
‘Travesty' no officers prosecuted for Jean Charles de Menezes' death
It came two weeks after the 7/7 terror attacks, which killed 52 people in central London in 2005.
Mr de Menezes' family were joined at a memorial outside the station to pay tribute and lay flowers, to mark the 20th anniversary of his death.
A minute's silence was held to mark the moment the 27-year-old was killed, a prayer was also read in both Portuguese and English, and traditional South American music was played in his honour.
Family members and supporters of the campaign wore black T-shirts which read: '20 years: Justice denied. Justice4Jean.'
Relatives say the anniversary marks a renewed call for truth and accountability for those responsible for his death.
Mr de Menezes was shot seven times in the head the day after police mistakenly identified him as one of the suspects for the failed bombings.
Would-be suicide bombers had targeted the transport network on July 21, but their devices failed to explode.
Police found an address in Scotia Road, Tulse Hill, written on a gym membership in one of the unexploded bags used by the bombers.
Mr de Menezes, who lived in one of the flats at Scotia Road, was wrongly identified by police as Hussain Osman, one of the terrorists.
He was shot dead at Stockwell Tube station on July 22 2005.
His family said it is 'a travesty' that no police officer has been held accountable for his death.
Patricia da Silva Armani, Mr de Menezes' cousin, said: 'He was a completely innocent man. And yet, he was shot in cold blood.
'To make things worse, lies were spread to justify the unjustifiable.
'For our family, the grief of that loss and the injustice surrounding it are still with us, every single day.
'Nothing can erase the pain of knowing that the life of a hard-working, kind, and honest young man was taken from us out of prejudice and incompetence.
'To this day, no police officer has been held accountable for Jean's death. That is a travesty.
'It is unacceptable that agents of the state can act with impunity. Without accountability, there is no justice.
'Jean's memory demands more than words – it demands truth, accountability, and real change. We will not forget. We will not be silent.'
No officers were ever prosecuted for the killing of Mr De Menezes but the Metropolitan Police were fined for breaching health and safety laws.
Dame Cressida Dick, who became Metropolitan Police commissioner in 2017, led the operation in which Mr de Menezes died.
Yasmin Khan, the campaign's lawyer, said: 'Twenty years ago today, Jean Charles de Menezes stepped on to a train here at Stockwell station and never came home.
'We remember him today, because the system that killed him never faced justice, and not a single police officer was ever held accountable.'
Ms Khan added: 'What I've learned from these people we see standing in front of you is to remember Jean Charles is a lesson in refusing to be silent.
'It's an honour, not just to his life, but to the bravery of those who fought for him to remind us that the fight for justice is long.
'Justice may have been denied, but their fight was worth every breath.'
Met Police Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley said: 'The events of July 22 2005 remain a matter of deep regret to the Met and have had a major and lasting impact on counter-terrorism policing in this country.
'Twenty years after the death of Jean Charles de Menezes, the thoughts of all of us at the Metropolitan Police are today with his family and friends.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
4 hours ago
- Daily Mail
'Death is part of your daily life': Ex-homicide detective reveals what it's REALLY like to discover a dead body - and why it's not like Silent Witness
Investigating grisly crime scenes on a notorious strip dubbed 'Murder Mile' would be a baptism of fire for most trainee detectives. But for Damian Allain, the scourge of knife crime and shootings in Peckham, south-east London, in the late 1980s was what spiked his interest in becoming a homicide detective for Britain's biggest police force. Having served 31 years in the Metropolitan Police, the former detective chief inspector has been confronted with harrowing crime scenes that most of us will never face in a lifetime. It's a far cry from what you see on BBC hit drama Silent Witness, he admits, joking that you wouldn't have a pathologist, in this case actress Emilia Fox, 'running around trying to investigate the murder'. From finding a bloodied woman beaten and strangled to death in the shower cubicle of an office to staring down at the disfigured face of a man who was burned alive in the boot of a car in a twisted revenge plot, Mr Allain has seen it all. 'Death is part of your daily life,' he tells MailOnline in the brutally honest assessment you would expect from a hardened detective who has worked on the frontlines of homicide crime for three decades. It is clear that having worked on hundreds of murder cases, attending countless crime scenes and post-mortems, Mr Allain has become astonishingly desensitised to seeing dead bodies. 'It's obviously quite shocking,' he concedes. 'But you're there to do a professional job and you put any anxieties aside. You've got to crack on and just investigate the circumstances. There's a great sense of professional pride that takes over.' Seeing murder victims is something detectives just get used to, he says, adding: 'You're immersed in that environment. You go to post-mortems and crime scenes and see death as part of your daily life.' The harder part, Mr Allain admits, is meeting the victims' grieving families and supporting them when they see the beaten or burned bodies of their loved ones. He says in the past 'you would actively dissuade families to view the remains', but the 'culture has changed' and relatives often want to see the remains to 'see their loved one for the last time'. Mr Allain added: 'No two people grieve the same way, you do get different reactions... I've had every emotion in front of me from families being perfectly lucid - not visibly distressed - through to people flailing around on the floor in grief.' 'Sometimes there's even anger directed towards you because they see you as the authority.' His first homicide case, in 1991, was a 'nasty' murder in Peckham where an old man was queuing up in a benefits office when three men dragged him into a disused warehouse and beat him to death. 'This guy was clubbed to death and then they set the whole building on fire,' he recalled. 'This poor guy's remains were found and I was the exhibits officer on that case which was quite unusual for a trainee detective back then.' Mr Allain, now a lecturer in policing, criminology and the criminal justice system at Brunel University of London, tells MailOnline about three memorable cases that have stuck with him throughout his career and beyond his retirement in 2017. The first case that sticks in Mr Allain's mind was finding the beaten and strangled body of New Zealander Cathy Marlow, who was murdered in her office block in Vauxhall by her ex-colleague Matthew Fagan, in 2007. Ms Marlow was killed after a cruel quirk of fate put them in the same place at the same time. She had come into work on the weekend only to find Fagan, who had been fired from the company, stealing computers. Ms Marlow's body was found in a shower cubicle at her office after she was tied up and throttled with her own scarf at the offices of market research company Research Now. Mr Allain was met with a grisly scene, where the walls and floor of the office were smeared with blood. 'She suffered a really significant head injury, there was lots of blood. And there were drag marks in blood down a corridor into a shower room and she was found slumped. in a shower room. The actual cause of the death was strangulation.' Mr Allain said he 'vividly' remembers Ms Marlow's family coming over from New Zealand after her death. 'Just imagine that you live on the other side of the world, and you get a call to say she's been murdered in her office block in the way that she had been,' he said. 'I just remember them being very lost really. They were in shock and didn't know where to turn and of course they were in a foreign country.' The detective also managed to piece together how the murderer proceeded to then steal the laptops as they found his blood - indicating there had been a struggle - under the desks where he had gone to disconnect the cables. The murderer had tried to claim he was mugged in Peckham at the time the attack took place in a bid to provide a false alibi. However, CCTV showed him going to and from the premises and when he was eventually charged and his name released to the public, someone called to say he had sold them the laptops on the following Sunday. Mr Allain admitted that forensic evidence is absolutely crucial when first approaching a crime scene as it brings the 'scene to life to determine what's happened' which can help you start to identity lines of investigation. Another case which sticks in the mind of Mr Allain after all these years is the grisly love triangle murder of a TV executive in February 2012. Gagandip Singh, 21, was bundled into the back of a boot before the vehicle was set on fire in Blackheath, south-east London. Harinder Shoker, 20, was sentenced to life with a minimum of 22 years for murder, while Darren Peters, 20, was jailed for 12 years for manslaughter. Mr Singh was murdered in a cold-blooded revenge plot after he allegedly attempted to rape 20-year-old Mundill Mahil. Mahil, who lured Mr Singh to her university house in Brighton, was jailed for six years for causing grievous bodily harm. The victim was unaware that Shoker and Peters were waiting for him in the bedroom and they violently attacked him, wrapped him in a duvet and put him in the boot of his Mercedes before taking the car to Blackheath and burning it. Mr Singh was still alive when the car went up in flames and died of breathing in toxic fumes. Recalling the gruesome case, Mr Allain said: 'When he arrived, he goes in there and he's basically battered with a camera tripod and he's bundled into his own Mercedes and then driven up to Blackheath, where they torched the car.' He continued: 'Obviously, we've got a situation where there's disfigurement of the body. It obviously makes life slightly more difficult. 'When you've got fire involved, of course that destroys any potential often for forensic evidence as well. 'You've got little or no chance of getting any sort of DNA or any other trace evidence, and you've obviously got the added where you've got to identify who the victim is, because visual identification is often impossible. 'You've got to manage the family as well in terms of do they want to see their loved one? We would never accept a visual identification, but obviously, once we know who the victim is, either through odontology or through DNA, the family may well want to view the body and that happened in this case. 'The mother and her daughter [Gagandip's sister] were insistent on seeing him which is difficult to manage.' The victim's sister, Amandip Kaur Singh, previously relieved the harrowing moment on 5Star, saying: 'Having to see the burnt body is something I can't believe, I don't know how we got through that. 'There was no skin, he had gone charcoal colour. His eyes had sunk in. He didn't even look like a human. It was scary, but he was my brother so I had to go.' Mr Allain said the case was 'memorable in a number of ways'. 'I think we picked that job up on a early Saturday morning, and by Wednesday we charged three people with murder and it was quite fast moving investigation.' Despite the fast investigation, the detective also encountered stumbling blocks that could have hampered the investigation. There were five students living in the house, none of whom contacted the police and left the address, while a neighbour subsequently told police they saw two men carrying a 'bulky object covered in a duvet' to the boot. He took down the number plate but only told police when they carried out house to house inquiries. Mr Allain explains: 'So you've got five medical students there who know something really bad has happened there. They don't contact the cops. 'And obviously you've got someone down the street who's seen something suspicious and didn't call the cops, which is fine, but it's a good example of the fact that don't assume that because someone's seen or heard anything that they are going to contact you.' The third case he recalls investigating was the gruesome murder of George Francis, a career criminal who was linked to the £26million Brinks-Mat heist. Mr Francis, 63, was shot four times at his haulage firm in Bermondsey, south London, by contract killers in 2003. Terence Conaghan, from Glasgow, and John O'Flynn, from Cheshunt, Hertfordshire, were convicted of murder. Mr Francis was savagely shot in the face, back, arm and finger after he tried to collect a £70,000 debt from a business contact, his Old Bailey trial heard at the time. The gangster was found slumped in the front seat with his legs hanging out of the front passenger door after he was gunned down while collecting a newspaper from his car. Mr Francis, described by prosecutors as a 'career criminal' with a 'chequered history' is believed to have played a role in helping to dispose of a large part of the Brinks-Mat gold bullion heist in 1983. Adding to the 'Brinks-Mat curse', he was the ninth man linked to the robbery to be killed Recalling the case, Mr Allain told MailOnline: 'That was quite an interesting case. It was challenging in a number of ways, because it cut across not just homicide, but organised crime.' In grisly detail, he revealed: 'It was an execution style shooting as well. The guy just turned up for work and he was just shot point blank range in the head. He was shot four times. 'It's quite chilling to think that the guy's just driving to work and then, all of a sudden, he's been shot in quite a cool and collected fashion.' Mr Allain explained how one of the first decisions to make in this case was whether you are going to 'extricate the body from the vehicle or take the vehicle with the body inside to a sterile location where you can conduct forensic work'. Mr Allain and and his team were able to snare the killers after a pair of glasses and a cigarette left at the scene showed traces of O'Flynn and Conaghan's DNA. Despite working on some horrific murder cases, the former detective is incredibly matter of fact when it comes to discovering dead bodies. He tells MailOnline: 'I think your initial feeling is dependent on the circumstances. You can be shocked in terms of how that person has died. With Cathy Marlow, she's died in her office block in quite an horrific attack... that does make you stop and think and it is quite shocking. 'But then there's a great sense of professional pride that takes over and think in terms of the mindset of just as horrific as this is, it is now my job to try and unpick what's happened and how it's happened, and start to bring offenders to justice.' The former detective says while he enjoys the odd investigative drama, his real obsession is true crime. He explains: 'It's interesting when you watch Silent Witness because you see the pathologist running around trying to investigate the murder, which obviously doesn't happen... it's totally in the world of fiction. 'There is a balance to be struck in making entertaining television to the public and having some level of continuity about policing practice.' 'Some of these dramatized murder series are pretty true true to life, and others go off on a bit of a fictional tangent sometimes, with a view to entertaining the public. 'I do watch occasionally some of these dramatized programs. But I also watch quite a lot of true crime,' he said.


Reuters
5 hours ago
- Reuters
Man arrested at US Treasury building after climbing gate, agency says
July 27 (Reuters) - The U.S. Secret Service arrested a man after he climbed a gate at the U.S. Treasury building in Washington on Sunday at about 2:30 p.m., the agency said in statement. Traffic in the area was blocked off as Washington's Metropolitan Police Department's bomb squad, 'out of an abundance of caution,' examined a bag the man had left on the sidewalk outside the fence, according to the statement from a Secret Service spokesperson. It was not an explosive device, the spokesperson added. The Treasury building is located next to the White House on Pennsylvania Avenue. No Secret Service protectees were at the White House at the time, the statement said. The suspect was charged with unlawful entry and in connection with an outstanding warrant and was taken to a local hospital for a medical evaluation, according to the statement.


Daily Mirror
6 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Family of missing Brit to fly to France for search after unsettling phone call
The family of missing Belfast man Robert Kincaid are racing to Paris in France after the 38-year-old disappeared after missing his flight to Dubin earlier this month The family of a missing man is flying to France in a frantic bid to track him down after he mysteriously vanished at a busy airport before strangers answered his phone. Robert Kincaid, 38, from the Tullycarnet area of East Belfast, hasn't been seen or heard from in 10 days after failing to catch his connecting flight from Charles De Gaulle Airport in Paris. The oil rig worker was travelling to Dublin on July 17 after a stint offshore in Benin, West Africa, but he never made it onboard his final flight. Since then, there's been radio silence. Worry turned to alarm when Robert's family tried to FaceTime him later that night and were shocked when the call was answered by a man they didn't recognise. Even more chillingly, a second attempt the next day connected to a woman with a crying baby in the background before the phone went dead for good. Now, his devastated family is preparing to head to France themselves in a last-ditch effort to find him. Speaking to Belfast Live, Robert's brother Louis said the whole ordeal has been a waking nightmare. He said: 'Robert had been working on an oil rig in Benin and was due to fly back on July 17. He missed his flight at ten past seven from Charles De Gaulle Airport, and now his phone is completely off.' The last contact came just after 8pm that night where Robert admitted he'd had a few drinks after missing his flight. But at 10pm, the situation took a chilling twist. His family said: 'We tried FaceTiming him and it was answered by a black man in what looked like a corrugated hut. He spoke broken English and said the phone battery was dying and then the call cut out. The next day, a woman answered with a baby crying in the background. Since then, nothing. No calls. No texts. Just silence.' The family has filed a missing person report with the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) and has been in touch with the British Embassy in Paris, but so far, they've been left in the dark. 'Everything's going through Interpol, but we've had no updates,' Louis said. 'The Embassy says Robert's not in any hospitals or medical centres, but they can't tell us much more. We are up to high dough with worry. This is completely out of character – he always keeps in touch.' Determined to do something, the family is now preparing to fly to France on Wednesday to launch their own search, despite knowing how overwhelming the task ahead is. Robert's brother continued: 'It'll be like looking for a needle in a haystack. But we can't just sit here and do nothing.'