South Wales Echo

NO NEW ANSWERS IN DEATH PROBE

POST-MORTEM EXAMINATIO­N FAILS TO FIND CAUSE OF DEATH OF MAN WHO DIED HOURS AFTER RELEASE FROM POLICE CUSTODY

- ADAM HALE echo.newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

A POST-MORTEM examinatio­n has failed to establish the cause of death of a man who died just hours after being released from police custody, an inquest has been told.

Mohamud Hassan, 24, was arrested at his home in Cardiff on the evening of January 8 on suspicion of a breach of the peace, but was released the next morning without charge.

The father-to-be was then found dead at his flat in Newport Road later on January 9, with his family claiming he was left bloodied and bruised after being assaulted by officers.

Yesterday, the inquest heard the cause of Mr Hassan’s death was “unascertai­ned” following a postmortem examinatio­n by Dr Deryk James, of the University Hospital of Wales, in Cardiff.

Coroner’s assistant Emma Pontin told the coroner’s court in Pontypridd: “The pathologis­t has provided a report, advancing a provisiona­l cause of death as 1A unascertai­ned.”

The court heard Mr Hassan, who was of Somali heritage, was born in London and then moved to the Welsh capital.

Ms Pontin said Mr Hassan was with a friend at his flat on January 9 and was last seen alive at 5pm.

He was then found unconsciou­s by the friend at 10.30pm, with emergency services being called and arriving at 10.56pm.

Ms Pontin said: “His cause of death unknown, a post-mortem examinatio­n was authorised.”

Coroner Graeme Hughes said: “Given that Dr James has indicated in his most recent report that he is unable to advance a medical cause of death at this time, it falls upon me to conduct an investigat­ion into the circumstan­ces surroundin­g Mr Hassan’s death, and then conclude that investigat­ion by way of an inquest.”

Mr Hughes told Mr Hassan’s family, who attended the hearing virtually, that his investigat­ion would be limited to “who was the deceased, when did he die, where did he die, and most importantl­y how did he come about his death?”.

Mr Hughes acknowledg­ed an ongoing Independen­t Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) investigat­ion into Mr Hassan’s death, following a self-referral by South Wales Police, was “in its infancy”.

Rebecca Hinton, representi­ng the IOPC, said it expects to conclude the investigat­ion before September, saying: “We are hopeful that we should be complete within six months,” but adding that is on the provision “we experience no further slippage with technical issues” including CCTV.

Mr Hughes said a pre-inquest review hearing will take place on December 3, but a written update from the IOPC could be requested in August.

Mr Hassan’s contact with officers is being investigat­ed by the IOPC, which on Tuesday said there is “no evidence” a Taser was used on him during his arrest or detention following allegation­s to the contrary by his family.

The IOPC said officers attended Mr Hassan’s flat following a report that five men had entered the address and were fighting with five occupants, some of whom already had visible injuries when the officers turned up.

It also said it is gathering accounts from 46 officers and police staff, including those who were on duty at Cardiff Bay police station over two separate shifts, those who were in supervisor­y positions, and those who attended Mr Hassan’s address during his arrest and after his death.

One officer who brought Mr Hassan to the station in a police van has already been issued a misconduct notice in relation to whether the individual failed to relay Mr Hassan’s complaints of having a fit and being in pain to custody staff.

The most serious sanction the officer could receive if found to have breached profession­al standards at misconduct level is a written warning.

Several Black Lives Matter protests and vigils have been held outside Cardiff Bay police station to call for CCTV and police bodycam footage of Mr Hassan’s arrest to be made public.

The IOPC has refused to do so, citing the possibilit­y it may be needed for criminal, misconduct, or inquest proceeding­s.

Lawyer Hilary Brown, representi­ng Mr Hassan’s family, said they were

concerned that delaying a full inquest into his death until December could allow it to be influenced by a police watchdog investigat­ion.

A representa­tive of the Independen­t Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) told a coroner on Wednesday its review into Mr Hassan’s contact with South Wales Police officers would conclude within six months.

Ms Brown has previously criticised the IOPC in its handling of its investigat­ion.

Ms Brown said: “My concern is by the time the IOPC will have concluded their investigat­ion, they will have written up a report on their findings, and that will influence the coroner.

“We wanted the inquest to come forward because we want to be able to ensure that everything is on track, and lines of inquiry that we feel are relevant are actually followed.”

 ?? Mohamud Hassan ??
Mohamud Hassan
 ??  ?? Mohamud Mohammed Hassan
Mohamud Mohammed Hassan

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom