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Met officers ‘did not check on woman and child killed during police pursuit’

Pc Edward Welch and ex-Pc Jack Keher were chasing a stolen Ford Focus when the driver lost control and struck a group of pedestrians, killing two.

Pol Allingham
Wednesday 15 May 2024 14:02 EDT
Makayah McDermott (Oli Regan/BAM/PA)
Makayah McDermott (Oli Regan/BAM/PA) (PA Media)

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Two Metropolitan Police officers did not “check even briefly” on a woman and child killed by a car during a police pursuit, a misconduct panel has heard.

Pc Edward Welch and former Pc Jack Keher were chasing a stolen Ford Focus when the driver lost control and mounted the pavement, striking a group of pedestrians and killing child actor Makayah McDermott, 10, and his aunt Rozanne Cooper, 34.

Another child sustained major injuries in the collision in Penge, south-east London, on August 31 2016.

Pc Welch reached speeds of more than 60mph driving the marked BMW after Joshua Dobby, then-19, in the six-minute pursuit, the hearing on Wednesday was told.

It is alleged both officers committed gross misconduct by leaving the injured pedestrians to chase Dobby on foot and failing in their duty to protect life and limb.

They are also accused of not accurately assessing and communicating the risks to Met Command and Control (MetCC), the force’s control room.

Mr Keher, who was in the passenger seat, is further accused of not challenging Pc Welch’s driving.

And Pc Welch is accused of failing to assess if continuing the chase was proportional, and not ensuring Mr Keher provided MetCC with accurate information.

At the end of the car chase Dobby exited the vehicle and Pc Welch radioed “I need ambulance, it’s a decamp. He’s decamped”, said Gerry Boyle KC, representing the Met.

Mr Boyle said Mr Keher then said: “Control he’s decamped, he’s hit members of the public.”

But the officers did not administer first aid to the victims or help the bystanders who stepped in, Mr Boyle said.

He told the panel: “It was either he (Pc Welch) knew that there had been an impact with members of the public but set off in pursuit of the driver, or he had reason to suspect that the Ford had collided with members of the public at the end of the pursuit.

“Why would he then say ‘I need an ambulance’? Even if he didn’t hear his colleague say ‘he’s hit members of the public’.

“There is a failure of him to check, even briefly, if somebody had been hurt.”

Pc Welch was the first to accelerate at the start of the pursuit after he spotted the stolen Ford Focus, Mr Boyle said.

It had triggered an ANPR camera but was driving normally, he added.

The officers told MetCC the vehicle had been taken using keys days earlier and that they suspected Dobby had also stolen petrol.

But Mr Boyle alleged the chase “was obviously disproportionate to the nature of the underlying offence”.

Police dashcam footage shown to the panel featured the police car hurtling through sunny residential streets and through a busy high street.

The footage included a speedometer that showed the cars travelling at more than double the speed limit at times.

The officers did not tell MetCC that the Ford Focus drove through a no entry sign, left past a no left turn sign, the wrong way down a one-way street at “considerable speed”, and over multiple roundabouts “at high speed”, Mr Boyle said.

At one point they told MetCC that the pursuit was at 40 to 50mph despite the speedometer shown to the hearing reading 60mph.

MetCC responded “can you just confirm your actions are proportionate with the offences?”

To which Mr Keher said: “Yes, yes, at this time, due to low risk.”

Mr Boyle said: “He (Pc Welch) obviously failed to accurately report the level of risk to MetCC and, or, failed to ensure that Mr Keher accurately reported the level of risk.”

He said a vehicle taking off from police “could be involved in armed robbery, terrorism, drugs, human trafficking” but “there was no intelligence linking this vehicle with anything”.

Mr Boyle added: “All the officers had at that time was that this is a stolen car.

“Given that there was a number of occasions along this particular pursuit where the risk should have been considered to have been high, it is the view of (the Met) that this risk ought to have been terminated by Pc Welch – as a result of those failings it is (the Met’s) submission that Constable Welch has breached the professional standards of behaviour.”

Mr Keher has chosen to not be involved in the proceedings at Palestra House, Southwark, and has made no written submissions.

Both Pc Welch and Mr Keher deny the allegations.

At the Old Bailey in December 2022 Pc Welch was cleared of two charges of causing death by dangerous driving, one count of causing serious injury by dangerous driving, and an alternative charge of dangerous driving over the incident.

Dobby has been convicted of two counts of manslaughter by gross negligence and one count of causing serious injury by dangerous driving.

The hearing continues at Palestra House on Monday.

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