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

Hopes for Lower Interest Give Brazilians Stocks a Push

Latin American stocks were mixed to higher, with Brazilian shares gaining on hopes the ...

Brazil Intent on Doing Without Bolivia’s Gas in 2 Years

Brazil is going to produce, up to 2008, practically the same quantity of natural ...

Transportation Costs Are Stunting Exports in Brazil and LatAm

Latin American exports' growth depends more on lower transport costs than on reduction of ...

A gas pipeline in Brazil

Brazil Only Loses to Chile as the Best Place to Invest in LatAm

According to a report from the World Economic Forum meeting this week in the ...

Led by Brazil G20 Gathers in Washington to Mull Over Gravelly Ill Economy

Following on a joint initiative from United States and Brazil the Group of 20, ...

February 1995

CONTENTS: Cover story: The Cardoso era starts (p. 8) Weber is king (p. 11) ...

Sugar cane cutting is extremely hard and badly paid work

Brazil’s Competitive Edge Comes from Workers’ Brutal Exploitation

Brazilian Foreign Minister Celso Amorim, the president of the G-20 (the group of 21 ...

Brazil Gets Ready to Cash Its Carbon Credits

Alongside India, Brazil holds a leadership position in the Clean Development Mechanism (CDL) market, ...

Brazil’s Agribusiness Had Banner Year with US$ 60 Billion Trade Surplus

The agribusiness sector in Brazil should end this year with a US$ 60 billion ...

Brazil Sends 16 of Its Writers in a World Love-Story Mission

A postcard from Cairo arrives at the house of a youth in São Paulo. ...