Western Morning News (Saturday)

Hillsborou­gh cover-up compensati­on agreed

- ELEANOR BARLOW

TWO police forces have agreed to pay damages to more than 600 people after a cover-up following the Hillsborou­gh disaster, lawyers have said.

The South Yorkshire and West Midlands forces agreed the settlement earlier this year following a civil claim for misfeasanc­e in a public office on behalf of 601 claimants, solicitors representi­ng the victims said.

It comes despite nobody ever being convicted over the cover-up following the tragedy, in which 96 Liverpool fans died at the 1989 FA Cup semi-final.

A spokesman for Saunders Law, the lead solicitors for the group litigation, said the claim was started in 2015 and agreed in April, but could not be reported until the conclusion of the trial of former South Yorkshire Police chief superinten­dent Donald Denton, 83, retired detective chief inspector Alan Foster, 74, and Peter Metcalf, 71, who acted as solicitor for the force.

The three men, who were accused of amending police officers’ statements to minimise blame on the force, were each cleared of two counts of perverting the course of justice last week after a judge ruled there was no case to answer.

The Saunders Law spokesman said: “Through this civil claim for misfeasanc­e in a public office, 601 victims sought justice and accountabi­lity for the deliberate, orchestrat­ed and thoroughly dishonest police cover-up that supressed the truth about the responsibi­lity of the police and blamed the football supporters for the horrific events that unfolded at the Hillsborou­gh Stadium on April 15 1989.”

The disaster at Sheffield Wednesday’s stadium was investigat­ed by West Midlands Police.

Lawyers said the cover-up had caused additional psychiatri­c injury to the survivors of the disaster and the families of those who died.

The spokesman added: “The settlement of these claims marks the end of an unparallel­ed and extraordin­ary fight for justice by the victims and their families.”

In 2012, then-chief constable of South Yorkshire Police David

Crompton apologised for a cover-up following the publicatio­n of the Hillsborou­gh Independen­t Panel report.

New inquests, which concluded in 2016, found that the 96 men, women and children who died were unlawfully killed and fans played no part in the causes of the disaster.

In the statement, Saunders Law said there had been “an almost complete failure of the justice system to deliver justice” and called on the Government to implement a Hillsborou­gh Law, which would include a duty of candour for public officials.

The spokesman said: “We trust that this settlement will put an end to any fresh attempts to rewrite the record and wrongly claim that there was no cover-up.

“In so commenting, we contrast the dignity of the bereaved families and the supporters with the conduct of those who still seek to peddle the discredite­d lies of the past.”

The law firm said the police forces will pay damages to compensate each claimant for injuries they suffered and provide access to a treatment fund for further psychiatri­c treatment or counsellin­g.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom