ONTD Political

Stephen Lawrence verdict delivers justice after 18-year wait

1:28 am - 01/04/2012
Doreen Lawrence says police put her through years of grief and uncertainty as Gary Dobson and David Norris found guilty.

The mother of Stephen Lawrence accused the police of putting her through 18 years of grief and uncertainty after witnessing the conviction of two of her son's killers for his racist murder nearly a generation ago.

Outside a grey and rainswept central criminal court in London, to cheers from members of the public and campaigners, Doreen Lawrence said she could not celebrate; all she felt was relief that at last "some sort of justice" had been done, with the jury's unanimous guilty verdicts on Gary Dobson, 36, and David Norris, 35.

"How can I celebrate when I know that this day could have come 18 years ago if the police, who were meant to find my son's killers, had not failed so miserably to do so?"

Alongside her but speaking separately, Stephen's father, Neville, thanked the police and prosecutors and did express joy at the convictions. But he qualified his words, saying that five or six men had been responsible for his son's death on 22 April 1993. "I don't think I will be able to rest until they are all brought to justice," he said.

The high-profile status of the Lawrence killing – its highlighting of racism, incompetence and an apparent vein of corruption in the Metropolitan police, and the way the aftermath of the murder radically changed the face of policing, the law and politics – was reflected within minutes of the jury foreman pronouncing the "guilty" verdicts in court 16.


David Cameron issued a statement praising the Lawrence family for fighting "tirelessly" for justice. "Today's verdict cannot ease the pain of losing a son. But, for Doreen and Neville Lawrence, I hope that it brings at least some comfort after their years of struggle," he said.

But while the Lawrences hope to see others brought to justice, seven police investigations costing more than £30m and the latest groundbreaking work by forensic scientists have failed to unearth any new evidence against the Acourt brothers, Neil and Jamie, and Luke Knight – the three remaining prime suspects for the killing.

A police source said officers would now visit Dobson and Norris in prison to see if they would end their 18-year pact of silence. "We will work on their anger, and see if we persuade them that while they face long sentences the others are free," said the source.

It took just a few seconds for the jury foreman to pass judgment on the cutting-edge scientific evidence presented by the crown against Dobson and Norris after years of humiliating failures by the Metropolitan police.

One spot of the dead teenager's blood, a few fibres and two microscopic hairs brought Dobson and Norris – who became suspects within hours of the murder in 1993 – to justice. They will be sentenced on Wednesday. The blood found on the collar of Dobson's jacket was the smallest spot scientists have ever used in a criminal prosecution.

Dobson – who becomes one of only six people ever to be tried twice for the same offence – shook his head vigorously as at 2.55pm the foreman pronounced he was guilty of the murder of Stephen Lawrence. Norris gave no reaction to the same verdict. Mr Justice Treacy had ordered the court to remain quiet. "I recognise that this is a time of emotion for many people in court," he said. "I would ask those people to respect the dignity of the courtroom and the feelings of other people. The verdicts in this case will be received in complete silence."

He choreographed a break in proceedings after the verdicts were announced to prevent uproar in court. But when he sent the defendants down to the cells for the 10-minute adjournment, the emotions he had tried to contain spilled over.

As his mother, Pauline, began sobbing in the public gallery above him, Dobson looked from the dock to the jury. "You have condemned an innocent man," he said as he was led away. "I hope you can all live with it."

Above him, his family were urged to take some air, but Pauline Dobson could be heard sobbing loudly and shouting: "This is so wrong. He didn't kill that man, he is innocent."


Below her the composure of Doreen Lawrence – which she had maintained throughout the seven-week trial – began to crack. She cried while her son, Stuart, whispered words of comfort to her.

A few feet away Neville Lawrence was openly weeping. Later as the defendants were led away for the day, Dobson shouted to his family: "Stay strong, I love you, don't worry."

While they replied: "We love you Gal, we will fight to the death."

After years of dashed hopes and police failures the pursuit of the much-criticised Metropolitan police produced the evidence the family had been waiting for in 2007. A full forensic review of all the evidence unearthed a microscopic spot of Lawrence's blood in the collar of the jacket seized from Dobson's house. In addition 16 fibres from Lawrence's clothes were found on the jacket and the evidence bag it was held in.

Norris was linked to the scene by a microscopic hair matching the familial DNA of Lawrence and seven fibres from the dead boy's clothes. The defence counsel argued that the evidence was a result of contamination of the exhibits over 18 years. But the jury took just over eight hours to reject this and pronounce guilty verdicts.

The case was one of the most notorious unsolved murders in Britain. The 18-year fight for justice by Lawrence's parents led to a public inquiry which uncovered blunders by the Metropolitan police, blamed on institutional racism, which allowed his killers to escape justice.

Lawrence, 18, was murdered on 22 April 1993, as he and a friend waited for a bus in Eltham, south-east London.

They were attacked by a group of five to six white youths who shouted: "What, what, nigger?" and then rushed towards them, engulfing him by the weight of their number and stabbing him twice in the upper torso.

He ran 300 yards before collapsing and dying.


The former home secretary Jack Straw, who had ordered the public inquiry into the killing and the Metropolitan police's response to it, praised the Lawrences' campaigning work. "Things have improved dramatically and that is down to the extraordinary courage and determination which Neville and Doreen Lawrence showed in keeping alive the case for justice for their murdered son Stephen and for getting on for 19 years they couldn't get anyone convicted for the murder."

VIDEO - How the Stephen Lawrence murder case changed Britain: The murder of Stephen Lawrence became a cause celebre, prompting changes in policing, forensic science, the law, employment and community relations.



***

source: The Guardian

I thought there should be a post about the verdict, given that it'll be on every front page tomorrow. I'm relieved that the family have finally got some justice after so long.
starsinshapes 4th-Jan-2012 04:03 am (UTC)
I guess better late than never, but 18 years? Really?

This also makes me wonder about the follow-up to recent case about those mississippi boys killing that black man. I know the police already started fucking that case up.
stevie_jane 4th-Jan-2012 04:36 am (UTC)
I was 10 when this happened and remembered watching the news and wondering why the police would mess everything up so badly. Then all the details came out and I seriously thought something would be done but, no, not until 18 years after the fact. The racist fucks in the police should be shamed. A young man was murdered and no justice was available because the police were/are just that digusting. Doreen Lawrence should have been compensated in the millions because the police failings made an already horrific situation so much worse.

romp 4th-Jan-2012 05:32 am (UTC)
I saw this on the news this morning--it reminded me of a local unsolved murder. Creepy to think of how wide the guilt is spread with people out there who know the killers but say nothing.

Is the Metro considered cleaned out? I haven't heard anything good recently.
bethan_b_bad 4th-Jan-2012 09:56 am (UTC)
Do you mean the Met? The Metro is a newspaper.
moussaka_thief 4th-Jan-2012 11:54 am (UTC)
To be fair, I haven't heard anything good recently about either.
bethan_b_bad 4th-Jan-2012 12:13 pm (UTC)
Heh. Is there anything good about the Metro? I was just reading it on the train and FFS. Even if you ignore the actual content, that thing is atrocious. Do they even know what proof-reading is?
myrana 4th-Jan-2012 12:29 pm (UTC)
Hah, if you google for Metro spelling mistakes, you can find some pretty shameful ones - like this one, which they wouldn't even need a proof-reader for, just a spell-checker.

Evening Standard all the way!
bethan_b_bad 4th-Jan-2012 01:10 pm (UTC)
We don't get the Evening Standard here (Cardiff), worse luck: it's the Metro or nowt. Honestly, I was flicking through it on the train and just ITCHING for my red editor's pen. One of these days I'll actually go through it and edit everything, then send it into them with a grade.
romp 4th-Jan-2012 08:37 pm (UTC)
I meant the Metropolitan Police Service--I shortened it but failed to remember that the Met is the common version. The Metro is also the transit system in Paris... ;)
myrana 4th-Jan-2012 11:18 am (UTC)
Creepy to think of how wide the guilt is spread with people out there who know the killers but say nothing.

This - what's really creepy is that basically everyone in the country know who the killers are, but still nothing gets done. I mean, if you've even got the Daily Mail calling you out on a racist attack, then you know it must be pretty obvious, right?



And, in terms of the Met, one of the Stephen Lawrence panel openly stated that it's still institutionally racist today (no surprises there, then).
bethan_b_bad 4th-Jan-2012 12:54 pm (UTC)
one of the Stephen Lawrence panel openly stated that it's still institutionally racist today

Ooh, I am so shocked I may need smelling salts.

Except not.
frelling_tralk 4th-Jan-2012 05:20 pm (UTC)
This - what's really creepy is that basically everyone in the country know who the killers are, but still nothing gets done.

I remember being at school a few years after the murder, and we were all so shocked when the teacher explained that everyone basically knows who killed Steven Lawrence. Apparently at the time several local residents were naming the gang. The police were getting phone calls naming them, even anonymous notes on their windescreens, and still nothing was done

http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2012/jan/03/stephen-lawrence-racist-pair-suspicion is an interesting look at how the father of David Norris (drug dealer and gangland figure) was known for paying off witnesses and threatening them to protect his son, which might explain why might none of the witnesses to the murder could name any of the gang. Also a former police officer involved in the case has since admitted that the police were taking money off David Norris's father to obstruct the case.

So this is some small attempt at justice 18 years later, but it's sickening to think that three of them are still out there
myrana 4th-Jan-2012 10:59 pm (UTC)
Thanks for the link - I knew vaguely that Norris's father was involved with the gangs, but not in a lot of detail. It was pretty obvious that even though there were a lot of witnesses, they were scared from both sides (i.e. threatened by the perpetrators, and scared by the police). I guess we have to hope that someone will feel confident enough now to come forward with more information.

This article from 1999 also has some good information on the witnesses, and how even those who came forward were basically ignored. One of the bits that shocked me the most was that a girl who knew Neil and Jamie Acourt kept a diary, and -

Scribbled at the bottom of one page was the entry: 'Acourts stabbed black boy up Well Hall Road. Jamie and Neil, Gary, David, Lukie.' That entry is thought to refer to Jamie and Neil Acourt, Gary Dobson, Luke Knight and the fifth member of the gang, David Norris.

It's claimed this was given to the police in 1993 shortly after the attack, but the police denied hearing about it. As you say, pretty sickening. :(
frelling_tralk 7th-Jan-2012 01:02 am (UTC)
They've asked about that in the 1999 interviews actually where they attempt to defend themselves with "I don't know, girls say silly things". And when they're asked about 26 separate people naming them, they say "I couldn't tell you".

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9SjZpBmLLys

I just cannot believe that three of them never got to court, their stories wouldn't hold up for one minute if they did. They only made themselves even more guilty when they attempted to defend themselves
johnjie 4th-Jan-2012 10:38 am (UTC)
Thank fuck. Thank fuck

I had to write an essay on this case for my sociology course (on instiutuionalised racism in the police force) and it disgusted me that there hadn't been a conviction.

I hope they have an awful time in jail.
moussaka_thief 4th-Jan-2012 11:56 am (UTC)
Finally.

From Mrs. Lawrence: "Had the police done their job properly, I would have spent the last 18 years grieving for my son rather than fighting to get his killers to court."

So sad.
anjak_j 4th-Jan-2012 02:04 pm (UTC)
I was just 11 years old when this happened and the fuck ups the police made in the investigation into Lawrence's murder form part of the reason I don't trust the police one fucking bit.

I'm glad Stephen and his family finally got some of the justice that they deserve; justice that has been a long time coming and hard fought for. I only hope they find a way to nail the other three bastards involved in this heinous crime.
octoberstarlite 4th-Jan-2012 10:45 pm (UTC)
I was so young when this happened. It's the first clear major news story I can remember as a child and even then as a kid I knew the whole case was effed up from beginning to end. I'm glad there is finally some justice, but it's just so much later than it needs to be because 18 years ago everyone knew who it was. I just hope we see some more convictions to follow.
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