Paisley Daily Express

Families: Gunman given licence to kill

Keyham inquest told of unsafe culture in police licensing unit

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KEYHAM gunman Jake Davison was granted “a licence to kill” because of failures in a police licensing unit, his victims’ families said as an inquest jury found there was a “seriously unsafe culture” in the department.

In just eight minutes Davison killed his mother Maxine, 51, and then shot dead three-year-old Sophie Martyn, her father Lee, 43, Stephen Washington, 59, and Kate Shepherd, 66.

He then turned the weapon upon himself as he was confronted by an unarmed police officer on August 12 2021 in Keyham, Plymouth.

Jurors at a long-running inquest held at Exeter Racecourse gave their conclusion­s on yesterday afternoon, ruling each victim was unlawfully killed.

They were critical of the failings within Devon and Cornwall Police’s licensing unit, which handed Davison back his shotgun five weeks before the killings.

The jury said: “There was a catastroph­ic failure in the management of the firearms and explosives licensing unit, with a lack of managerial supervisio­n, inadequate and ineffectiv­e leadership.

“This was compounded by a lack of senior management and executive leadership who failed to notice or address the issues.

“There was a lack of scrutiny and profession­al curiosity at all levels.

“There was a seriously unsafe culture within the firearms and explosives licensing unit of defaulting to granting licences and to returning licences after review.”

Turning to national failings, the jury also found: “There was a serious failure at a national level by the Government, Home Office and National College of Policing to implement the recommenda­tion from Lord Cullen’s Report in 1996 arising out of the fatal shootings in Dunblane, to provide training for firearms inquiry officers and the subsequent recommenda­tion in Her Majesty’s Inspectora­te of the Constabula­ry’s Targeting the Risk Report in 2015 for an accredited training regime for firearms enquiry officers.”

In a statement, the families of Davison’s victims said his actions that day were “an act of pure evil”, which were “facilitate­d and enabled by a series of failings and incompeten­ce from the people and organisati­ons that are supposed to keep us safe”.

They said: “It is beyond us how Davison, a man with a known history of violence, mental health issues, and with no real need to own a firearm, was granted a licence to possess a gun in the first place. Warning signs were ignored and a licence to kill was granted.” The inquest heard the 22-year-old legally held a shotgun certificat­e and weapon having been obsessed with firearms from a young age due to a trait in autism of developing a “special interest”.

He applied to Devon and Cornwall Police for a shotgun certificat­e in July 2017 aged 18, saying he wanted to go clay pigeon shooting with his uncle. As part of the applicatio­n process Davison had declared his autism and Asperger’s but when police sought relevant informatio­n from his GP, the doctor declined to provide any as it was not mandatory. The police granted the applicatio­n in January 2018 to last five years.

Later that year the apprentice crane operator bought a black Weatherby pumpaction shotgun which he kept at home in Biddick Drive.

Police were already aware Davison had a history of violence and knew that aged 12 he had assaulted two teachers and aged 13 had punched a pupil at the special school he attended. Aged 17 he was involved in a domestic verbal argument with his father Mark and was also suspected of an assault outside a Tesco store in 2016.

In September 2020, Davison was captured on CCTV punching a 16-year-old boy up to nine times in a skate park and slapping their 15-year-old female friend after another boy called him a “fat c***”.

Detectives did not know he was a firearms holder and put him on the deferred charge Pathfinder scheme instead of prosecutio­n.

It was only two months later a concerned Pathfinder worker alerted police and the shotgun and certificat­e were seized.

But just five weeks before the killings, they were handed back to Davison.

 ?? ?? Maxine Davison, Sophie and Lee Martyn, Kate Shepherd and Stephen Washington
Maxine Davison, Sophie and Lee Martyn, Kate Shepherd and Stephen Washington
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 ?? ?? Jake Davison
Jake Davison

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