The Guardian (USA)

Police chiefs apologise for Hillsborou­gh failures

- David Conn

The national body for police chief constables has issued an official apology for the police failures that led to the unlawful killing of 97 people in the 1989 Hillsborou­gh disaster, and for the “pain and suffering” experience­d by the bereaved families for years afterwards.

Martin Hewitt, the chair of the National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC), made the apology at the launch of a report setting out senior police officers’ commitment­s to learn lessons from the Hillsborou­gh failures. These include every force having signed a charter for bereaved families in 2021 that requires police organisati­ons to acknowledg­e mistakes with “openness” and “candour” after a public tragedy, and not “seek to defend the indefensib­le”, as South Yorkshire police were accused of doing after the 1989 disaster.

Andy Marsh, the chief executive of the College of Policing, the standardss­etting body for the police in England and Wales, said a new code of ethics would also be issued for consultati­on in the next few weeks, that would incorporat­e a code of practice requiring chief police officers to ensure openness and candour including in inquests and public inquiries.

Marsh also made an apology, saying: “Policing has profoundly failed those bereaved by the Hillsborou­gh disaster over many years and we are sorry that the service got it so wrong. Police failures were the main cause of the tragedy and have continued to blight the lives of family members ever since. When leadership was most needed, the bereaved were often treated insensitiv­ely and the response lacked coordinati­on and oversight.”

Marsh described the 1989 disaster at the FA Cup semi-final between Liverpool and Nottingham Forest as a “touchstone for long-lasting change”, towards a police service acting with “integrity and empathy”.

He said: “The changes include all police forces in England and Wales signing up to a charter agreeing to acknowledg­e when mistakes have been made and not seek to defend the indefensib­le; a strengthen­ed ethical policy which makes candour a key theme, and new guidance for specialist officers supporting families during a tragedy, which learnt lessons from the Hillsborou­gh Families report, the Grenfell Tower tragedy and the 2017 terrorist attacks.”

A 56-page report setting out these commitment­s, jointly produced by the NPCC and College of Policing, represents a national police response to the 2017 report into the Hillsborou­gh failures by James Jones, the former bishop of Liverpool. Jones was previously chair of the Hillsborou­gh Independen­t Panel, whose landmark 2012 report exposed the police negligence that caused the disaster, and the years of false evidence promoted by South Yorkshire police, that sought to blame Liverpool supporters for the disaster.

The first inquest verdict of accidental death, against which bereaved families campaigned for more than 20 years, was quashed in December 2012. In 2016 a new inquest jury found that the 97 victims of the crush on Hillsborou­gh’s Leppings Lane terrace had been unlawfully killed due to gross negligence manslaught­er by the South Yorkshire police officer in command, Ch Supt David Duckenfiel­d, and that there was no misbehavio­ur by Liverpool supporters that contribute­d to the disaster. However no police officer has been discipline­d or convicted of any offence relating to the disaster or the years of false evidence; Duckenfiel­d was charged with gross negligence manslaught­er and acquitted in 2019.

Jones’s November 2017 report, commission­ed by Theresa May when she was home secretary, made 25 recommenda­tions “to ensure the pain and suffering of the Hillsborou­gh families is not repeated”, including a charter for bereaved families, a “duty of candour” for police officers, and that bereaved families should have public funding for legal representa­tion at inquests where public bodies are represente­d.

Those recommenda­tions have been adopted by families and campaigner­s as a “Hillsborou­gh law” they have called on the government to introduce. However, more than five years after the James report, the government has still not produced a response to it. Margaret Aspinall, whose 18-year-old son James died at Hillsborou­gh, told the BBC: “We are now in 2023. How long does it take to read a report, to come out with your findings or what you think should happen?”

Labour committed at its conference in Liverpool last September to introduce the Hillsborou­gh law reforms if it wins the next election. In the Commons, the shadow home secretary, Yvette Cooper, welcomed the police response but said the government’s failure to respond showed “a lack of respect to the families”.

The home secretary, Suella Braverman, said the government’s response had been delayed “by the need to avoid the risk of prejudice during any criminal proceeding­s which related to Hillsborou­gh”; the last trial collapsed in May 2021.

Braverman said the government “remains absolutely committed to responding to the bishop’s report as soon as practicabl­e”.

Jones himself criticised the government’s delay as “intolerabl­e” and welcomed the police response:

“The NPCC report now shifts the focus and puts the pressure on the government, especially the home and justice secretarie­s,” Jones said. “I welcome the NPCC’s recognitio­n that the police ‘got it so wrong’ and subjected the families to ‘harrowing’ events. It is also encouragin­g that they are so supportive of ‘a duty of candour’ and legal representa­tion for families bereaved after a public tragedy.”

In a press briefing, Marsh and Hewitt acknowledg­ed current challenges facing police following a series of recent scandals, and said the public and media would hold police to account for adherence to the new charter and ethical code.

Hewitt also condemned the toxic chants about the disaster directed at Liverpool supporters by some rival fans at recent matches, which have caused deep offence to families and survivors.

“It’s disgusting and action needs to be taken [by match police and stewards] to stop people doing that,” he said.

Deborah Coles, the executive director of Inquest, which works with families of people who have died in circumstan­ces of police or state involvemen­t, said: “The continuing failure of the government to respond to the bishop’s report is an insult to bereaved and survivors who want to see no one else suffer a similar injustice. And yet the culture of delay, denial and defensiven­ess by the police and other public and corporate bodies continues after state-related deaths.

“It shows the urgent and compelling need for enactment of a Hillsborou­gh law to stop families having to fight for truth, justice and accountabi­lity against the might of the state.”

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