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Donald needed family love - not a baton and Taser
Donald needed family love - not a baton and Taser

BBC News

time10 hours ago

  • BBC News

Donald needed family love - not a baton and Taser

"You could see just by his eyes, that wasn't Donald," said Jason Pye, who watched footage of his great uncle Donald Burgess being sprayed with Pava, hit with a baton and Tasered by police played repeatedly in court."It was shocking. How does a 92-year-old know what a spray or a Taser is?"Mr Burgess, a wheelchair user who had one leg, was reportedly brandishing a cutlery knife when police arrived at his care home in St Leonards-on-Sea, East Sussex before Tasering Pye said the family could have calmed Mr Burgess if they were contacted by care staff - but the home told the BBC they gave them a full update as soon as they were able to. Care staff waited four hours until contacting Mr Burgess's family about the Pye said the family, who lived 10 minutes away, could have resolved the situation without the police, and should have been called immediately."That one room was his home. No one introduced who they were," he said Mr Burgess may have put down the knife if his family had sat with him for an hour or two. "We could have been talking to him to say 'don't be silly' and he would have recognised our voices," he said."They phoned family members before just for general updates, so I don't understand on this occasion why didn't they think of calling someone on the list to see if someone could go up there." The following video contains distressing scenes. Sussex PCs Stephen Smith and Rachel Comotto were found not guilty of assault occasioning actual bodily harm when jurors returned their unanimous verdicts at Southwark Crown Court on 28th court heard Mr Burgess was acting out of character and threatening to murder the care home had a urinary tract infection (UTI), which can make sufferers jury heard how care home staff tried for more than 30 minutes to get Mr Burgess to put down his knife, before police arrived at about 13:15 Burgess was taken to hospital after his arrest and died 22 days later after contracting Covid-19. The Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) said PC Smith and PC Comotto should face a gross misconduct hearing for potential breaches of the police standards of professional behaviour, with PC Comotto facing a further misconduct allegation relating to comments she made on social media after the asked if the officers would deny or admit to the allegations, Sussex Police Federation declined to comment because of the ongoing live misconduct Pye, who described his great uncle as funny and gentle, said his family were now waiting for the hearing, and for the inquest into his great uncle's death to resume."If Donald didn't go into hospital, he may not have caught Covid, and he may not have died when he did," he said. Jodie Anderson, a senior caseworker at the charity Inquest, which is supporting the family, said she hoped the inquest would look at whether the care home's decision to call the police was appropriate."I sincerely hope the care home staff have reflected on how they responded that day, " she said. In a statement, Regal Care Trading said: "We understand the family's concern regarding the timing of the call, and we recognise how important timely communication is in such circumstances. "However, staff must first ensure that the situation is stabilised before contacting family members."It said that while it valued the involvement of families, its primary responsibility was to ensure the welfare and safety of all residents and staff."In crisis situations, our policy is to promptly involve the appropriate professionals who are trained to manage complex and potentially high-risk behaviours," it said."Once the situation is under control, we inform families as soon as possible about any incidents involving their loved ones."

Southport: FBI to help police with inquiry into killer's deleted searches
Southport: FBI to help police with inquiry into killer's deleted searches

BBC News

time16-02-2025

  • BBC News

Southport: FBI to help police with inquiry into killer's deleted searches

The FBI are providing support as British police try to recover deleted searches from the Southport killer's online Rudakubana cleared his internet history just before he travelled to the dance class where he stabbed three girls death and injured many more in the Merseyside town on 29 July last investigating officer Det Ch Insp Jason Pye said in January that the process to retrieve his online history "could be years" because the crime had not been categorised as terrorism as officers did not find evidence that Rudakubana had been motivated by any specific it had been, he said, the process could have been easier. Investigators found no signs of any allegiance to a single cause, which is why - despite Rudakubana pleading guilty to downloading a terror manual - his case has never been treated as a terrorism have had to apply to access Rudakubana' search history on Google and Microsoft, which are based in the US, via a specialist prosecutor in the country. In a new joint statement, the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) and Merseyside Police confirmed the FBI were now involved as the inquiry said: "A specialist liaison CPS prosecutor in the United States has been working with international partners to obtain material which may be relevant."We are thankful to the US Department of Justice and the FBI for their ongoing assistance and the importance which they have placed upon our request."Merseyside Police have previously said that Rudakubana's view of violent footage of the attempted murder of a bishop in Australia - made minutes before he left home on the day of the attack - was the only thing that remained from his online history after he deleted his have contacted Google, which owns browser Chrome, and Microsoft, which owns search engine Bing, to uncover what Rudakubana had been searching in the months before the attack. Detectives also discovered more than 164,000 documents had been downloaded from the internet and stored on Rudakubana's the 18-year-old for a minimum of 52 years in January, Mr Justice Goose said the material showed he had "a longstanding preoccupation with violent killing and genocide".At the time, Det Ch Insp Pye said an ongoing process in the US courts to retrieve Rudakubana's online searches "could be years"."Our case has always been - based on the evidence - it's not counter-terrorism. There is nothing in terms of ideology," he said."So I couldn't go down that path to try and get that information any quicker."There is a process of getting it quicker, but because it's in the serious organised crime, major crime category, unfortunately I can't get it as quick as we would like." Listen to the best of BBC Radio Merseyside on BBC Sounds and follow BBC Merseyside on Facebook, X, and Instagram, and watch BBC North West Tonight on BBC iPlayer.

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