Birmingham Post

Judge backs officers who restrained prisoner

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A RETIRED custody sergeant and a police detention officer have been cleared of assaulting a verbally abusive prisoner after a judge rejected claims they had used disproport­ionate force.

Former West Midlands Police sergeant Howard Price, aged 52, and 50-year-old Steve Orton had both denied any wrongdoing in connection with injuries suffered by a detainee in a cell at the force’s Oldbury custody unit.

Acquitting both men of assault by beating after a one-day trial at Birmingham Magistrate­s’ Court, District Judge David Robinson said CCTV showed both officers had been in a situation where their health and welfare was at risk.

After hearing how a third custody officer had spent seven months off work after being injured while trying to restrain the detained man, the judge said: “I am satisfied that the complainan­t was actively resisting and was actively participat­ing in the struggle as it began.

“It’s perfectly clear that there was a struggle going on in which he was an active resister, even if he’s not throwing blows as such.”

The judge, who viewed CCTV of a number of “distractio­n strikes” being deployed as up to seven officers restrained the complainan­t, added none of their actions amounted to retaliatio­n or a response to offensive comments.

“I am quite satisfied that the force used was to restrain and seek the compliance of the complainan­t,” the judge said.

Price, aged 52, from Halesowen, told the court he had performed two leg sweeps after answering a panic alarm to attend the cell on November 11 last year.

Orton, aged 50, from Walsall, told the court he was left “quite sore” after aiming several “distractio­n strikes” at the prisoner, who was resisting and constantly saying he wanted to hurt himself.

 ??  ?? > Howard Price, aged 52
> Howard Price, aged 52
 ??  ?? > Steven Orton, aged 50
> Steven Orton, aged 50

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