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Met pays £117000 in G20 compensation‎

Laurie Hanna | 15.02.2011 00:27 | G20 London Summit | Other Press | Repression

FOI by Daily Mirror exposes compensation payments to G20 protesters to date

Metropolitan Police has paid out more than £100k to keep G20 demo cases out of court
by Laurie Hanna, Daily Mirror 14/02/2011

THE Metropolitan Police has paid more than £100,000 to G20 protesters who claim they were mistreated by riot cops.

An investigation by the Mirror found the cash had been used to keep 30 cases out of court.

As of this month, £117,000 had been given to demonstrators who say they were assaulted or falsely imprisoned in the protests of April 2009.

The biggest payout was to David Hoffman, details obtained under the Freedom of Information Act reveals.

The photographer, 64, was left with four ­fractured teeth after being smashed in the face with a shield.

The Met has been condemned by its watchdog for its approach to the protests in London, during which bystander Ian Tomlinson died after being pushed to the ground.

The Metropolitan Police Authority attacked macho training methods, a lack of supervision and confusion over kettling – where big groups are held in a confined area.

Mr Hoffman said: “The police can just toss cash to people who complain but the officers who caused this have walked free.”

An MPA spokesman said: “The decision to settle does not imply that the officers involved have done wrong. Each case is considered on its merits.”

[Also reported in London Evening Standard:  http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/standard/article-23923166-met-pays-pound-117000-in-g20-compensation.do]

Laurie Hanna
- Homepage: http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/top-stories/2011/02/14/metropolitan-police-has-paid-out-more-than-100k-to-keep-g20-demo-cases-out-of-court-115875-22921627/

Comments

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Unworthy praise for a job badly done at G20 2009

15.02.2011 13:34


Taken from Monday April 6th 2009 edition of the buisness and finance section of the Metro.

Harry


Can someone explain

15.02.2011 17:47

why not one of those mistreated by the Met didn't take this all the way through the courts to prove the Met are violent thugs who fit people up?

questioner


Nice to see..

15.02.2011 19:48

that the police are still funding campaigners nicely. Good work Met, you may have controlled one day but these funds will help the activists fight you and your corporate masters on a daily basis. See you on the streets and thanks for the funding!

Activist


The reason they didn't go all the way to court

16.02.2011 13:08

It's because the civil procedure rules, which apply to all cases in the county court, expect people to aim to settle the dispute before it gets to a full court trial. This does make sense for ordinary disputes with no political element. The civil courts are not set up to be able to investigate police procedure and policy, so if a case did go to a full hearing, all the court would look at is whether the police did in fact commit the civil tort of assault or false imprisonment and decide, after looking at previous similar cases, how much compensation to award the person who was assaulted. The rules don't allow the court to make political judgements about the behaviour of the police. Different judges might have their own opinions about the police, or about protestors for that matter, but they can't impose huge fines on the police because they particularly disapprove of their behaviour unless there is a previous appeal case which sets a precedent for them to impose that level of fine.

The other problem is, going to a full court hearing is always a risk because there's no guarantee that you will win. Also, it's not automatic that you would get costs awarded against the police. Normally, the loser pays the winner's legal costs, but this isn't compulsory on the court. If the judge thinks you could have settled the case for a decent amount of compo without going to a full trial, he could decide to award some of the police's legal costs against you even if you win the case. So, you could get awarded compensation but have to pay some of it back to the fuzz for their legal fees. Personally, I'd find that a bit galling. I'd rather do them for compo, even if I didn't get an admission they were at fault. If it gets expensive enough for them, they'll have to think about improving their methods. They're not going to keep assaulting demonstrators if the compo they subsequently have to pay out looks like becoming high enough to bankrupt the force.

pinkolady


Why people don't

16.02.2011 17:27

Pinkolady is almost right. If you tell them where to stick their offer and take the case to court, you're bringing a civil action for damages. "Fines" don't come into it. Fines result from criminal cases, not civil ones, and the state gets the money. If you are awarded damages in a civil case YOU get the money.

The problem is that if the Defendant (that's the cops in this case) has made you an offer to settle which you refuse and the amount of damages awarded in the end is less than the offer, then you are likely to be ordered to pay the costs, or at least part of them. They could be even more than the damages in some cases. Awarding damages of less than the offer is what a bastard-type judge is likely to do. You might then appeal against the amount if it is well out of line, but that's more costs if you don't succeed, as well as more delay. All courts are casinos, and casinos are always rigged in favour of "the house".

Civil judges, coming mostly from protected middle-class backgrounds, have little experience of the police and their ways and are more likely to believe them, compared with criminal judges who know the filth lie in their teeth all the time (whether they admit it or not). Guess what; the judiciary in the civil courts may not, in general, be our best friends.

Stroppyoldgit