two damning reviews – one a report by Baroness Louise Casey in March 2023 that found the Met was institutionally racist, misogynist and homophobic.
Then an inquiry by Dame Elish Angiolini in February 2024 concluded that the Met and two other police forces could and should have stopped Couzens being a police officer.
Metropolitan Police commissioner Sir Mark Rowley (Image: James Manning/PA Wire)
Sir Mark spearheaded efforts to clean up the Met, with 1,500 officers and staff having been sacked, resigned or retired in the past three years.
But in September last year he warned “toxic or corrupt networks or cliques” that might be resistant to change remained in the force.
It followed undercover reporting at Charing Cross police station by Panorama that led to accusations of excessive use of force and offensive discriminatory comments.
We must continue to repair ‘damage inflicted on the trust of women and girls in policing’, says Met commissioner
Sir Mark said Ms Everard’s death “brought into sharp focus the need for a national reset in how policing, and society more widely, prioritises tackling violence against women and girls, as starkly illustrated by the Angiolini Review”.
“With the painful reality that far too many remain victim‑survivors and still do not feel safe, this anniversary is more than symbolic,” he added. “It is a reminder of our duty to the millions of women and girls who move through London every day with a right to feel protected, not fearful; respected, not dismissed; believed, not doubted.
“We know we have not always lived up to that responsibility and must continue to repair the damage inflicted on the trust of women and girls in policing.
“I don’t just see this as an operational priority – it is also a moral one, and one I am fiercely committed to.”
Jess Phillips, minister for safeguarding and violence against women and girls, said: “Five years on from Sarah Everard’s tragic murder, my thoughts today are with her family and all those who loved her.
“I will do everything I can to ensure women and girls can live free from fear and harm – something Sarah was so cruelly denied.”