Skip to content or view screen version

Families and Friends at Downing St

Peter Marshall | 01.11.2009 12:45 | Repression

Families and Friends of those who have died in suspicious circumstances in custody held a demonstration opposite Downing St in London calling for justice and for properly independent investigations into deaths of people in the care of police and prison offers. Saturday 31 October 2009.

Paul Calvert
Paul Calvert

1960 LEON 1992 & "The person who changed my life"
1960 LEON 1992 & "The person who changed my life"

Sean Rigg
Sean Rigg

IPCC
IPCC

Jason Thompson
Jason Thompson

Ricky Bishop
Ricky Bishop

-
-

Sarah Campbell
Sarah Campbell

Paul Calvert
Paul Calvert


Over the past years, the march by the 'United Friends and Families' of those who have died in suspicious circumstances in police custody, prison and 'secure' mental health facilities has become an annual event, making its way at a funereal pace in silence inch by inch down Whitehall to halt outside Downing Street for an angry protest before continuing noisily to a final rally in Parliament Square.

At last year's event a large banner was carried with 2500 names of those known to have died over the years, including 182 in the previous year, and among those taking part were the mother and other family members of Jean Charles de Menezes. It seemed then an added insult that the police insisted on searching all the bouquets before allowing them to be laid at the gates of Downing St in what I described as "a surreal manifestation of anti-terrorist paranoia."

A decision was made not to hold a march this year, but it was suggested that some of the families might meet to hold a demonstration, and on Saturday afternoon a number of them came to Whitehall for a protest opposite Downing St.

Although some of the cases would appear to have involved deliberate acts of violence and others a woeful lack of the care required, those responsible for these deaths have seldom been brought to justice or even reprimanded for their actions. Where investigations have been held, they have often been seen largely as ineffectual or designed to cover up offences committed by police and prison officers.

Among those present were the family of Sean Rigg, who died after being taken ill in police custody in Brixton Police Station on Thursday 21 August 2008, and Ricky Bishop died in the same police station after being arrested during "Operation Clean Sweep" on November 22, 2001, an action described by some as a "modern day lynching."

I first photographed Pauline Campbell a few months after the death of her daughter in Styal prison in 2003, and was deeply moved. She went on to devote the rest of her life to a campaign not just for justice for her daughter but on behalf of all prisoners, particularly women in prison. I got to know her better after photographing her being assaulted by a police officer at a demonstration outside Holloway Prison after the death there of 24 year old of Jaime Pearce, the eighth woman to die in jail in 2007, after which we exchanged many e-mails. Her own suicide, at her daughter's graveside in May 2008, moved me strongly, and I felt something of this again at seeing the banner with her daughter's image.

On a lamppost on the opposite side of the road, right in front of the Downing Street gates the families had taped a single rose and A4 sheets about three of those who have died. One was simply a photograph of a healthy, athletic looking young man with the caption 1960 LEON 1992.

Below it on a sheet above a photograph of another young man, Jason Thompson, who died in Swansea prison at the age of 26 five years ago on 1 Nov 2004, was a story written by an eleven-year-old girl that brought tears to my eyes, "The person who changed my life." Here is a part of it:

"In 2004 my brother died in prison, but he wasn't suppose to be in prison, the police had got the wrong person it was suppose to be my brother's friend. I was only 6 when Jason (my brother) died. I went to Jason's funeral because he was my big brother and while I was at the funeral I cried and cried and cried. After the funeral I was still crying basically every day, even now I still get up set... He changed my life when he died it made me feel like there was a hole in a part of my life. That's what happens when someone you love dies, it is the worst feeling ever."

On the opposite side of the post was a picture of the mother of Paul Calvert and his son at a demonstration, holding a picture with a photograph of his father and the words "Justice for my Dad. Why? Paul Calvert died Pentonville Prison 24 October 2004."

Paul Calvert was 40, and although the original charges made against him had been dropped he was arrested for being in breach of his bail conditions. Two days after being put into Pentonville he hanged himself. He had actually pressed the emergency button for help, but the alarm bell had been taped over to mute it and the warning light outside the cell was ignored for 40 minutes, allegedly because the officer in charge was playing Backgammon.

Across the road, his mother was holding a banner calling for 'JUSTICE FOR MY SON" and on the back of her t-shirt was the message "My son went to prison to lose his liberty not his life!"

A few more pictures on My London Diary in a few days
 http://mylondondiary.co.uk/2009/10/oct.htm

Peter Marshall
- e-mail: petermarshall@cix.co.uk
- Homepage: http://mylondondiary.co.uk

Comments

Hide 1 hidden comment or hide all comments

Solidarity

01.11.2009 13:29

Solidarity to all those families.

I wonder if the Socialist Party who have just recruited Brian Caton, leader of the Prison Officers Union, would dare show their faces at these marches, of indeed future marches where people have died at the hands of Prison Officers.

Socialist Party? Screws Party!

anarchist


solidarity with all involved

01.11.2009 20:25

I wanted to send a message of strong solidarity and support to all the families involved in this event many of whom I have met and know. I am sorry that my health prevented me being there in person but respect and strength to you all. Too many borders have been crossed too often and the shameful cover up of those blatantly responsible for deaths in custody is a national disgrace.
friends, keep marching foward and if that's how the system wants it let the fight go on and the conflict be unending. No Justice, No Peace

George Coombs


Hidden Comment

This posting has been hidden because it breaches the Indymedia UK (IMC UK) Editorial Guidelines.

IMC UK is an interactive site offering inclusive participation. All postings to the open publishing newswire are the responsibility of the individual authors and not of IMC UK. Although IMC UK volunteers attempt to ensure accuracy of the newswire, they take no responsibility legal or otherwise for the contents of the open publishing site. Mention of external web sites or services is for information purposes only and constitutes neither an endorsement nor a recommendation.

but who?

02.11.2009 11:57

who would be in this enquiry?

Yes a full and published investigation into all the deaths in custody should be made, and we should publish all the results, and I mean everything, from the custody reports on entry into the system to the medical evidence such as the corroners reports.

My only fear is that if the families dont get a "the state murdred them" result then they will call it a coverup. There is very little way that this situation will ever be resolved. In some cases the memory of the deceased will be tarnished by reverlations of such things as drugs overdose, congenital weaknesses and the like.

Will we ever find out the truth...who knows, the bigger question is, will we believe it if its there? Deaths in custody are an emotive subject with perceptions clouding reason on all sides.

anon


Onward....

04.11.2009 00:39

Big respect to all affected families.
They need support throughout the year, and opportunities to collaborate in action as well as socially.

Onward Ever
The 4WardEver UK Team

4WardEver UK
- Homepage: http://www.4wardeveruk.org


Hide 1 hidden comment or hide all comments