The Sunday Post (Dundee)

We’ll sue cops over death of our Sheku

Family seeks answers

- By Murray Scougall mscougall@sundaypost.com

THE family of Sheku Bayoh are to launch a civil action against Police Scotland.

The father-of-two died while in police custody in Kirkcaldy in May 2015 after he was restrained by nine officers.

Sheku’s loved ones believe the 31-year-old was killed by positional asphyxiati­on caused by the officers’ actions and have been campaignin­g for answers ever since.

The family’s lawyer, Aamer Anwar, confirmed: “We are intending to launch a civil action against Police Scotland for what happened to Sheku that day.

“That will mean we can ask how it came to be that he was handcuffed, ankle-cuffed, had leg restraints on and was face down on the floor.

“Was excessive violence used? Why did police officers feel the need for the treatment that day, and did it result in death?

“Those are all areas that will arise in a potential civil action and we have a very experience­d senior counsel working on it.”

The revelation comes in a documentar­y, After Sheku, to be shown on BBC2 Scotland at 9pm on Tuesday. It follows Sheku’s loved ones over the course of 20 months and lays bare the strain and heartache his death and the subsequent investigat­ion have caused them.

Sheku’s sister, Kadi Johnson, is pleased by the latest developmen­t.

She said: “We want justice to be done, we want to know the truth and we want to know what happened to our brother.”

Sheku had been at a friend’s house in the hours before his death but he hadn’t been himself. He left and then fought with a friend, before returning to his own house.

Police were later called when he was seen in the street acting erraticall­y and he died soon after being restrained.

His family believe officers used undue force and the Police Investigat­ions and Review Commission­er launched an inquiry.

Toxicology reports showed Sheku had ecstasy and APVP, a psychostim­ulant, in his system when he died.

Collette Bell, Sheku’s partner and mother

to his youngest son, Isaac, who was just three months old when his dad died, said: “He was a kind, caring gentlemen who would do anything for anyone. He called me his princess and he treated me like one.”

His brother-in-law, Ade Johnson, added: “If Shek hadn’t met the police or come into contact with them that day, would he be alive or dead? I believe he would be alive.”

Police Scotland provided a statement for the documentar­y, which states: “We cannot comment on the events of May 3, 2015, while the Crown Office evaluates the independen­t findings submitted by the PIRC.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Collette and Isaac.
Collette and Isaac.
 ??  ?? Ade and Kadi Johnson.
Ade and Kadi Johnson.

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