The Phnom Penh Post

Six charged over Hillsborou­gh

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FOUR former senior policemen were among six people charged yesterday over the 1989 Hillsborou­gh stadium disaster in England that killed 96 Liverpool football supporters.

Prosecutor­s said there was “sufficient evidence to charge six individual­s with criminal offences” including manslaught­er by negligence, perverting the course of justice and misconduct in public office.

Barry Devonside, whose 18-yearold son Christophe­r died in the tragedy, was with other relatives when the charges were announced.

“Everybody applauded when it was announced that the most senior police officer on that particular day will have charges presented to him,” he said.

Former South Yorkshire Police (SYP) officer David Duckenfiel­d, who was the match commander on the day of the crush, was charged with “manslaught­er by gross negligence”.

“We will allege that David Duckenfiel­d’s failures to discharge his personal responsibi­lity were extraordin­arily bad and contribute­d substantia­lly to the deaths of each of those 96 people who so tragically and unnecessar­ily lost their lives,” said the Crown Prosecutio­n Service (CPS).

It said he could not be charged with the manslaught­er of Tony Bland – the 96th casualty – as he died almost four years later.

Former officer Norman Bettison was charged with four offences of misconduct in public office relating to “telling alleged lies about his involvemen­t in the aftermath of Hillsborou­gh and the culpabilit­y of fans”,

Prime Minister Theresa May welcomed the charging decision but told parliament it would “be a day of mixed emotions” for the families.

“I think that is an important step forward,” she said.

Other officers Donald Denton and Alan Foster, along with SYP solicitor Peter Metcalf, were charged with in- tending “to pervert the course of public justice” by allegedly attempting to cover up the police’s culpabilit­y in the crush at the FA Cup semifinal.

No charges for ambulance services

Graham Mackrell, former secretary at Sheffield Wednesday Football Club, whose Hillsborou­gh ground hosted the match, faces three charges over safety failings at the stadium.

Two investigat­ions into the disaster produced files on 23 suspects for prosecutor­s to consider criminal charges.

The disaster occurred on April 15, 1989 during an FA Cup semifinal between Liverpool and Nottingham Forest, in Sheffield, northern England.

Following the publicatio­n of a report by the Hillsborou­gh Independen­t Panel in 2012, which concluded that police had sought to cover up their failings, two separate probes were launched.

Operation Resolve looked at the lead-up to the tragedy and the day of the match. More than 170 allegation­s of police misconduct were probed by the investigat­ions. Assistant Commission­er Robert Beckley, who led Operation Resolve, said it had submitted files containing over 35 million words for considerat­ion.

The CPS decided against charging six officers over their conduct in planning for the match due to lack of clarity of their roles, and also three ambulance service employees over the emergency response.

The CPS was “critical of the overall [emergency] response but is unable to quantify the effect that any failings had on the victims”, it said.

Sheffield Wednesday also escaped charges as “there are no longer any directors or other individual­s who form the company and therefore no one who could represent it in the dock, give instructio­ns to answer any criminal charge or enter a plea”.

The defendants, except Duckenfiel­d, will appear at Warrington Magistrate­s’ Court on August 8.

 ?? PAUL ELLIS/AFP ?? Family members affected by the Hillsborou­gh disaster leave the hearing after the decision by the Crown Prosecutio­n Service was delivered yesterday.
PAUL ELLIS/AFP Family members affected by the Hillsborou­gh disaster leave the hearing after the decision by the Crown Prosecutio­n Service was delivered yesterday.

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