Calling all police officers on duty at Hillsborough on 15.04.1989

There were a great many junior officers on duty that day that did a fantastic job, without senior supervision, to try and help those who were trapped and dying in the Leppings Lane terraces.

Recent documentaries, in the light of the Hillsborough Independent Panel, have seen PC’s come forward and tell their side of the story.

It seems that no matter what depths senior officers were willing to sink, that there are a great number of more junior officers who were, honest, who tried their best and who were horrified at the way their statements were amended to remove any criticism of the police.

I would be forever grateful, if one such hero of the day would step forward and help me tell the story about the real truth of Hillsborough?

The first part of the 3-part documentary is online here:

Please help me unravel this horrendous cover-up. My email is mike_nicholson@hotmail.co.uk

Even if you are unwilling/ frightened to appear on camera, I would still welcome your anonymous comments.

Thank you for reading.

Hillsborough: The police cover-up

The mistakes at Hillsborough should never have happened in the first place. There had been so many warning signs in the other semi-final matches held in ‘81‘87 and again in ‘88, and if anybody in authority had taken those signs seriously then Hillsborough would have only ever been remembered for being the home of Sheffield Wednesday Football Club. Today, the very mention of the stadium conjures up disturbing & horrific images.

The main contributory factors which caused the disaster at Hillsborough, as discovered by the subsequent government enquiry (The Taylor Report) into the disaster, were as follows:

1. A lack of organisation outside the ground. Fans were not organised outside the ground. There was no queuing, and there were no barriers along the roads leading towards the turnstiles to slow the flow of fans towards the (old & insufficient) turnstiles as there had been at the semi-finals held at Hillsborough in 1987 and 1988. By 2.30pm, a full 15 minutes before the match ticket advised fans to be inside the ground, the swell of numbers had started to become unmanageable. The simple fact was that the numbers allowed to crowd outside the turnstiles were far greater than the numbers that the turnstiles could admit.

2. Police opened an exit gate. At 2.48pm, once the throng outside had developed into a dangerous crush; police opened an exit gate to allow thousands to enter the ground unchecked. Exit gate C was directly behind a tunnel that led to the over-full central pens.

3. Failure to close the central tunnel after opening the gate. It was clear to all that day that the central pens were already full well before kick-off, while there was still plenty of room in the half-empty wing pens. Countless players, officials, fans and even John Motson of the BBC commentated on this fact on the Grandstand programme that was broadcasting live that day.

Yet, when Chief Superintendent David Duckenfield gave the order to open exit gate C from his position directly over-looking the Leppings Lane terrace, he failed to close off access to the tunnel leading to the (already over-full) central pens. Fans entering through gate C were confronted by a dark tunnel, with a steep decline down towards the pens, and the green of the pitch could be seen at its end. It was the only obvious way onto the terrace. Above this tunnel, was the solitary word ‘standing’ and as a result fans headed straight down the tunnel into the dangerously over-capacity central pens. Lord Justice Taylor was later to describe the failure to block access to the tunnel as ‘a blunder of the first magnitude’.

People were compressed so tightly that serious injury and death followed, worsened by the fact that a crush barrier collapsed under the sheer weight of people and body after body fell forward on top of one another. The crush claimed the lives of 96 men, women and children.

The facts above are the main reasons that a disaster occurred; they are the true events of that day. As the inexperienced match commander watched the disaster unfold, Chief Superintendent David Duckenfield realised the enormity of his mistakes and his first reaction was to lie about them.

The first recorded moment in which an orchestrated and obvious police cover-up started can be traced to 3.15pm that day, just nine minutes after the referee had stopped the match and taken the players off the pitch. Graham Kelly, the then Chief Executive of the Football Association, Mr Kirton, also from the FA, and Graham Mackerell, Secretary of Sheffield Wednesday Football Club went to the police control box to find out from the match commander what had happened. According to the Taylor Report: Duckenfield indicated that he thought there had been fatalities and that the game was likely to be abandoned. He also said that a gate had been forced and there had been an inrush of Liverpool supporters. He then pointed at one of the television screens focused on gate C by the Leppings Lane turnstile and said ‘That’s the gate that’s been forced; there’s been an inrush’ ”.

This is the first and earliest lie, and the very start of a cover-up that clearly sought to deflect blame from the actions of those with a duty of care, and onto those who were owed that very duty. Lord Justice Taylor was later to call this ‘A disgraceful lie’ in his report. Remember, while Duckenfield told this lie the tragedy was still unfolding in front of his very eyes. There were fans all over the pitch, some fans giving mouth-to-mouth, some ferrying the injured and dying from one end of the pitch to the other, and others tragically dying in front of him. He still sought not only to save his own skin, but in doing so to blame the victims of his mistakes. I don’t think ‘disgraceful’ quite covers it, do you?

Graham Kelly was interviewed on television a little later and he spoke of two stories. One, which the fans told of the police opening a gate and the other, that Duckenfield had deceitfully told about the fans breaking down a gate. The lie spread around the world. Duckenfield admitted to the Taylor inquiry that he lied, but the news reports and headlines had long-since run, and their damage had been done.

In the days after the disaster, there were some newspaper headlines that continued this orchestrated cover-up and to perpetuate this lie. The worst by some way was put together by Kelvin Mackenzie, who was at that time editor of The Sun newspaper. His front page headline was “The Truth” and three sub-headlines read “Some fans picked the pockets of victims. Some fans urinated on brave cops. Some fans beat up PC giving the kiss of life.”

To this day, 22 years later, The Sun newspaper is still boycotted on Merseyside.

The above statements were attributed to unnamed South Yorkshire Police officials. The stereotype of thuggish football fans, and thieving Scousers, was now firmly fixed in the nation’s conscience. One member of staff who worked at The Sun at that time described it as ‘a classic smear’. I’d like to add that The Taylor Report saw 71 hours of video from that day, and were given thousands of statements, both oral and written, and not a single statement supported these disgusting lies.

Officers on duty that day were asked to do something that is unusual. Rather than writing their recollections in their official police notebooks as is normal practice, they were asked to write their recollections on plain, A4 paper. Anything written in a police notebook is admissible as evidence, and official. The thoughts, experiences and recollections of officers hand-written on plain paper were not governed by Official Criminal Act rules.

What happened next is quite incredible. I believe that it was Professor Phil Scraton, author of the excellent Hillsborough The Truth, who was the first person to reveal that PC’s statements had been changed, with their criticisms of the police operation that day removed!

After submitting their hand-written version of events to their line manager, they were then sent to the solicitors acting for South Yorkshire Police. There, they are typed, and returned to their author with huge chunks of their recollections scored through. Some had single words red-lined, others had complete lines and in some cases PC’s were expected to remove whole paragraphs.

Andy Burnham MP recently read out one such amended statement in the Commons Debate.

PC 227’s initial statement read:

“I realised at the time that a terrible tragedy had occurred. I began to feel myself being overcome with emotion, but quickly realised that I would be no use to anyone if I felt sorry for myself. I was assisted out of the terracing and onto the pitch. I saw several officers wandering about in a dazed and confused state. Some were crying and some simply sat on the grass. Members of the public were running about with boarding, ferrying people from the pitch to the far end of the ground.”

This is the note attached to this original statement, from a senior officer:

“Last two pages required amending. These are his own feelings. He also states that PC’s were sat down crying while fans were carrying the dead and injured. This shows that they were organised and we were not. Have the PC re-write the last two pages, excluding the points mentioned.”

The TV pictures from Grandstand that day illustrated the words written by PC 227, and the senior officer was right. It did look like they [the fans] were organised and we [South Yorkshire Police] were not. It looked that way, because in the main, it was the sad truth.

This is just one of many, many statements that were edited, in an apparent attempt to remove any criticism of the police by the police. Incredible! You can watch the Commons Debate in its entirety by clicking the link. The first part of the video is about pensions, so forward to 17:42:23 for the start of the Hillsborough debate.

—-

My next article will be concerning the coroner’s decision to place a 3.15pm cut-off time on the evidence that could be heard.

Please do comment on this article if have something to say.

Hillsborough: The missing CCTV tapes

On the night of 15th April 1989, the Hillsborough stadium would have no doubt been a sombre place to be. The public were by now all cleared from the disaster scene. Most of those would either be on their way home, in hospital either receiving treatment for injuries or visiting those that were, or maybe still frantically travelling between hospitals looking for missing relatives. Some of the unlucky ones would have been at the stadiums gymnasium, trying to identify the deceased by studying Polaroid snapshots of lifeless faces, pinned together on a board outside the gym.

The wails of those who found their relatives there would have no doubt been haunting in a virtually empty stadium, as night fell, and as police officers were filling bag after bag with discarded items of clothing from the now empty Leppings Lane terrace. Scarves, shoes, coats and tops … all crushed from their owners earlier that day.

That night, two CCTV tapes went missing from the locked police control box at Hillsborough stadium.

If you have an inquisitive mind like me, you will be asking yourself how, why & in whose interest would it have been for those tapes to disappear? We may never know the answers to those questions, and it beggars belief that more wasn’t made of this in the investigation. Vital evidence on the deaths of 96 people vanishes, and nobody in authority seems that bothered!

When trying to ascertain who could have stolen those tapes, I think about opportunity, motive and knowledge. Specifically, who had the opportunity to enter a locked police control box in order to take the tapes, who had a motive to make those tapes disappear and crucially, who had the knowledge to be able to recognise the ‘right’ tapes from all that were there simply from the casing?

Can you believe this scenario for instance? A group of Liverpool fans realised that they had done something wrong, then in a stadium full of police officers they stage an audacious robbery, breaking into the epicentre of police ‘control’ and out of several dozen tapes present, they pin-point the two that will have the offending images on and make away with them. I can’t believe this for a second, can you? Quite frankly, it’s ridiculous.

However, we do know that Chief Inspector David Duckenfield ordered the opening of exit gate C and then subsequently lied about it, saying that Liverpool fans had forced down that gate. This was an on the spot lie that he presumably told in order to shift the blame from his shoulders and onto the fans. That is a fact. He admitted that himself. He admitted that he lied, on record, and it was described in the Taylor Report as ‘a disgraceful lie’. That is a fact. We also know that Duckenfield was stationed in the police control box while the disaster unfolded before him. He certainly then had the opportunity, the motive and the knowledge of which tapes needed to disappear.

So that leads you to ask, is this not perverting the course of justice? No matter who took them, surely the police would be duty bound to investigate more fully than has been? It has been swept under the carpet, which also leads me to think that it is more likely, on the balance of evidence, that the police made those tapes go away.

I realise it is highly unlikely, but if anybody has any information relating to these missing tapes I would love to talk to you as a part of the documentary. I can be contacted at mike_nicholson@hotmail.co.uk

More reading:

What really happened at Hillsborough

3.15pm – A cut off from justice

The Missing CCTV tapes

About the Documentary

Poems about Hillsborough

Were you there & can you help?

Steve Rotheram – Commons debate speech

Steve Rotheram MP – A survivor’s stoy

Richie Greaves – A survivor’s story

Ed – A survivor’s story

Pete Carney – A survivor’s story

Damian Kavanagh – A survivor’s story

Hillsborough; 1981 Spurs disaster narrowly avoided.

Most people know that in 1989, 96 Liverpool supporters lost their lives in a terrible human crush at the Hillsborough stadium in Sheffield during an F.A. Cup semi-final match versus Nottingham Forest. You can read more about the 1989 disaster here.

What many people don’t know however is that disaster nearly struck eight years earlier, at the same ground, in the same round, of the same cup competition. That year it was Tottenham Hotspur and Wolverhampton Wanderers who travelled to the Hillsborough stadium, and it was the Spurs fans who were allocated the smaller, problematic Leppings lane end of the ground. There were broken limbs and other injuries sustained that day in 1981, but thankfully no fatalities largely due to the fact that the police opened up pitch-side gates as the crushing became apparent. If only they had done that in 1989.

As a part of the filming of my Hillsborough Disaster documentary, I met with a Spurs fan who was at Hillsborough that day in 1981, and he told me his story, You can also see the video he put together here which shows the Spurs fans spilling onto the pitch as play continues.

Here is a short clip taken from my longer interview with Neil Irving that will appear in the documentary:

Had the South Yorkshire Police not opened the perimeter gates that day, and let over 500 Spurs fans escape onto the pitch (click to watch video) then there could well have been a Hillsborough disaster eight years before the one in 1989.

I am due to meet with other fans from other teams who also had a terrible experience of the Leppings Lane terracing, and more details on that will follow.

So why was it OK to open the gates in 1981, but not in 1989?

If you are a Spurs fan, and you were at Hillsborough for this match in 1981, please leave a reply with your recollections below.