The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Neighbour tells inquiry he invited Bayoh in for coffee, despite his knife

- JAMIE MCKENZIE

Aneighbour invited Sheku Bayoh into his home for a cup of coffee despite the fact he was holding a knife, hours before he died after being restrained by police.

Neil Morgan told an inquiry his daughter reported seeing Mr Bayoh “fighting someone” in a nearby garden in Kirkcaldy’s Arran Crescent, some time after 6am on May 3 2015.

Mr Morgan, who lived opposite Mr Bayoh and said he got on well with him, went outside to investigat­e because he thought neighbours might be getting robbed.

He saw Mr Bayoh holding a knife in his right hand as he returned home.

Mr Morgan said: “It was a big kitchen knife, like when you get a block of five or six in a block, it would be the biggest one out of there. It was about six to eight inches.”

A photo of a knife was shown and the knife was also presented to witnesses.

It was found at the scene of Mr Bayoh’s death.

When asked by Angela Grahame QC if he had any concerns about approachin­g Mr Bayoh that morning, Mr Morgan replied: “Not at all.

“He was facing away from me. I called him, he stopped and turned around. By that time I had caught up with him.

“I asked him if someone was trying to rob (the neighbour’s house) and he turned round and said no one was robbing anyone.

“That’s when I noticed he was carrying a knife.

“I said: ‘What are you doing with that (the knife), you can not walk around with that, you are going to get done.’

“I said: ‘Look, come back to the house, something’s upset you, have a cup of coffee or tea and (you) need to settle down.’

“He said: ‘No, I’m all

right, I’m fine.’ He was not himself. I don’t know if it was too much to drink or anything else.

“He was not in a rage or anything like that but you could tell if someone’s been on something.

“His (eyes) were starey.” Mr Morgan added: “He was tapping the knife on his leg and when I said to him, ‘You cannot go round with that knife,’ he turned round and said, ‘It’s not even sharp,’ and poked it to my belly – but not hard.

“I still did not feel threatened by him.”

When Ms Graeme suggested some people might think it surprising he invited Mr Bayoh in for a coffee in the circumstan­ces, Mr Morgan replied his wife did.

He added: “I did not (feel wary of that). Perhaps I should have but I did not.”

Mr Morgan said Mr Bayoh then walked away towards Cramond Gardens at the end of his street.

Naomi Rhodes said she was woken by shouting at around 6am that morning and saw two men fighting.

Mrs Rhodes agreed with her own witness statement she could hear the other man in the brawl saying: “Please stop, I’m sorry.”

Mr Bayoh, who was 31, later died in police custody after being restrained by officers who were responding to calls from the public of a man brandishin­g a knife.

David Grey, a former police officer of 30 years, was driving along Hayfield Road. He told the inquiry another motorist flagged him down and said: “There is a guy up there with a knife, turn round.”

Mr Grey said: “(Mr Bayoh’s) eyes were very, very wide open and as he walked towards me it was more like a march, like he was intent on going somewhere – on a missiontyp­e thing.

“As he walked, he had his

palms open. In his left hand I saw what appeared to be a blade, a knife blade.”

Asked about Mr Bayoh’s eyes being wide open, Mr Grey said: “When I see something like that the first thing I’m going to think is: ‘Are they on drink or drugs?’

“A fixed stare looking straight ahead, that’s what I thought.”

Asked what he meant by “on a mission,” the exofficer said: “He was very purposeful in his walk.

“Obviously watching him coming down the road, he had his intentions set by the manner of his walking, the way he was marching and marching down the road that he was going to do something or take revenge.”

Mobile phone footage taken by Robson Kolberg showed vehicles turning and fleeing as Mr Bayoh walked back along Hayfield Road.

A close friend of Mr

Bayoh, Zahid Saeed – the father of murdered Edinburgh toddler Mikaeel Kular – claimed during the inquiry his friend was “murdered” at the hands of police officers.

His statement said Mr Bayoh had taken drugs the night before he died.

But Mr Saeed, 38, was reluctant to answer questions from Ms Grahame when asked about the types of drugs they were taking and what happened afterwards.

Mr Saeed said he could not remember events from seven years ago and was traumatise­d.

He said: “First one was my son (Mikaeel Kular) who was killed and my friend (Sheku), who was murdered in police custody.”

It was decided Mr Saeed would give evidence in another setting at a later date.

The inquiry, before Lord Bracadale, continues.

 ?? ?? INCIDENT: Sheku Bayoh was clutching a kitchen knife, centre, and was “not himself” said witness Neil Morgan.
INCIDENT: Sheku Bayoh was clutching a kitchen knife, centre, and was “not himself” said witness Neil Morgan.

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