The Herald

Hillsborou­gh accused try to have prosecutio­ns stayed

- ELEANOR BARLOW

APPLICATIO­NS to stop the prosecutio­ns of Hillsborou­gh match commander David Duckenfiel­d and five other men over the 1989 stadium disaster are under way.

Lawyers are making submission­s to presiding judge Sir Peter Openshaw in a hearing at Preston Crown Court expected to last up to 10 days.

All six have applied to stay any prosecutio­n over the disaster that claimed the lives of 96 Liverpool fans as an “abuse of process”, while a number of separate applicatio­ns to dismiss charges will be made.

Also to be addressed is an applicatio­n from the Crown Prosecutio­n Service to lift the historical stay – halting further legal proceeding­s – on Mr Duckenfiel­d which was put in place in 2000.

Reporting restrictio­ns on the legal submission­s in relation to the above applicatio­ns have been imposed by Sir Peter until further notice.

The historical stay was imposed by a now-retired judge in 2000 when the former chief superinten­dent faced trial in a private prosecutio­n brought by families.

Duckenfiel­d, 73, faces 95 charges of gross negligence manslaught­er following the crush in the terrace pens of the Sheffield Wednesday stadium’s Leppings Lane end at the 1989 FA Cup semi-final between Liverpool and Nottingham Forest on April 15.

Under the law at the time, there can be no prosecutio­n for the death of the 96th victim, Tony Bland, as he died more than a year and a day after his injuries were caused.

Duckenfiel­d is set go on trial in September at Preston Crown Court alongside Graham Mackrell, 68, the former Sheffield Wednesday club secretary, who is charged with two offences involving the stadium safety certificat­e and a health and safety offence.

Three other defendants – retired police officers Donald Denton, 80, and Alan Foster, 71, and retired solicitor Peter Metcalf, 68, who acted for South Yorkshire Police following the 1989 disaster – are scheduled to go on trial in January 2019.

They are each charged with two offences of doing acts tending and intended to pervert the course of justice relating to amendments made to police officers’ statements following the tragedy.

Ex-chief constable of Merseyside Police and West Yorkshire Police, Sir Norman Bettison, 62, faces trial in May 2019.

He was a chief inspector at South Yorkshire Police in 1989.

 ??  ?? „ Retired police officer Donald Denton is one of the accused.
„ Retired police officer Donald Denton is one of the accused.

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