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Sean Rigg - inquest verdict

copypaster | 01.08.2012 18:12 | Anti-racism

Summary: Schizophrenic but physically healthy black man died in custody at Brixton police station after excessive police restraint. Care trust failed to offer Rigg psychiatric evaluation, instead placing him in a hostel. Police failed to reply to emergency calls for 3 hours after Rigg started threatening staff at his hostel, then took him to a holding cell instead of hospital. Inquest jury - level of force "unsuitable". Rigg's family - "Sean died as a result of the wilful neglect of those who were meant to care for him". IPCC "inadequate and obstructive". Yet another black death in police custody without an officer being prosecuted.

Police used an unsuitable level of force before the death of a schizophrenic man in custody, an inquest jury has found. Karate expert Sean Rigg, 40, was held after a claim he had attacked passers-by in Balham, south London, in 2008. He died at Brixton police station. Southwark Coroner's Court heard he had not been taking his medication.

Returning a narrative verdict, jurors found police handling of the death had showed an "absence of leadership". Coroner Andrew Harris said: "The level of force used on Sean Rigg whilst he was restrained in the prone position at the Weir estate was unsuitable. In addition, there was an absence of leadership. This led to a failure to take appropriate control of the situation."

Mr Rigg, who had a history of problems with the law, had been diagnosed with schizophrenia as a 20-year-old. In May 2008 he was living at a hostel run by Penrose Housing Association in Fairmount Road, Brixton. Staff there called 999 just before 17:00 BST when he smashed up a gazebo and threatened staff with karate moves.

Over the next three hours the staff at Penrose made another four emergency calls to police, but help was not forthcoming. By 20:00, when they made their final call, he had left the hotel and was then reported to have attacked a young couple. Within 10 minutes of the report he was restrained by three police officers on the Weir Estate in Brixton.

Later that evening he collapsed at Brixton police station suffering from a heart arrhythmia, which was the medical cause of Mr Rigg's death. The court heard he had been physically fit before he died. The jury found police restrained Mr Rigg in the prone position for eight minutes while he was being arrested, a length of time that "more than minimally" contributed to his death. Jurors also found there was no evidence Mr Rigg had in fact been violent to the public.

The coroner continued: "Sean Rigg's health continued to decline during the journey in the cage of a police van back to the police station. Sean Rigg's mental health was already, and continued to be, very poor. As Sean Rigg was brought into the cage at Brixton police station he was extremely unwell and was not fully conscious."

He added: "It was reasonable to expect the police to recognise that there was cause for concern regarding Sean's mental and physical health."

South London and Maudsley NHS Trust (SLAM) was also criticised for failing to organise a mental health assessment for Mr Rigg before his death. Crisis plans in place to deal with him were found to be inadequate. The trust also failed to ensure Mr Rigg took his medication in the two months before his death. The jury found the absence of a mental health assessment "more than minimally contributed" to his death.

A spokeswoman for the trust said: "We apologise to the family of Mr Sean Rigg that he did not receive the standard of care he was entitled to expect from us. Having reviewed the care and treatment we provided to Mr Rigg, it is clear that different clinical decisions should have been taken in the days leading up to his tragic death. In particular, we accept a Mental Health Act assessment should have been undertaken when it became apparent that Mr Rigg was relapsing."

In a statement, Mr Rigg's family said: "The evidence we have heard has left us in no doubt that Sean died as a result of the wilful neglect of those who were meant to care for him and keep him safe. If the South London and Maudsley Trust had done their job properly and provided the care and help that Sean urgently needed, he would be alive today. If the police had not ignored repeated 999 calls from the hostel, and taken Sean to the hospital as they should have done, he would be alive today."

The family said they had been let down by the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) investigation which was "inadequate and obstructive from the start". They have also called for a public inquiry to establish "why the system in this country consistently fails to deliver justice to the many families whose loved ones have died in police custody".

"Until we have justice there will be no peace for us or the many other families we stand with," the statement added.

Both the Metropolitan Police and the IPCC have yet to comment.

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Comments

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  1. Everyone — a person
  2. more info — Cho Cho
  3. Kings n queens. — Prophet of the truth.
  4. 1 track — chi cho
  5. Worth noting the record — reader
  6. the police did the right thing ... — n
  7. the fully story — cho chi
  8. Listen to it! — PC Shitforbrains