The Scotsman

Families applaud decision to prosecute

● Six men to face charges connected to deaths of 96 fans at Hillsborou­gh

- By ELEANOR BARLOW

Families of the 96 Hillsborou­gh victims broke into applause as they were told match commander David Duckenfiel­d and five others are to face criminal charges nearly 30 years on from the death of their loved ones.

Duckenfiel­d, 72, along with former chief constable Sir Norman Bettison, 61, two other senior ex-south Yorkshire Police officers, the then force solicitor and the safety boss of Sheffield Wednesday FC, will be prosecuted, the Crown Prosecutio­n Service (CPS) announced.

Margaret Aspinall, chairwoman of Hillsborou­gh Family Support Group, described yesterday’s announceme­nt to the families as the “beginning of the end”.

Mrs Aspinall, whose son, James, 18, died in the tragedy, said: “No-one should have to go through what the families have gone through for 28 years to try and get to the truth and to get accountabi­lity.

“I think now what has been achieved today will change things for the good of this nation and I think that’s the legacy of our 96, that they will have left behind.”

Duckenfiel­d, a former South Yorkshire Police chief superinten­dent and the officer in charge at the football ground on the day, faces 95 counts of manslaught­er by gross negligence, while Bettison, a chief inspector at the time of the disaster, faces four offences of misconduct in a public office over alleged lies in accounts of his involvemen­t in the 1989 disaster.

In a statement, Bettison said: “I am disappoint­ed to be charged with misconduct in a public office. The charge is not in relation to my actions around the time of the disaster but in relation to comments I made years afterwards.

“I will vigorously defend my innocence as I have been doing for nearly five years.”

The Football Associatio­n, South Yorkshire Ambulance Service and Sheffield Wednes- day FC and its architects and safety consultant­s will not be prosecuted, the CPS said.

Ninety-six Liverpool fans were crushed to death in pens at the Leppings Lane end of Hillsborou­gh Stadium on 15 April 1989, as their FA Cup semi-final cup tie against Nottingham Forest began.

After decades of campaignin­g by relatives, an inquest jury last year ruled the victims had been unlawfully killed in a tragedy caused by police blunders, paving the way for prosecutio­ns, after the quashing of original inquest verdicts in 1991 of accidental death.

 ??  ?? 0 Margaret Aspinall and Trevor Hicks address the media after hearing the CPS’S decision. Right, David Duckenfiel­d and Sir Norman Bettison are among the six men facing charges
0 Margaret Aspinall and Trevor Hicks address the media after hearing the CPS’S decision. Right, David Duckenfiel­d and Sir Norman Bettison are among the six men facing charges

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