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Britain: Open verdict on man shot by police
By Keith Lee
1 July 2002
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The jury at a hearing into the death of Harry Stanley, who
was shot dead by armed police, has returned an open verdict on
his killing. The coroner, Dr Stephen Chan at St. Pancras coroners
court in London refused to allow the jury the possibility of returning
a decision of unlawful killing. In his summing up he tried to
direct the jury to find that it was a lawful killing. The jury
rejected this option. It took nearly three years for the inquest
to be held and the open verdict is only the second such judgement
to be made in a case such as this.
Irene Stanley, widow of Harry Stanley, said, I came here
for justice having waited two and a half years for this inquest.
To me it was unlawful killing as my husband was an unarmed man.
I am going to carry on fighting for justice for Harry. Despite
the coroner, the jury, who were members of the public and ordinary
people, did not decide that the two officers who shot Harry killed
him lawfully.
Harry Stanley, 46, was shot dead by two armed police officers
in Hackney, London while walking home from the pub. He had been
released from hospital a few days earlier, after undergoing a
successful operation for colon cancer. He was carrying a coffee-table
leg in a blue plastic bag.
The two police officers were acting on a call made by Clifford
Willing, a regular drinker at the Alexander pub, who said that
an Irishman with a sawn-off shotgun had just left
the pub. The inquest heard the transcript of the call he made
to the police. Willing is clearly telling police that he actually
saw the gun in Stanleys hand and the gun was sawn off and
he even saw the trigger. Nothing was made of Willings false
claim.
Harry Stanley was shot twice by Inspector Neil Sharman and
PC Kevin Fagan from the SO19 armed response unit.
All through the week-long inquest, the coroner made clear his
determination to see the police exonerated. In an attempt to persuade
the jury that Stanley was a dangerous man and had been in the
past involved in armed robbery, Dr. Chan allowed his previous
convictions to be read to the jurysomething that is not
allowed in a criminal prosecution. The convictions dated back
to 1968 and were for possession of drugs and robbery. The police
who shot Stanley would not have known anything of his background.
The decision caused uproar, provoking Irene Stanley to say,
This is outrageous. We never claimed that Harry was an angel.
Its bad enough that Harry, an innocent man, was shot by
police, but then to blacken his name after he is dead is unforgivable.
The coroner offered no reason for allowing the past convictions
to be read and was challenged by the familys solicitor,
Tim Owen, who asked, What is the relevance of this to what
the jury have to consider here. How can this help the jury to
decide the issues they have to decide? There are guidelines and
procedures concerning the relevance of spent convictions. The
normal rules are for us to make submissions to you away from the
jury and then for you to consider and make your ruling.
The only possible reason for revealing Harry Stanleys
past conviction was to make him out to be a dangerous man who
was lawfully shot. This theme was continued by the two police
officers who shot Stanley. In their statements they made the strange
claim that Stanley had grasped one end of the table leg into his
body and pointed it at the police, making it look like a gun.
The coroner made this the central theme of his summing up to the
jury. A person who is attacked or believes that he is about
to be attacked can use such a force as is reasonably necessary
to defend himself. If thats the situation, then his use
of force is not unlawful, he argued.
Far from Harry Stanley facing down the police with a table
leg held like a gun, forensic evidence from a Home Office pathologist
proved that Stanley was turned away from the police when he was
shot. He had just come out of hospital after major surgery on
his stomach and his wife had said that he could not even bend
down to tie his own shoe laces.
The forensic evidence that Stanley was shot in the back of
the head was ignored by Dr Chan and was not referred to in his
summing up; provoking the familys solicitor into saying
that he had committed a blatant error of law.
Deborah Coles, co-director of INQUEST, who has been working
with the Stanley family and their legal team, said, In rejecting
a verdict of lawful killing, the jury have clearly also rejected
the evidence of the two police officers who shot Harry that they
acted in self-defence. The Coroner gave a biased and one-sided
summing up, which ignored crucial forensic evidence that Harry
Stanley was shot from behind. The failure of the Coroner to give
the jury the opportunity to decide if this was an unlawful killing
is a gross error of law, which the Stanley family and their lawyers
will be taking to judicial review. The procedures which follow
a death in custody, from the police investigation to an inquest,
has failed yet another family.
This inquest and the biased and insensitive conduct of
the coroner once again brings the whole inquest system in relation
to deaths in custody into disrepute. We have always believed that
this case should have been tried before a jury in a criminal court.
Where police officers kill members of the public, they must be
held to account openly and transparently. The rule of law must
be seen to apply equally to all citizens, including those in police
uniform.
The family has said they will now sue the Metropolitan Police.
They will make a formal complaint about the coroner and will seek
a judicial review of the inquest into Harry Stanleys death.
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