Sheku Bayoh Public Inquiry to begin next week

26 Nov 2020 01:59 PM

Assessors appointed to assist Lord Bracadale.

The independent Public Inquiry into the circumstances surrounding the death of Sheku Bayoh will begin next Monday, 30 November, Justice Secretary Humza Yousaf has announced.

The Right Honourable Lord Bracadale, retired senator of the College of Justice, will lead the statutory  inquiry and will announce how it will proceed in due course.

The Justice Secretary also appointed Michael Fuller and Raju Bhatt as assessors to support Lord Bracadale with their knowledge and experience in their individual areas of expertise, as well as on race and diversity issues during the preparation, oral hearings, decision making and report writing phases.

Mr Yousaf yesterday said:

“The family of Mr Bayoh have shown remarkable dignity and perseverance during their five-year wait for an inquiry into the death of Sheku. I hope that today’s announcement gives them comfort and reassurance that the circumstances surrounding his death will be examined in a public and transparent manner.

“Lord Bracadale and I worked closely together in selecting the assessors  and we agreed that Mr Fuller and Mr Bhatt would provide extensive levels of experience and expertise to the Inquiry. The formal start of the Inquiry is a key milestone and I am confident the assessors will ably assist the chair to consider issues relevant to the Terms of Reference.  The Inquiry will examine the circumstances leading up to the death of My Bayoh, the post incident management process and subsequent investigation. The inquiry will also establish the extent to which Mr Bayoh’s actual or perceived race played a part in events, if any.”

Background

The Justice Secretary met with the Bayoh family, Police Scotland, the Scottish Police Federation, the Police Investigations and Review Commissioner and others to listen to their views on the assessor appointments – including to suggest suitable candidates for consideration. Mr Yousaf shared the feedback from these meetings with Lord Bracadale who agreed with the appointment of Mr Bhatt and Mr Fuller.

Lord Bracadale also has the power to call expert witnesses, with specific expertise in a range of areas, to give evidence to the Inquiry.  

An opening statement will be made by Lord Bracadale on the inquiry’s website www.shekubayohinquiry.scot when it goes live at 9am on Monday.

Mr Fuller is a former Her Majesty’s Chief Inspector of the Crown Prosecution Service. Prior to that he served 34 years as an officer in the Metropolitan Police Service and Kent Police, retiring as Chief Constable of Kent Police in 2010. During his time in the Met he was instrumental in setting up the Racial and Violent Crime Task Force and drew up the force’s action plan in response to criticism of institutional racism arising from the inquiry into the Met’s investigation into the murder of Stephen Lawrence.

Mr Bhatt is an experienced lawyer, specialising in working with families who have lost a loved one through a death in custody. In 2015, he was appointed to the Reference Group on the Independent Review of Deaths and Serious Incidents in Police Custody by Dame Elish Angiolini who reported to the Home Secretary in 2017. In 2010 he was appointed to the Hillsborough Independent Panel which reported to the Home Secretary in September 2012. In 2009 he was appointed special adviser to the Joint Committee on Human Rights in relation to its parliamentary scrutiny of the Bill that came to pass as the Coroners and Justice Act 2009.