The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)
‘Blow to head protocol’
The Fife police chief on the day Sheku Bayoh died would have “100%” called an ambulance had he known the detainee had received a blow to the head.
Former inspector Stephen Kay told the inquiry into Mr Bayoh’s death he would consider the move to be standard procedure following such an injury.
Mr Kay said he made his way to the scene after hearing an officer had been injured.
He said he asked for an ambulance for PC Nicole Short as he was told she was injured but did not know one was needed for anyone else, including Mr Bayoh.
PC Short claims to have been stamped on by Mr Bayoh after he chased her along Hayfield Road.
Asked by counsel to the inquiry Angela Grahame KC why he had not also called an ambulance for Mr Bayoh, Mr Kay said: “I knew that she was injured and somebody had asked (for) an ambulance.
“I obviously got one ambulance en route for the information that was gleaned to me... at that stage we knew there was one injury and there’d already been an ambulance requested.”
Asked if he would have called a second ambulance had he known Mr Bayoh had been hit across the
head with a baton, he replied: “100%. It’s a male with a blow to the head, so he’s not any different to PC Short – if they’ve both had head blows, they both need checked over.”
He said calling an ambulance would also have been protocol had he known Mr Bayoh had had PAVA and CS spray used against him.
Mr Kay said following the incident he took steps to transport officers back to
Kirkcaldy Police Station and placed them in a “sterile” environment in the canteen.
This was done by placing a sign on the canteen door and verbally informing officers who came in from other areas to cover the shift.
He said this was to prevent crosscontamination of any evidence on officers’ uniforms, but stated he had stressed to them that this
did not mean they were suspects.
Mr Bayoh died on May 15 2013 during his arrest in Kirkcaldy. He was said by witnesses to have been carrying a knife.
The public inquiry is to determine the exact circumstances of – and after – his death and whether race played any part.
Mr Kay said when he described Mr Bayoh as “the size of a house” during a
call with a senior officer he was quoting another officer, stating: “That’s not my terminology”.
He said he would have preferred terms such as “well-built”, or “in sports terms” he would have said Mr Bayoh was a “unit”.
Asked why he had said Mr Bayoh had run at officers with a knife, he said this is the information he would have been given.
The hearing, before Lord Bracadale, continues.