Sunday People

DAD’S JOY AT

- EXCLUSIVE BY HEATHER MAIN

WHEN applicatio­ns finally opened for the Elizabeth Emblem, a medal recognisin­g public service heroes who lost their lives in the line of duty, Bryn Hughes was right at the front of the queue.

The heartbroke­n dad of two lost his daughter PC Nicola Hughes when she was gunned down by a fugitive killer.

Shocked to find there was no way of officially honouring Nicola’s sacrifice, Bryn campaigned for two years for state recognitio­n for his daughter and other heroes like her.

And so when the Elizabeth Emblem became a reality earlier this month, Bryn applied for Nicola’s award just moments after the website went live.

Pride

For the former prison guard, it was a moment filled with pride that also finally brought a sense of closure 12 years after Nicola’s appalling murder.

Bryn, 60, says: “I’m over the moon that there is finally something in place to honour Nicola, and hundreds of other people like her.

“I applied for Nicola’s medal at one minute past midnight on the day they were launched, and can’t wait to have it in my hands.

“It’s something that shows her sacrifice is appreciate­d and heard by the country, which is hugely comforting.”

Nicola, 23, and colleague PC Fiona Bone, 32, were murdered on September 18, 2012, when they answered what they thought was a routine call to a burglary in Tameside, Greater Manchester. But it was a fake 999 call, a trap laid by one-eyed underworld killer Dale Cregan.

On the run after shooting dead gangland rival David Short, 46, and his son Mark, 23, Cregan fired at Nicola and Fiona with a semiautoma­tic Glock pistol and launched a grenade.

Bryn was driving home from work when he got the phone call that changed his life for ever. He recalls: “This police officer told me Nicola was dead. Having to call my son Sam, then 20, and tell him what had happened... it was the hardest call of my life.”

Bryn had been so proud when Nicola decided to join Greater Manchester Police in 2009, aged just 19. He says: “She flew through her training. She had such a way of dealing with people, she was strong but kind.”

The two had a close bond. “She was brilliant company, funny,” he says. “She was always offering to help our neighbours, always had a kind word.

“We had conversati­ons about the possibilit­y of being assaulted – she was well aware of it, given my job – but she wasn’t scared and, at the time, I wasn’t scared for her. She knew her job.”

Cregan, 30, was given a whole-life sentence in 2013 for what the judge called “premeditat­ed savagery”. He

This is really important to me and I hope it will provide solace for other heroes’ families too

caused outrage when he was accused of manipulati­ng the system by going on hunger strike to get himself moved out of his category A jail to secure Ashworth Hospital in Merseyside where he could have more freedom.

After Nicola’s death, Bryn returned to his job at HMP Wakefield, but found working for the prison service – where he’d been for 25 years – too hard, and took early retirement.

To prevent himself being consumed by grief, he started running – and has run 12 marathons all over the world, including with police officers at the

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MBE HONOUR At Buckingham Palace
HAPPIER MEMORIES Pair lark about MBE HONOUR At Buckingham Palace

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