National Post

Top police charged in soccer tragedy

1989 crush at Hillsborou­gh killed 96 fans

- Danica Kirka

• British prosecutor­s charged a former senior police officer with manslaught­er Wednesday as they announced the first criminal cases in the 1989 Hillsborou­gh stadium disaster that left 96 people dead — many of them crushed against metal fences — and changed English soccer forever.

The families of the victims have waged a decades- long quest to seek justice for their loved ones, who they believed were unfairly blamed in the April 15, 1989, tragedy. The initial deaths were ruled accidental — a ruling overturned in 2012 after a new, wide-ranging inquiry.

Last year new inquests found that the 96 fans had been unlawfully killed. Files were sent to prosecutor­s to consider criminal charges and they announced their highly anticipate­d decision Wednesday.

Those charged include the police commander on the day, David Duckenfiel­d, who is accused of gross negligence manslaught­er in the deaths of 95 men, women and children. Prosecutor­s declined to issue a manslaught­er charge relating to the 96th casualty because he died four years after the fateful match.

The former chief of South Yorkshire Police, Norman Bettison, is charged with misconduct in public office for lying about the disaster and its aftermath.

Graham Henry Mackrell, the secretary and safety officer for the Sheffield Wednesday Football Club at the time, was charged with failing to carry out health and safety duties.

Peter Metcalf, the attorney for the South Yorkshire Police, was charged with acting “with intent to pervert the course of public justice” in regards to changes in witness statements during an inquiry into the tragedy. Former Chief Superinten­dent Donald Denton and former Detective Chief Inspector Alan Foster were charged for their involvemen­t in the same matter.

Barry Devonside, whose son Christophe­r, 18, was among the 96, pumped his fist after a meeting with lawyers and other relatives.

“Everybody applauded when it was announced that the most senior police officer on that particular day will have charges presented to him,” he said.

“Criminal proceeding­s have now commenced and the defendants have a right to a fair trial,” said Sue Hemming, the head prosecutor for special crime and counterter­ror.

The tragedy at the stadium in Sheffield unfolded when more than 2,000 Liverpool soccer fans flooded into a standing- room section behind a goal, with the 54,000- capacity stadium already nearly full for the match against Nottingham Forest. The victims were smashed against metal anti- riot fences or trampled underfoot. Many suffocated in the crush.

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