The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

PC says his actions in Bayoh arrest were ‘reasonable’

- ROSS GARDINER

Apolice officer who shoulder barged Sheku Bayoh before punching him on the ground said his actions were reasonable.

PC Craig Walker continued giving evidence yesterday at the inquiry into Mr Bayoh’s death in police custody.

PC Walker said he “pulled” his punches during an attempt to get handcuffs on Mr Bayoh and only after the 31-year-old aimed blows at his stab vest.

The day after Mr Bayoh’s death, PC Walker was signed off on sick leave for six months.

Giving evidence on Thursday, the officer said he considered running Mr Bayoh over in a police vehicle when he arrived at the scene.

Instead, he shoulder barged him to the ground after claiming he saw him chase a colleague, strike her to the ground and stamp on her.

He said: “The whole point was to try and reach across and get a hold of his hands and just pin them down and from that point, get cuffs on him.

“When I went to grab a hold of him, there was an exchange of punches on the ground.

“He started to lash out and punch towards me. Then I threw a couple of punches back again.

“It was an ongoing situation from there.

“He was on his back, I was on his right at his lower torso. I was struggling with him. He was punching two or three times at me. I think it was mainly on my stab vest.

“The two punches that I threw was to his face, to the left side with my right hand.”

The officer said his punches were “pulled punches, delivered tactically” in an attempt to make Mr Bayoh present his hands to be cuffed.

“Not full-force punches, not looking to hit him hard enough to break any bones or knock him out or anything like that.

“It was a tactic mentioned a few years ago that if you could make contact with somebody’s face, the automatic reaction is to bring their hands up.

“That presents the hands with the wrist area so you can apply cuffs.”

He said he felt Mr Bayoh reached the highest level of resistance on the scale used by police when he saw him “strike PC Short and knock her to the ground... and the stamp.”

However, on being told by Angela Grahame QC that evidence may be led later that Mr Bayoh didn’t stamp on the officer, PC Walker replied: “That was my recollecti­on.”

The officer was also quizzed about his attitude to race, with Ms Grahame asking: “If you were to respond to a call tomorrow that a black man was in possession of a knife, thinking about the racial awareness training that you’ve had, would you do anything differentl­y tomorrow than you did in 2015?”

Mr Walker paused before replying: “No.”

He said he was not aware of stereotype­s that black men may be more likely to be violent, of “superhuman strength or size” and more likely to resist arrest.

He said he did not assume Mr Bayoh produced a greater risk, saying: “He was physically quite broad. He looked quite a strong individual.”

When asked if he would have seen Mr Bayoh as less of a threat if he was white, the PC said: “No, he still would have been the same

physical size,” adding that he had no expectatio­ns on what he would find at the scene.

He said no assumption­s were made and “everything was intelligen­ce-led”.

He said he had never heard any racist jokes or comments at Kirkcaldy police station and would have challenged them if he did.

The inquiry continues.

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 ?? ?? PUNCHED: PC Walker, below, insists he used reasonable force in detaining Mr Bayoh.
PUNCHED: PC Walker, below, insists he used reasonable force in detaining Mr Bayoh.

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