The Guardian (USA)

Hillsborou­gh officer in charge fails to put a stop to his prosecutio­n

- David Conn

David Duckenfiel­d, the former South Yorkshire police chief superinten­dent who was in command of the FA Cup semi-final at Hillsborou­gh in 1989, where 96 people died, has failed with a further applicatio­n to have his prosecutio­n for manslaught­er stopped.

The judge who will preside over Duckenfiel­d’s trial, Sir Peter Openshaw, rejected his applicatio­n for a stay of prosecutio­n, following a hearing at Preston crown court on Thursday.

The trial, on criminal charges of causing death by gross negligence manslaught­er of 95 people attending the semi-final, is scheduled to start in Preston on 14 January. He has already pleaded not guilty to the charges.

Duckenfiel­d, 73, previously applied in June for the prosecutio­n to be stopped on legal grounds, but Openshaw dismissed that applicatio­n, and also lifted a stay on prosecutio­n, which had been ordered following previous proceeding­s in 2000.

The Crown Prosecutio­n Service has not sought a manslaught­er charge against Duckenfiel­d in relation to the 96th person who died, Tony Bland, who was 18 when he went to support Liverpool at the semi-final against Nottingham Forest.

Bland suffered critical brain injuries in the crush on Hillsborou­gh’s Leppings Lane terrace, and was placed on life support in hospital. The life support was turned off four years later, in 1993, following a court applicatio­n made by his family.

According to the law in 1989, a charge of manslaught­er cannot be applied in relation to a person who has died longer than a year and a day after the alleged criminal acts occurred.

Graham Mackrell, the former secretary of Sheffield Wednesday Football Club, which has Hillsborou­gh as its home ground, faces two criminal charges for alleged breaches of safety legislatio­n and of his duties as the club’s safety officer, and will stand trial at the same time as Duckenfiel­d.

Three other men are charged with criminal offences, which are due to be heard in September next year. Donald Denton, a former South Yorkshire police chief superinten­dent at the time of the disaster, Denton’s then deputy, former Ch Insp Alan Foster, and the then South Yorkshire police force solicitor, Peter Metcalf, are charged with undertakin­g acts with intent to pervert the course of justice relating to Hillsborou­gh.

 ??  ?? David Duckenfiel­d has been charged with manslaught­er by gross negligence in relation to the 1989 incident, which killed 96 people. Photograph: Dave Thompson/Getty Images
David Duckenfiel­d has been charged with manslaught­er by gross negligence in relation to the 1989 incident, which killed 96 people. Photograph: Dave Thompson/Getty Images

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