Sunday Mirror

Tories face £200m payouts for Covid care home deaths

- BY JOHN SIDDLE, JACK CLOVER and DAN HALL jack.clover@reachplc.com

BORIS Johnson’s Government could be forced to pay grieving families £200million over Covid deaths in care homes in Britain’s biggest-ever class-action lawsuit.

A court ruled this week that the Tories’ reckless policy of clearing 25,000 hospital patients off wards and into homes without first testing them for the virus had been unlawful.

Judges said the Government had failed to consider the risks from asymptomat­ic transmissi­on.

Their ruling blew apart the claim by then Health Secretary Matt Hancock that ministers had put a “protective ring” around care homes.

Now legal experts say loved ones of those who died as a result could each win a five-figure negligence payout.

And they say the Department of Health and Social Care could be faced with having to defend itself against claims for corporate manslaught­er.

Shadow Health Secretary Wes Streeting said: “It’s impossible to know the number of lives lost as a result. The Government can’t claim they weren’t warned at the time.

“And they now can’t claim they acted to save lives. They broke the law and people died.”

The policy continued until a sudden rule change on April 15, 2020.

Yet the SAGE scientific advisory group had warned in early February that “asymptomat­ic transmissi­on cannot be ruled out”. And Government Chief Scientific Adviser Sir Patrick Vallance mentioned the issue as early as March 13, a month before the rule changed.

But the High Court found no evidence to indicate the Government had considered those risks, a catastroph­ic failure that contribute­d to more than 20,000 care home deaths.

Human rights lawyer Emma Jones, of law firm Leigh Day, said the Government could face the biggest class action of its kind.

She said: “This ruling that the policy was ‘unlawful’ assists our investigat­ion into whether it is possible for families to sue the Government for negligence.

“We are now investigat­ing whether there might be a claim or a case on behalf of people’s loved ones.

“This will include an investigat­ion into each case. This is important because, for families, it’s not about money – it’s about answers. It could lead to one of the first and largest group actions of its kind.”

Mr Hancock has been accused of “categorica­lly” telling Prime Minister Boris Johnson in March 2020 that hospital patients would be tested before being moved to care homes.

But no such policy was put in place until the PM returned from his own Covid battle and reportedly asked Mr Hancock: “What the hell happened?”

Mr Hancock last year denied he misled the PM, saying “it wasn’t possible” to test all patients at discharge.

Second World War hero Charles Wright, 99 – who fought behind enemy lines and spent 18 months in a PoW camp – died in a care home on

It could be one of the first and largest actions of its kind EMMA JONES HUMAN RIGHTS LAWYER Families of 20,000 victims could claim

April 17, 2020. His son Clive, unable to see his “amazing” dad in his last six weeks, had no idea he had the virus.

The family believe he may have got Covid in hospital before being sent back to a care home in Ipswich, Suffolk, without a test. Clive said: “People like my dad were put out to die. If he had Covid, staying in hospital would have been best for him. Instead

he was sent to a care home and no one was the wiser.”

Care home boss David Crabtree says he was threatened when he tried to refuse to accept untested hospital patients – and saw eight residents die.

Mr Crabtree, 68, of West Yorks, said: “I don’t believe for a second they weren’t aware. Maybe the elderly were seen as expendable.”

Trying to deflect blame, Mr Johnson told MPs this week: “The thing that we didn’t know was that Covid could be transmitte­d asymptomat­ically in the way that it was. That is something I wish we had known more about at the time.” And a spokesman for Mr Hancock said of the ruling: “The court also found that Public Health England failed to tell ministers what they knew about asymptomat­ic transmissi­on.”

Minutes of SAGE’s second meeting on Covid on January 28 said “early indication­s imply some [asymptomat­ic transmissi­on] is occurring”.

Top QC Alex Bailin said: “Liability for corporate manslaught­er is a real possibilit­y if it can be shown there was reckless disregard for risk to life.”

Some 2.87 million people had Covid in the week to April 23, a 24% weekly fall – the biggest since July 2020.

 ?? ?? BRAVE War hero Charles on return from PoW camp
MEDALS Charles had fought for his country
BRAVE War hero Charles on return from PoW camp MEDALS Charles had fought for his country
 ?? ?? OUR HERO Charles with family in 2017
OUR HERO Charles with family in 2017

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