British Officers Who Killed Brazilian by Mistake Won’t Be Punished

Brazilian electrician Jean Charles de Menezes was killed by British police Eleven British police officers involved in the fatal shooting of a Brazilian man wrongly suspected of being a suicide bomber will not face disciplinary action. The Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) said the officers would not face a police tribunal over the killing of Jean Charles de Menezes, on July 22nd, 2005.

Police officers, believing the 27-year-old Brazilian electrician to be a suicide bomber, shot him seven times in the head after he boarded a London underground train.

The shooting came amid high tension in the capital over the threat of suicide attacks. Just 15 days earlier, four British Islamists had blown themselves up on underground trains and a bus, killing 52 people and wounding hundreds.

The De Menezes family issued a statement saying it was "gravely disappointed" at the decision.

"The families are given no relief to their agony, grief and anxiety caused by their lack of access to all the evidence …"

The Metropolitan Police have apologized for the killing.

IPCC chairman Nick Hardwick said he had concluded there was "no realistic prospect of disciplinary charges being upheld against any of the firearms or surveillance officers involved."

He said he had reached the decision "on the basis of the evidence I have available to me now or any development that might reasonably be foreseen".

Last July, prosecutors said no police officer would face criminal charges over the shooting. The IPCC said it had not made any decision on disciplinary action against the four commanders and tactical advisors involved in the botched operation.

It was reserving that decision until after a court case due to start in October in which London's Metropolitan Police faces a corporate prosecution under health and safety laws

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

The Man with a Fish Between the Legs

Moment of matchless power is that in which a man will do anything, really ...

Central Market in Florianópolis, state of Santa Catarina, Brazil

A Few Ways to Legally Move to Brazil Without Having to Marry a Brazilian

Immigration visa to Brazil will be granted only to applicants who satisfy the special ...

Brazil’s Lula Planning New Trip to Africa

As part of Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s policy of promoting closer ...

Brazil Heads CIAT, World Body Reuniting Tax Offices from Americas and EU

The Secretary of Brazil’s Federal Revenue and Customs Secretariat, Jorge Rachid, starting Wednesday, April ...

Some in Brazil Distrust UN’s Tobacco Control Pact

Brazil is the world’s largest tobacco exporter and the second-biggest producer, responsible for an ...

Cashew Hamburger, a Brazilian Invention to Compete with Soy Hamburger

The main raw material for the product is cashew bagasse, discarded by juice and ...

Vatican Confirms: Pope Will Visit Brazil in May

Pope Benedict XVI will visit Brazil in May 2007. The news was confirmed by  ...

Foreigners Wishing to Buy Land in Brazil Have New Rules to Follow

Normative Ruling #1, which sets forth the administrative process for foreigners to request authorization ...

Brazil’s President-Elect Stays the Course and Keeps Lula’s Finance Minister

Dilma Rousseff, the president-elect, as announced by her press office, has chosen economist Alexandre ...

Brazilian presidential candidate Geraldo Alckmin

Brazil, Roll Up Your Sleeve to Defeat Alckmin and the US Empire

We the social movements must mobilize, roll up our sleeves and go to the ...