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Episode seven: Hot to touch

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Manage episode 399173959 series 3441508
Indhold leveret af The Ferret. Alt podcastindhold inklusive episoder, grafik og podcastbeskrivelser uploades og leveres direkte af The Ferret eller deres podcastplatformspartner. Hvis du mener, at nogen bruger dit ophavsretligt beskyttede værk uden din tilladelse, kan du følge processen beskrevet her https://da.player.fm/legal.

"At the moment we are searching for truth, but ultimately the family want justice." Aamer Anwar, Bayoh family lawyer

On the first day of each new hearing in the Sheku Bayoh public inquiry there is now a ritual. Campaigners in support of the Bayoh family gather outside the building with banners and calls for justice.

When Kadi Johnston – Sheku's sister – arrives, she and family lawyer Aamer Anwar walk across the square towards Edinburgh's Capital House, where the inquiry takes place.

Before going through the doors, she stands in front of campaigners and takes the mic, thanking people for giving her "the strength and the energy to walk through those doors".

And then she takes her place in the public gallery.

This hearing in the long running inquiry focuses on Police Scotland training. It’s full of acronyms for police protocols and procedures, making it easy to lose sight of the family’s fight for justice. So this episode starts there.

Inquiry brings new revelations

But it also contains some startling new revelations about policing both back in 2015 and now.

We hear about senior Police Scotland officers' inclusion in a US conference with the Police Executive Research Forum (PERF) – where they offered expertise on "the legal use of force" in the case of mental illness when someone is in possession of a knife...just days after Sheku's death.

And they admit that even today serious issues remain, including reports from senior officers that while procedure dictates they should treat acute behaviour disturbance – or ABD – as a medical emergency, police cannot always get an ambulance to attend.

There are also questions about training. For all the claims of revised process and protocol, if police got 999 calls from Hayfield Road, where Sheku died just now, how much would have changed?

The Ferret continues its summary of the evidence heard so far in its award-nominated podcast.

To make this podcast we’ve spent hours listening to all of the evidence so we can summarise it for you, our listeners. And we need your support to do more. Join us at theferret.scot/subscribe or contribute by giving us a donatation.

Read the script: https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/24408672-sheku-bayoh_-the-inquiry-episode-seven-hot-to-touch_script

  continue reading

10 episoder

Artwork
iconDel
 
Manage episode 399173959 series 3441508
Indhold leveret af The Ferret. Alt podcastindhold inklusive episoder, grafik og podcastbeskrivelser uploades og leveres direkte af The Ferret eller deres podcastplatformspartner. Hvis du mener, at nogen bruger dit ophavsretligt beskyttede værk uden din tilladelse, kan du følge processen beskrevet her https://da.player.fm/legal.

"At the moment we are searching for truth, but ultimately the family want justice." Aamer Anwar, Bayoh family lawyer

On the first day of each new hearing in the Sheku Bayoh public inquiry there is now a ritual. Campaigners in support of the Bayoh family gather outside the building with banners and calls for justice.

When Kadi Johnston – Sheku's sister – arrives, she and family lawyer Aamer Anwar walk across the square towards Edinburgh's Capital House, where the inquiry takes place.

Before going through the doors, she stands in front of campaigners and takes the mic, thanking people for giving her "the strength and the energy to walk through those doors".

And then she takes her place in the public gallery.

This hearing in the long running inquiry focuses on Police Scotland training. It’s full of acronyms for police protocols and procedures, making it easy to lose sight of the family’s fight for justice. So this episode starts there.

Inquiry brings new revelations

But it also contains some startling new revelations about policing both back in 2015 and now.

We hear about senior Police Scotland officers' inclusion in a US conference with the Police Executive Research Forum (PERF) – where they offered expertise on "the legal use of force" in the case of mental illness when someone is in possession of a knife...just days after Sheku's death.

And they admit that even today serious issues remain, including reports from senior officers that while procedure dictates they should treat acute behaviour disturbance – or ABD – as a medical emergency, police cannot always get an ambulance to attend.

There are also questions about training. For all the claims of revised process and protocol, if police got 999 calls from Hayfield Road, where Sheku died just now, how much would have changed?

The Ferret continues its summary of the evidence heard so far in its award-nominated podcast.

To make this podcast we’ve spent hours listening to all of the evidence so we can summarise it for you, our listeners. And we need your support to do more. Join us at theferret.scot/subscribe or contribute by giving us a donatation.

Read the script: https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/24408672-sheku-bayoh_-the-inquiry-episode-seven-hot-to-touch_script

  continue reading

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