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Britain: armed police demand immunity from prosecution
By Mike Ingram
8 November 2004
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In an unprecedented action, up to 130 officers of the Metropolitan
Police SO19 armed unit in London staged a two-day protest in which
they refused to carry weapons.
They were protesting a verdict of unlawful killing returned
in the second inquest into the death of Harry Stanley, a painter
and decorator shot dead by police in east London in 1999. The
killers, Chief Inspector Neil Sharman and PC Kevin Fagan, have
been suspended from duty and face possible manslaughter charges
arising from the shooting.
The police action, which threatened to spread throughout the
country, was only called off after supportive interventions by
senior officers and conciliatory statements from Labour Home Secretary
David Blunkett.
Outgoing Metropolitan Police Chief John Stevens said he had
great sympathy for the protesting officers, but they
must come back to work. He agreed to review the suspensions
and to seek legal protection for firearms officers from the Home
Office.
In a statement following the calling off of the action Stevens
said, I am grateful to our officers for starting to resume
their firearms duties and putting the safety of Londoners and
their fellow officers ahead of their own concerns at this time.
They do need more legal protection for the difficult
job they do on our behalf.
This cannot be achieved overnight but we are committed
to working together to seek changes that will give them confidence
to undertake their dangerous and demanding work.
The deputy commissioner and commissioner designate of the Metropolitan
Police, Sir Ian Blair, issued a statement in Rupert Murdochs
Sun newspaper on November 3, which was published under
the heading, We must stand by our hero gun cops.
Blair said, If the Government is to review murder legislation
then surely there must be a place for measures which protect armed
police from the prospect of serious criminal charges and prosecution.
Glen Smyth of the Metropolitan Police Federation has said the
organisation will consider a legal challenge to the inquest verdict.
Jan Berry, chairman of the Police Federation of England and
Wales, said she was not surprised by the officers reaction.
With the benefit of hindsight we can all say what we may
have done but these two officers were required to make a split-second
assessment and decision.
SO19 is, among other things, tasked with special duties to
protect the capital from terrorist threats. In the present climate,
this makes all the more remarkable the favourable response the
police protest has received within the media and political circles.
One must recall the bitterly hostile response to strike action
by firefighters last year, who were demanding a living wage. They
were denounced from all quarters as agents of Saddam Hussein for
striking while troops were engaged in Iraq. In contrast, no statement
was issued by Downing Street on the police action. And far from
condemning the striking officers, Home Secretary David Blunkett
went out of his way to appease them. He said it was deeply
unsatisfactory for both the Stanley family and officers
that the case had gone on for so long and promised to review the
way police shootings were handled, including looking at
how the law in this area operates, and the speed with which cases
can be resolved.
He added, Whilst there cannot be any question of police
officers being exempt from the normal requirement that any force
used must be lawful, we must remember what it is that we ask firearms
officers to do.
Uniquely among police officers, they find themselves
in positions where they have to decide, in a split second, to
shoot, and possibly kill somebody. Enquiries after an incident
need to give proper weight to this.
In other words, the argument now being advanced is that any
restraint on police officers ability to fire at will without
fear of prosecution impinges on their ability to do their job.
Others went further, opposing any and all criticism of the police.
The Daily Mail editorialised on November 3, The
problem is that this casewhatever the rights and wrongshas
to be set in the context of the way police have become everybodys
whipping boy. They are damned if they do and damned if they dont.
In these politically correct times, they are always assumed
to be guilty: guilty of institutionalised racism and guilty of
homophobia; guilty of over-reacting and guilty of under-reacting;
and increasingly they are humiliated by chief constables who seem
more interested in sociological box-ticking than catching criminals.
Yes, police need to maintain the highest standards. The
public demands no less. But when politicians and chief constables
expectand getloyalty and support from their officers,
wouldnt it be refreshing if sometimes they offered just
a touch of loyalty and support in return?
For the Mail the argument is simple. Unfortunate incidents
like the shooting to death of an innocent man must not stand in
the way of the police doing their job. The vitriolic response
to any semblance of accountability raises the question: exactly
what job is being referred to?
Daniel Machover, the solicitor for Mrs. Stanley said, Officers
are told they should only use firearmsor lethal forcewhen
they have lawful self-defence and if we take that requirement
away were opening the door for a military dictatorship.
This points to the real significance of the police reaction
to the Stanley inquest verdict.
The police are not the impartial upholders of law and order
whose sole purpose is to fight crime. They are the armed
bodies of men, as Frederick Engels called them, whose purpose
is to defend a system based upon private profit. The lives of
innocent people such as Stanley are entirely secondary to the
maintenance of the authority of the state over the working masses
and the defence of the privileged few.
On one level, the police appear accountable to no one but themselves.
But this means that they are in fact accountable to the ruling
elite, who can mobilise them at will whenever necessary against
the working class, as they have been during major social conflicts
such as the 1984-1985 miners strike.
That is why there is no independent monitoring of police activities
and shootings are investigated by the police internally. Moreover,
in eight cases in which a verdict of unlawful killing has been
brought by a jury in the last decade, the Crown Prosecution Service
(CPS) has refused to prosecute the officers responsible. The CPS
itself is a state body that would be more aptly named the Crown
Protection Service. In the last 10 years, only two prosecutions
of police have taken placein the case of David Ewin, who
was shot dead in his car in South London in 1995 and in that of
James Ashley, shot in January 1998. On both occasions the officers
were acquitted.
In the case of Harry Stanley, the second inquest and its unlawful-killing
verdict only came about because of pressure from the Stanley family.
An initial inquest into the death held in 2002 returned an open
verdict. Coroner Dr. Stephen Chan had refused to allow the jury
the possibility of returning a decision of unlawful killing, and
tried to direct towards a verdict of lawful killing. The jury
rejected this and returned an open verdict. The family last year
won a High Court battle that quashed the open verdict, and the
judge ordered a new inquest.
The verdict of unlawful killing secured in the
second inquest is a welcome tribute to the tenacity of the Stanley
family in pursuing justice. But that it comes only after a five-year
legal battle and immediately provokes such a hostile reaction
shows that justice and democratic rights are incompatible with
a society that is riven by such stark and growing disparities
between the rich and the poor, between the ruling elite and those
they govern.
The demands for immunity from prosecution and the favourable
response this has won from Blunkett must be taken as a stark warning.
A government that has consistently ignored the popular will has
again shown how it is prepared to violate all democratic norms
in order to protect the interests and impose the dictates of a
super-rich financial oligarchy. Its leading representatives know
full well that when it calls on the police to impose policies
that have no popular mandate and that are detrimental to the of
the majority of the population, then they must be able to do this
job with impunity.
See Also:
Britain: second inquest held
into police shooting of Harry Stanley
[29 October 2004]
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