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NOVANEWS www.cpgb-ml.org Blair Peach was murdered by police in the Special Patrol Group. Ian Tomlinson was murdered by police in the Territorial Support Group. 30 years on, what has changed? |
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The Cass report of the investigation into the death of Blair Peach at an anti-fascist demonstration inSouthall in 1979 has been made public, 30 years after his death.The report concluded that Blair Peach was killed by a police officer from the Special Patrol Group(SPG). The person responsible was one of six officers travelling in an SPG carrier U11. According to thereport, one officer in particular was “indicated” as being responsible, but no officer was ever chargedwith the death. Three further officers were strongly recommended for prosecution for perverting thecourse of justice on the basis of a “deliberate attempt to conceal the presence of the carrier at thescene at that time”.The report makes clear that fellow officers tried to protect their colleagues and none were willing tocome forward to admit the use of unnecessary force or to justify their actions. (‘Blair Peach killed bypolice at 1979 protest, Met report finds’, The Guardian 27 April 2010)Despite an investigation that culminated in more than 3,000 pages of documents, including witnessstatements and forensic reports, no prosecutions were ever brought against any of the officers whowere suspected of involvement. As a result, the officers were spared the prospect of having toaccount for their actions and the public was denied the opportunity, through a jury, to hear theevidence and decide for themselves who was responsible.It is incidents like these which lay bare the role of the police in our society, standing over and abovethe people, and protecting the interests of the exploiting class in times of protest and rebellion.Blair Peach’s family’s battle of 30 years for the truth is a sad illustration of this fact.Special Patrol GroupOne important clue to the police’s role is found in the very existence of the Special Patrol Group (SPG)– set up in 1965 as a specialist division within the Metropolitan police with responsibility for “publicdisorder, serious crime and terrorism”. (See en.wikipedia.org)Officers were trained as a fighting unit, operating independently from other units and on the lookoutfor the ‘enemy within’. The ideological training was thorough indeed, for it brought about the situationwhere SPG officers, sent to police a demonstration against the National Front in the heart of the Asiancommunity of Southall in 1979, viewed those who took to the streets to protest against fascism andracism, the forces which threatened to divide that and other communities in England, as enemies ofthe state and targeted them with lethal force.When Inspector Cass raided lockers at the SPG headquarters as part of his investigation into BlairPeach’s death, he “uncovered a stash of unauthorised weapons, including illegal truncheons, knives,two crowbars, a whip, a 3ft wooden stave and a lead-weighted leather stick. One officer was caughttrying to hide a metal cosh, although it was not the weapon that killed Peach. Another officer wasfound with a collection of Nazi regalia.” (The Guardian, op cit)It just goes to show the kind of individual who was sought after and able to flourish within the SPG.Police immunityA further clue is in the protection that is afforded to officers who exceed their powers. Theinvestigation into Blair Peach’s death was conducted internally by the Metropolitan police, allowingthe force to determine the course of the investigation, control the evidence and interpret the findings.Raju Bhatt, the solicitor for Celia Stubbs (Blair Peach’s partner), commented on the Cass report asfollows “what I read in this report is a senior investigating officer desperately trying to explain awaythe death, but despite himself, he is driven by the weight of the evidence to conclude that the deathwas caused by one of his officers”. (Ibid)Despite the fact that the internal investigation narrowed down the likely perpetrators to only sixofficers, and that one in particular was in the frame, no officer was ever charged with Blair’s murder.The investigatory process meant that the Metropolitan police, supported by parliament, remainedabove the law.Meanwhile, the internal investigation set the scene in respect of the various avenues of potentialpolice accountability that followed. Both the decision (of the Crown Prosecution Service) to refusecriminal charges and the decision (of the Police Complaints Board ) as to disciplinary measures, werebased on the Cass report.The report also tainted the inquest into Blair Peach’s death, which followed in 1980. By this time,there was mass international support for his family and condemnation of the police, who even thenwere widely believed to be responsible for his death.Of the inquest, the Guardian reported last year that the coroner “controversially suppressed the Cassreport. The coroner relied heavily on Cass’ findings to call and cross examine police officers, butrefused to allow Peach’s family lawyers access to the details … The coroner was criticised forinappropriately guiding the jury, discouraging them from being critical of the police. They returned averdict of misadventure.“For [partner of Blair] Stubbs the outcome of the inquest was the ultimate betrayal. ‘Blair’s inquestamounted to a posthumous sentence of death upon a man who was on his way home from ademonstration against the National Front and found himself in a trap’. She said ‘Police chose to goberserk’.” (‘Partner of man killed by Met officers calls for investigation to be made public’, TheGuardian, 13 June 2009)If these two measures were not sufficient, the report was then kept secret for 30 years until its recentrelease. There is no prospect of criminal charges being brought now.30 years on: the Territorial Support Group (TSG)On the publication of the Cass report, current Metropolitan Police Commissioner Stephenson hasoffered his assurances to the public, saying that the Met is now a “completely different” force, butfacts clearly demonstrate that this is not the case.Thirty years on, the Metropolitan police’s public order squad, now known as the TSG, has again beenunder intense public scrutiny, following the broadcasting of violent policing of protests outside theG20 summit in London last year and the murder of Ian Tomlinson, who died following a violent assaultby a TSG officer when walking home past protestors.Speaking on Radio 4 on the day the Cass report was released, Raju Bhatt said “the policing of politicalprotest in this country to this day gives a cause for concern. It avoids recognising the right to protest,the right to peaceful assembly. It analyses any protest as by its nature unlawful and it allows animpunity for police officers and investigators alike when faced with police officers who have crossedthat line as they did in the case of Blair Peach.” (BBC Today, 27 April 2010)He added that the Territorial Support Group (TSG), whose officers are implicated in the death of IanTomlinson, and the assault of numerous G20 protesters, are the “direct descendents of the SPG”.In support of his argument that the Met had changed, Commissioner Stephenson relied upon the“rigorous enquiries”, following Tomlinson’s death. But what has been the outcome of all thoseenquires?According to The Guardian, “in the four years leading up to the [G20] protests, for example, the TSG… received more than 5,000 complaints, mostly for ‘oppressive behaviour’ Of those, only nine weresubstantiated after an investigation by the Met’s internal complaints unit.” (‘Ian Tomlinson familywaits for answers one year on from G20 protests’, 26 March 2010)Police immunity continuesThirty years on and the overwhelming majority of complaints against police officers are stillinvestigated internally by the police force subject to the complaint. This situation allows the policetotal control over the investigation, including who is interviewed and which leads are pursued. Theinvestigating officer makes a judgement call about the credibility of witnesses and the likely outcomeof a prosecution in light of any discrepancies in witness accounts. This system presents a fairlyfailsafe method of keeping criminal police officers out of the criminal courts.The inquest system, meanwhile, remains extremely under-resourced, poorly funded and narrow in itsfocus.On the rare occasions when police officers do face criminal charges, the chances of securing aconviction are slim. The public galleries are usually packed with a supporters club of fellow officersand their families, with officers often being given time off other duties to support a fellow officer ontrial. The impact of a criminal conviction on the officer’s career is stressed heavily to any judge orjury.Any civilian witness is undoubtedly at a great disadvantage in the witness box compared with a policeofficer, who is trained and experienced in giving evidence in court. Only the most robust and self-confident civilian witnesses giving evidence against the police are able to withstand the intensegrilling and character assassination that they face under cross examination by police lawyers.One of the few TSG officers to stand trial in the aftermath of the investigations into numerouscomplaints surrounding the policing of the G20 summit in 2009 was Sergeant Delroy Smellie. He wasacquitted of assault after he slapped a woman across the face and hit her legs with his truncheon at amemorial protest the day after Tomlinson’s death. The judge hearing the case in the absence of thevictim, who declined to give evidence, accepted that the police officer acted in self-defence afterSmellie argued that he had felt threatened and that he believed that the young woman held a weapon(a juice carton) and was about to attack him and other officers.Notwithstanding this verdict, it seems very difficult to see how any rational person viewing the videofootage of the incident, which is widely available on the internet, could possibly conclude thatSmellie’s body language and actions are those of a frightened or threatened man. As George Monbiotwrote:“But when he hit her on the legs, she wasn’t coming from anywhere. She was standing still andpointing. And the idea that this huge, well-armed man could have felt, as he claimed, threatened bythat tiny woman seems laughable to me. It certainly isn’t the impression the footage creates. He verycalmly, almost casually, draws his baton and knocks her down, then immediately switches hisattention to someone else.” (‘Police officers must face trial by jury’, guardian.co.uk, 1 April 2010)Support the family of Ian Tomlinson30 years on and it is once again a grieving family which is drawn unwillingly into a confrontation with astate determined to protect its ‘protectors’. Despite evidence that clearly shows a police officermaking the assault that resulted in Ian Tomlinson’s death, his family have little confidence that thecircumstances will be investigated impartially, or that the officers responsible will be heldaccountable.In echoes of the Blair Peach murder, information released by the police concerning Tomlinson hasbeen inaccurate or misleading. Many attempts have been made to impugn Tomlinson’s character anddraw attention away from the conduct of the police.In the early days of the investigation, for example, a senior investigator “refused to rule out” thepossibility that the person who struck Mr Tomlinson may have been a protester dressed up as a policeofficer. One year on from his death, the family are still waiting for a decision from the CrownProsecution Service as to whether any officer will face charges for his killing.Are the police, the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) and the CPS once again in thegrips of Cass’s desperate struggle to avoid placing responsibility where it belongs, on the shoulders ofthe TSG? The family of Ian Tomlinson need our support as they seek the truth about their loved one’sdeath and as they bear the weight of our class’s burden in exposing the lies and culture of impunitywithin the police.Policing under capitalismIn order to maintain ‘order’, the state needs a population at once fearful and at the same time at leastpassively supportive of the institution of the police. In cases like that of Blair Peach and IanTomlinson, not to mention the thousands of complaints made each year about police brutality andabuse of power, the refusal to recognise and acknowledge this serious wrongdoing, because of whatthat might do to public support for the police and the ability of the state to keep control in the sameway, means that violent and dangerous police officers remain on our streets. The culture of the SPGlives on in the TSG and continues to define the way public protest is policed.The bourgeois state must not be allowed to intimidate us out of taking our demands and our voice tothe streets, until the tide of those demands is strong enough to sweep aside the old state institutionswhereby a wholly new police force may be established, by and for the working class, and which willtruly act, this time, in the service of the people. |
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