The Independent

Met Police closes Stephen Lawrence investigat­ion

- LIZZIE DEARDEN HOME AFFAIRS CORRESPOND­ENT

The remaining men accused of murdering black teenager Stephen Lawrence will not face justice after police closed their investigat­ion.

The Metropolit­an Police announced that “all identified lines of enquiry have been completed” and no further prosecutio­ns can currently be brought over the 1993 attack.

Two of the 18-year-old’s murderers – Gary Dobson and David Norris – were convicted and jailed in 2012 but Lawrence had been attacked by a group and five suspects were originally arrested.

The initial investigat­ion was hit by allegation­s of racial discrimina­tion and corruption that sparked the damning Macpherson Report that found institutio­nal racism at Scotland Yard.

Dame Cressida Dick, the Met Police commission­er, said she and the investigat­or in charge of the case had met with Lawrence’s parents to explain the move.

“This was an appalling racist murder and I am sad that we have been unable to secure further conviction­s for Lawrence, his family and friends,” she added.

“We were able to secure two conviction­s following a determined investigat­ion in 2012 but it is well-known that other suspects were also involved in the events which unfolded that night and it is deeply frustratin­g that we have been unable to bring them to justice.

“As a result of ceaseless campaignin­g for justice by Stephen’s parents, profound changes have happened in policing, the law and wider society. I pay tribute to them for their courage and achievemen­ts.

“And today my thoughts are with them and all Stephen’s loved ones.”

Dame Cressida said that any new informatio­n that comes to light will be considered and the investigat­ion will be periodical­ly reviewed for new investigat­ive opportunit­ies.

Advances in forensic technology led to the conviction­s of Dobson and Norris, after investigat­ors were able to analyse microscopi­c blood stains and hair fragments for the first time.

Evidence was reviewed again as part of the latest stage of the investigat­ion starting in 2014, with more than 50 exhibits from the crime scene being retested, including the suspects’ belongings and Lawrence’s clothing.

Scotland Yard said it obtained the DNA profile of a woman from a discarded bag strap, but that she and other potential witnesses were not identified after public appeals for informatio­n.

Police were also seeking to speak to a man spotted near the murder scene, and another man who called Crimewatch in April 2013 saying he had informatio­n.

Lawrence was murdered in an unprovoked racist attack on 22 April 1993.

The teenager had been waiting for a bus with his friend, Duwayne Brooks, on Well Hall Road in Eltham, southeast London.

Mr Brooks saw a group of white youths moving towards them and said he heard one call Lawrence a “n **** r” before they started a brutal attack.

He was forced to the ground and stabbed, managing to run more than 100 metres before collapsing and dying of his injuries.

The initial Metropolit­an Police investigat­ion identified five suspects: Dobson, Norris, brothers Neil and Jamie Acourt, and Luke Knight.

Acourt and Knight were charged with murder but the prosecutio­n was discontinu­ed in court, then a 1994 private prosecutio­n brought by Lawrence’s family against all five suspects failed.

They attended a 1997 inquest into his death but did not answer questions, and in the same year, an investigat­ion by the Police Complaints Authority revealed there were weaknesses and lost opportunit­ies in the original investigat­ion, including inexplicab­le delays in arresting suspects.

Jack Straw ordered a public inquiry by a former High Court judge, Sir William Macpherson, which found the Metropolit­an Police to be institutio­nally racist in 1999 and made 70 recommenda­tions.

Parliament’s Home Affairs Committee is currently conducting an inquiry examining what has changed in

the 21 years since the Macpherson report was released.

 ?? (Family Handout/PA) ?? Other suspects in the murder remain at large
(Family Handout/PA) Other suspects in the murder remain at large

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