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Shooting of Stephen Waldorf

Stephen Waldorf was a 26-year-old man who was shot and seriously injured by police officers in London on 14 January 1983 after they mistook him for David Martin, an escaped criminal. The shooting caused a public outcry and led to a series of reforms to the training and authorisation of armed police officers in the United Kingdom. Martin was a cross-dressing thief and fraudster who was known to carry firearms and had previously shot a police officer. He escaped from custody in December 1982 and the police placed his girlfriend under surveillance. On the day of the shooting, they followed her as she travelled in a car whose front-seat passenger (Waldorf) resembled Martin. When the car stopped in traffic, Detective Constable Finch—the only officer present who had met Martin—was sent forward on foot to confirm the passenger's identity.

Stephen Waldorf (top), was shot after police officers mistook him for David Martin (bottom)

Finch, an armed officer, incorrectly believed that Waldorf was Martin and that he had been recognised. He fired all six rounds from his revolver, first at the vehicle's tyres and then at the passenger. Another officer, believing that Finch was being shot at, fired through the rear windscreen. As the passenger slumped across the seats and out of the driver's door, a third officer, Detective Constable Jardine, opened fire. Finch, having run out of ammunition, began pistol-whipping the man. Only after he lost consciousness did the officers realise that the man was not Martin. Waldorf suffered five bullet wounds (from fourteen shots fired) and a fractured skull. Finch and Jardine were charged with attempted murder and causing grievous bodily harm. They were acquitted in October 1983 and later reinstated, though their firearms authorisations were revoked. Waldorf recovered and received compensation from the Metropolitan Police. Martin was captured two weeks after the shooting following a chase which ended in a London Underground tunnel. The incident became the subject of several documentaries and was dramatised for a television film, Open Fire, in 1994.

Two months after the shooting, new guidelines on the use of firearms were issued for all British police forces; these significantly increased the rank of an officer who could authorise the issuing of weapons. The Dear Report, published in November 1983, recommended psychological assessment and increased training of armed officers. Several academics and commentators believed these reforms exemplified an event-driven approach to policymaking and that the British police lacked a coherent strategy for developing firearms policy. Several other mistaken police shootings in the 1980s led to further reforms, which standardised procedures across forces and placed greater emphasis on firearms operations being conducted by a smaller number of better-trained officers, to be known as authorised firearms officers, and in particular by dedicated teams within police forces.

Background edit

In the Metropolitan Police (the Met) in 1983, selected officers, including some detectives working in plain clothes, were trained to use pistols (the vast majority of British police officers do not carry firearms). The weapons were kept at certain police stations and could be withdrawn by authorised officers with the permission of an officer of inspector rank or higher. The Met also had a dedicated Firearms Unit (known by the designation D11)—officers who specialised in armed operations and had access to heavier weapons—which could be called upon for complex or protracted incidents.[1][2]

The police officers who shot Waldorf were hunting David Martin, an escaped cross-dressing criminal who was considered to be extremely dangerous. Martin had repeatedly used violence to resist arrest and had previously escaped custody, or attempted to escape, on multiple occasions. He had served a nine-year prison sentence, starting in 1973, for a series of frauds and burglaries. His sentence was originally eight years but he received an extra year for his role in a breakout. He was released in 1981 and resumed his criminal career.[3] He committed a series of burglaries, including one in July 1982 in which he stole 24 revolvers and almost 1,000 rounds of ammunition from a gunsmith's shop. From then on, Martin carried two guns wherever he went. He committed several armed robberies with the stolen guns, including one in which a security guard was shot. In August 1982, police officers caught Martin in the act of burgling a recording studio but he shot his way out, seriously injuring one of the officers.[4][5]

Police put Martin's girlfriend under surveillance and Martin eventually turned up at her flat dressed as a woman. When confronted by a police officer (who initially thought he was talking to a woman), a struggle ensued and Martin produced a gun. Another officer shot Martin who, although hit in the neck, continued to resist and produced a second gun. Martin was overpowered and taken to hospital, where it was discovered that the police bullet had broken his collarbone. He was discharged from hospital into police custody in September 1982.[6][7] Over the following three months, Martin made multiple appearances at Marlborough Street Magistrates Court, charged with attempted murder and other offences. He was kept on remand at Brixton Prison and escorted to and from court under heavy guard. On 24 December, while waiting for his hearing, Martin escaped his cell and fled across the roof of the court building, prompting a large manhunt which was run by a dedicated task force.[5][8][9]

Shooting edit

 
A yellow Mini, similar to the one in which Waldorf was travelling

The task force again followed Martin's girlfriend, with the help of C11 (a unit of specialist surveillance officers), hoping she would lead them to him. If they encountered Martin, the plan was to follow him to a premises and await the arrival of D11, though several detectives and surveillance officers were armed in case of a confrontation in the open.[10] On the evening of 14 January 1983, police observed Martin's girlfriend get into a friend's car, which they covertly followed through West London. After about an hour, she left the vehicle and was picked up by a yellow Mini. The police tailed the Mini, in which she was a back-seat passenger, along Pembroke Road in the Earl's Court district. In the front passenger seat was an unidentified man whom the officers believed resembled Martin.[11][12]

When the Mini came to a halt in traffic, Detective Constable Finch was sent forward to confirm the front-seat passenger's identity. Finch had been present at Martin's previous arrest and was the only officer in the convoy who had met Martin; the other officers could only identify him from photographs.[8][13] Finch, who had been in a vehicle two cars behind the Mini, drew his revolver as he approached the suspect vehicle. Finch incorrectly identified the passenger as Martin and believed that Martin had recognised him. The passenger reached onto the back seat, which Finch misinterpreted as Martin reaching for a gun. Without warning, Finch fired all six rounds in his weapon, first at the vehicle's rear passenger-side tyre and then at the passenger. The driver of the Mini jumped out of the car and fled on foot. While Finch was firing, a second officer, Detective Constable Deane, began shooting at the passenger through the rear window. Deane later stated that he opened fire because he believed he was witnessing an exchange of fire between Finch and the passenger. A third Detective Constable, Jardine, arrived to see the passenger slumped across the driver's seat and hanging out of the car door. Jardine believed the passenger was reaching for a weapon and fired three times.[14][15] The subsequent investigation found that the officers had fired a total of 14 shots.[8][16][17]

The passenger was hit several times and seriously injured. After running out of ammunition, Finch verbally abused him and pistol whipped him until he lost consciousness.[8][16][17] He was then handcuffed and dragged to the side of the road. At this point, it was discovered that the passenger was not Martin but Stephen Waldorf, a 26-year-old film editor. Waldorf suffered five bullet wounds—which damaged his abdomen and liver—as well as a fractured skull and injuries to one hand caused by the pistol whipping.[16][18] Martin's girlfriend was grazed by a bullet. Both were taken to St Stephen's Hospital. Within an hour, a senior officer at Scotland Yard issued a public apology and promised an immediate investigation by the Metropolitan Police's Complaints Investigation Bureau (CIB).[16][19] He described the incident as "a tragic case of mistaken identity".[16] Waldorf was in hospital for six weeks. When he regained consciousness, a senior Met officer visited him to apologise.[16][20]

Aftermath edit

The CIB investigation began almost immediately, led by Detective Chief Superintendent Neil Dickens. Dickens and his team conducted initial interviews with all the officers involved in the shooting within hours and then again the following day.[21] The incident attracted considerable scrutiny from journalists and the public, who expressed concern at the lack of restraint shown by the officers, the danger their actions posed to the public, and the potential breach of police policies on the use of firearms. The matter was raised in parliament. The Home Secretary, William Whitelaw, promised that the CIB report would be reviewed by the independent Police Complaints Board (PCB) and passed to the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) to consider whether criminal charges should be brought against the officers. Whitelaw further promised that he would take steps to ensure that no such incident could happen again.[16][22]

The three officers who fired their weapons were suspended from duty during the investigation.[16] Finch was a local detective; Deane and Jardine both worked for C11. Deane was later reinstated when the DPP declined to bring charges against him. Five days after the shooting, on 19 January, Jardine and Finch were charged with attempted murder and inflicting grievous bodily harm with intent; Finch was charged with a second count of grievous bodily harm in relation to the pistol whipping. They went on trial at the Old Bailey in October 1983. Their defence teams argued that they had a genuine, albeit mistaken, fear for their lives. They were acquitted of all charges.[5][23][24]

In protest at the decision to prosecute Finch and Jardine, multiple armed officers relinquished their firearms authorisation. The Police Federation, which represents rank-and-file officers, suggested that armed police officers should be given a degree of legal immunity for actions taken in the course of their duties.[25] Following the trial, the CIB report was considered by the PCB and the Met's deputy commissioner (who oversees disciplinary issues), who concluded that the officers would not face disciplinary proceedings. They were returned to duty, though their firearms authorisations were withdrawn and Finch was returned to front-line policing duties.[26][27]

Waldorf eventually made a full recovery. He sued the police, who did not contest the case, and was awarded compensation (variously reported as £120,000 and £150,000) in an out-of-court settlement early in 1984.[17][28][29] Martin's girlfriend also sued the Met and was awarded £10,000.[29]

Later events edit

 
Hampstead tube station, where Martin was eventually recaptured by Flying Squad officers

As a result of the Waldorf shooting, the manhunt for David Martin was taken away from local detectives and assigned to the Flying Squad.[30] Martin's girlfriend was charged with handling his stolen property and released on bail. In exchange for leniency, she agreed to help the police recapture Martin and set up a date with him at a restaurant in Hampstead on 28 January 1983. Over 40 officers, many armed, lay in wait for him. Martin spotted the officers and a foot chase ensued, which entered Hampstead tube station. Martin jumped onto the tracks and ran into the tunnel towards Belsize Park. He was arrested by armed officers after hiding in a recess in the tunnel.[31] Martin was charged with 14 offences, including the attempted murder of a police officer and multiple counts of robbery and burglary. He stood trial at the Old Bailey in September 1983, was found guilty, and was sentenced to 25 years' imprisonment. Martin took his own life in prison in March 1984.[23][32]

Several documentaries have been made about the incident. The first was an episode of TV Eye, broadcast on ITV on 14 December 1983, which included a reconstruction of the events. Waldorf contributed to the programme and described it as a fair representation of events. The Police Federation called it "trial by television" and felt that it would prejudice potential disciplinary proceedings against the officers.[33] In 1994, the same channel broadcast Open Fire, a made-for-television film by Paul Greengrass. The film, starring Rupert Graves as David Martin, dramatised the manhunt for Martin and Waldorf's shooting, including the subsequent investigation. An episode of the BBC's flagship current affairs programme Panorama, titled "Lethal Force" and featuring an interview with Waldorf, was broadcast in December 2001.[34]

Effects on policing edit

The shooting caused significant public concern and was discussed extensively in the media. According to Dick Kirby, a retired police officer and police historian, "there was such a public outcry following Waldorf's shooting that the government knew something had to be done with regards to police firearms training".[35] The Metropolitan Police commissioner's annual report for 1983 acknowledged that "professionalism, declared policy, and training failed" to prevent the incident.[36] In March, two months after the shooting, Whitelaw issued a circular to all police forces in England and Wales, titled "Guidelines on the Issue and Use of Firearms by Police". Individual forces previously set their own policies but were effectively compelled to implement the new national guidelines. The guidelines raised the minimum rank of an officer who could authorise the issuing of firearms from inspector to a much more senior officer (commander in London; assistant chief constable in all other forces). A superintendent could grant authorisation in an emergency, when lives were at risk, but a sufficiently senior officer was required to be notified as soon as possible and the more senior officer had the option to rescind the authority.[17][37][38] With regards to training, the guidelines stated:

Every officer to whom a weapon is issued must be strictly warned that it is to be used only as a last resort where conventional methods have been tried and failed, or must [...] be unlikely to succeed if tried. They may be used, for example, when it is apparent that a police officer cannot achieve the lawful purpose of preventing loss, or further loss, of life by any other means.[39]

 
Geoffrey Dear (later Lord Dear, pictured in 2009) authored a report on improvements to police firearms training.

Whitelaw also convened a working group with a brief to "examine and recommend means of improving the selection and training of police officers as authorised firearms officers, with particular reference to temperament and stress".[38] The party was chaired by Geoffrey Dear, a Metropolitan Police assistant commissioner. It published its conclusions, which became known as the Dear Report, in November 1983. Among the recommendations were that all potential firearms officers should undergo psychological testing before selection, that initial firearms training should be more extensive, and that refresher courses should be more frequent.[38][39][40]

The Metropolitan Police implemented the first two recommendations but the third was indefinitely postponed because of budgetary concerns, partly because the Met was in the middle of a major restructuring.[39][41] The increased training focused in particular on Section 3 of the Criminal Law Act 1967, which codified the use of reasonable force in self-defence or to prevent the commission of a crime.[17] The working group standardised practices across police force. Among those, the term "authorised firearms officer" (AFO) became the standard national designation for a police officer trained in the use of firearms.[38] The group's work resulted in the publication of the first Manual of Guidance on Police Use of Firearms, under the auspices of the Association of Chief Police Officers.[22][42][43]

An article in The Independent ten years after the incident described the incident as "the error to force change".[16] The criminologists Peter Squires and Peter Kennison, in a study on police use of firearms, compared Waldorf's shooting to several other mistaken police shootings.[44] They believed that the shooting, particularly the way that other officers opened fire after hearing the initial shots, suggested "a 'gung-ho' attitude to firearms discharge falling well short of professionalism",[45] a view shared by Maurice Punch, another academic specialising in policing. Punch concluded that the "unprofessional, almost chaotic" nature of the incident raised "critical questions" about the command and control of the operation.[40] Timothy Brain, a former chief constable and author of a history of British policing, described the incident as "a disaster for the Met". He went on to say that "the episode seemed to confirm what critics [...] were asserting more generally, that the police were out of control and oppressive".[46] Squires and Kennison's thesis was that there is no coordinated approach to the development of police firearms policy in Britain, and that the response Waldorf's shooting was an example of the British police's event-driven policy making. They noted that the reforms emanating from the Dear Report did not prevent similar incidents, and believed that "each incident exposed failings at several levels of police critical incident management and execution".[47]

The use of firearms by police had long been the subject of debate in Britain. Although officers carried weapons for certain duties, many politicians and senior officers were keen to preserve the image of an unarmed police force. The debate was particularly intense throughout the 1980s, fuelled by a series of policy developments and several questionable shootings, including Waldorf's.[48] In 1986, the Home Office established another working group to build on the Dear Report, following two more mistaken police shootings—those of Cherry Groce, which sparked the 1985 Brixton riot, and John Shorthouse, a five-year-old boy accidentally shot dead in Birmingham.[22][49][50] Peter Waddington, a sociologist specialising in police policy on the use of force, suggested that these incidents, taken together with Waldorf's shooting, caused a permanent shift in the public's perception of armed policing and that police shootings—even of armed criminals and where police procedure had been followed correctly—became much more controversial from then on.[51] The report endorsed Dear's recommendations on training and selection of AFOs. Its main recommendation was that police forces place greater emphasis on specialist teams of armed officers, such as the Met's D11, and concentrate the use of firearms on a smaller, but better-trained, group of officers.[52] It also suggested research into roving armed patrols, which in the 1990s became armed response vehicles,[49] and recommended that local detectives (as Finch was) should no longer be AFOs; members of central squads (such as C11 or the Flying Squad) would be the only plainclothes officers to hold AFO status. As a result of these reforms, the number of AFOs in the Met reduced by about almost half over the following decade. Many of the report's other findings were overtaken by the 1987 Hungerford massacre, which prompted further reforms to armed policing.[52][53][54] In a 2023 book chapter, Squires argued that the effects of Waldorf's shooting continued to be felt and that the lessons from it and other incidents remained relevant.[55]

See also edit

References edit

Bibliography edit

  • Benn, Melissa; Worpole, Ken (1986). Death in the City. London: Canary Press. ISBN 9780950996745.
  • Brain, Timothy (2010). A History of Policing in England and Wales from 1974: A Turbulent Journey. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199218660.
  • Gould, Robert; Waldren, Michael (1986). London's Armed Police. London: Arms and Armour Press. ISBN 9780853688808.
  • Ingleton, Roy (1996). Arming the British Police: The Great Debate. London: Frank Cass & Co. ISBN 9780714642994.
  • Kirby, Dick (2016). The Wrong Man: The Shooting of Steven Waldorf and the Hunt for David Martin. Stroud: The History Press. ISBN 9780750964135.
  • McKenzie, Ian K.; Gallagher, Patrick (1989). Behind the Uniform: Policing in Britain and America. Hemel Hempstead: Harvester Wheatsheaf. ISBN 9780745006307.
  • Punch, Maurice (2011). Shoot to Kill: Police Accountability, Firearms, and Fatal Force. Bristol: The Policy Press. ISBN 9781847423160.
  • Rogers, Michael David (September 2003). "Police Force! An Examination of the Use of Force, Firearms and Less-Lethal Weapons by British Police". The Police Journal: Theory, Practice and Principles. 76 (3): 189–203. doi:10.1350/pojo.76.3.189.19443. S2CID 110817892.
  • Smith, Stephen (2013). Stop! Armed Police! Inside the Met's Firearms Unit. Ramsbury: The Crowood Press. ISBN 9780719808265.
  • Squires, Peter (2023). "Armed Responses and Critical Shots: Learning Lessons from Police-Involved Shootings in England and Wales". In Clare Farmer; Richard Evans (eds.). Policing & Firearms: New Perspectives and Insights. London: Springer. pp. 81–102. ISBN 9783031130137.
  • Squires, Peter; Kennison, Peter (2010). Shooting to Kill?: Police Firearms and Armed Response. Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 9780470779279.
  • Waddington, P. A. J. (1991). The Strong Arm of the Law: Armed and Public Order Policing. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198273592.
  • Waddington, P. A. J.; Hamilton, Malcolm (February 1997). "The Impotence of the Powerful: Recent British Police Weapons Policy". Sociology. 31 (1): 91–109. doi:10.1177/0038038597031001007. ISSN 0038-0385. JSTOR 42855771. S2CID 146122497.
  • Waldren, Michael (2007). Armed Police: The Police Use of Firearms Since 1945. Stroud: Sutton. ISBN 9780750946377.

Citations edit

  1. ^ Punch, pp. 30–32.
  2. ^ Waldren, pp. 13–15.
  3. ^ Kirby, pp. 42–53.
  4. ^ Kirby, p. 60.
  5. ^ a b c Smith, p. 57.
  6. ^ Kirby, p. 76.
  7. ^ Waddington, pp. 19–20.
  8. ^ a b c d Squires & Kennison, p. 72.
  9. ^ Kirby, pp. 82–83.
  10. ^ Kirby, p. 92.
  11. ^ Kirby, pp. 100–101.
  12. ^ Ingleton, p. 86.
  13. ^ Kirby, p. 102.
  14. ^ Kirby, pp. 105–107.
  15. ^ Ingleton, pp. 84–86.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i "The error to force change". The Independent. 10 January 1993. from the original on 5 November 2012. Retrieved 5 November 2012.
  17. ^ a b c d e Smith, p. 58.
  18. ^ Kirby, pp. 107–108.
  19. ^ Kirby, p. 117.
  20. ^ Benn & Worpole, p. 57.
  21. ^ Kirby, pp. 129–140.
  22. ^ a b c Squires & Kennison, p. 75.
  23. ^ a b "Man shot by police hunting David Martin". BBC News. 14 January 1983. from the original on 17 October 2012. Retrieved 4 September 2012.
  24. ^ Kirby, pp. 210–211.
  25. ^ Benn & Worpole, p. 61.
  26. ^ Kirby, p. 218.
  27. ^ Gould & Waldren, p. 188.
  28. ^ Benn & Worpole, p. 58.
  29. ^ a b Kirby, p. 228.
  30. ^ Kirby, p. 147.
  31. ^ Kirby, pp. 165–172.
  32. ^ Kirby, pp. 195, 206, 226.
  33. ^ Kirby, pp. 217–218.
  34. ^ Kirby, pp. 228–229.
  35. ^ Kirby, p. 229.
  36. ^ McKenzie & Gallagher, p. 145.
  37. ^ Kirby, pp. 229–230.
  38. ^ a b c d Waldren, p. 94.
  39. ^ a b c Kirby, pp. 230–231.
  40. ^ a b Punch, p. 108.
  41. ^ Waldren, p. 96.
  42. ^ Waldren, p. 95.
  43. ^ Summers, Chris (24 July 2005). "The police marksman's dilemma". BBC News. from the original on 10 September 2005. Retrieved 19 March 2023.
  44. ^ Squires & Kennison, p. 148.
  45. ^ Squires & Kennison, p. 195.
  46. ^ Brain, pp. 83–84.
  47. ^ Squires & Kennison, p. 195.
  48. ^ Waddington & Hamilton, p. 102.
  49. ^ a b Waldren, p. 127.
  50. ^ McKenzie & Gallagher, p. 144.
  51. ^ Waddington, pp. 23–24.
  52. ^ a b Rogers, pp. 191–192.
  53. ^ Squires & Kennison, p. 76.
  54. ^ Punch, p. 50.
  55. ^ Squires, p. 84.

shooting, stephen, waldorf, stephen, waldorf, year, shot, seriously, injured, police, officers, london, january, 1983, after, they, mistook, david, martin, escaped, criminal, shooting, caused, public, outcry, series, reforms, training, authorisation, armed, po. Stephen Waldorf was a 26 year old man who was shot and seriously injured by police officers in London on 14 January 1983 after they mistook him for David Martin an escaped criminal The shooting caused a public outcry and led to a series of reforms to the training and authorisation of armed police officers in the United Kingdom Martin was a cross dressing thief and fraudster who was known to carry firearms and had previously shot a police officer He escaped from custody in December 1982 and the police placed his girlfriend under surveillance On the day of the shooting they followed her as she travelled in a car whose front seat passenger Waldorf resembled Martin When the car stopped in traffic Detective Constable Finch the only officer present who had met Martin was sent forward on foot to confirm the passenger s identity Stephen Waldorf top was shot after police officers mistook him for David Martin bottom Finch an armed officer incorrectly believed that Waldorf was Martin and that he had been recognised He fired all six rounds from his revolver first at the vehicle s tyres and then at the passenger Another officer believing that Finch was being shot at fired through the rear windscreen As the passenger slumped across the seats and out of the driver s door a third officer Detective Constable Jardine opened fire Finch having run out of ammunition began pistol whipping the man Only after he lost consciousness did the officers realise that the man was not Martin Waldorf suffered five bullet wounds from fourteen shots fired and a fractured skull Finch and Jardine were charged with attempted murder and causing grievous bodily harm They were acquitted in October 1983 and later reinstated though their firearms authorisations were revoked Waldorf recovered and received compensation from the Metropolitan Police Martin was captured two weeks after the shooting following a chase which ended in a London Underground tunnel The incident became the subject of several documentaries and was dramatised for a television film Open Fire in 1994 Two months after the shooting new guidelines on the use of firearms were issued for all British police forces these significantly increased the rank of an officer who could authorise the issuing of weapons The Dear Report published in November 1983 recommended psychological assessment and increased training of armed officers Several academics and commentators believed these reforms exemplified an event driven approach to policymaking and that the British police lacked a coherent strategy for developing firearms policy Several other mistaken police shootings in the 1980s led to further reforms which standardised procedures across forces and placed greater emphasis on firearms operations being conducted by a smaller number of better trained officers to be known as authorised firearms officers and in particular by dedicated teams within police forces Contents 1 Background 2 Shooting 3 Aftermath 4 Later events 5 Effects on policing 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Bibliography 7 2 CitationsBackground editIn the Metropolitan Police the Met in 1983 selected officers including some detectives working in plain clothes were trained to use pistols the vast majority of British police officers do not carry firearms The weapons were kept at certain police stations and could be withdrawn by authorised officers with the permission of an officer of inspector rank or higher The Met also had a dedicated Firearms Unit known by the designation D11 officers who specialised in armed operations and had access to heavier weapons which could be called upon for complex or protracted incidents 1 2 The police officers who shot Waldorf were hunting David Martin an escaped cross dressing criminal who was considered to be extremely dangerous Martin had repeatedly used violence to resist arrest and had previously escaped custody or attempted to escape on multiple occasions He had served a nine year prison sentence starting in 1973 for a series of frauds and burglaries His sentence was originally eight years but he received an extra year for his role in a breakout He was released in 1981 and resumed his criminal career 3 He committed a series of burglaries including one in July 1982 in which he stole 24 revolvers and almost 1 000 rounds of ammunition from a gunsmith s shop From then on Martin carried two guns wherever he went He committed several armed robberies with the stolen guns including one in which a security guard was shot In August 1982 police officers caught Martin in the act of burgling a recording studio but he shot his way out seriously injuring one of the officers 4 5 Police put Martin s girlfriend under surveillance and Martin eventually turned up at her flat dressed as a woman When confronted by a police officer who initially thought he was talking to a woman a struggle ensued and Martin produced a gun Another officer shot Martin who although hit in the neck continued to resist and produced a second gun Martin was overpowered and taken to hospital where it was discovered that the police bullet had broken his collarbone He was discharged from hospital into police custody in September 1982 6 7 Over the following three months Martin made multiple appearances at Marlborough Street Magistrates Court charged with attempted murder and other offences He was kept on remand at Brixton Prison and escorted to and from court under heavy guard On 24 December while waiting for his hearing Martin escaped his cell and fled across the roof of the court building prompting a large manhunt which was run by a dedicated task force 5 8 9 Shooting edit nbsp A yellow Mini similar to the one in which Waldorf was travellingThe task force again followed Martin s girlfriend with the help of C11 a unit of specialist surveillance officers hoping she would lead them to him If they encountered Martin the plan was to follow him to a premises and await the arrival of D11 though several detectives and surveillance officers were armed in case of a confrontation in the open 10 On the evening of 14 January 1983 police observed Martin s girlfriend get into a friend s car which they covertly followed through West London After about an hour she left the vehicle and was picked up by a yellow Mini The police tailed the Mini in which she was a back seat passenger along Pembroke Road in the Earl s Court district In the front passenger seat was an unidentified man whom the officers believed resembled Martin 11 12 When the Mini came to a halt in traffic Detective Constable Finch was sent forward to confirm the front seat passenger s identity Finch had been present at Martin s previous arrest and was the only officer in the convoy who had met Martin the other officers could only identify him from photographs 8 13 Finch who had been in a vehicle two cars behind the Mini drew his revolver as he approached the suspect vehicle Finch incorrectly identified the passenger as Martin and believed that Martin had recognised him The passenger reached onto the back seat which Finch misinterpreted as Martin reaching for a gun Without warning Finch fired all six rounds in his weapon first at the vehicle s rear passenger side tyre and then at the passenger The driver of the Mini jumped out of the car and fled on foot While Finch was firing a second officer Detective Constable Deane began shooting at the passenger through the rear window Deane later stated that he opened fire because he believed he was witnessing an exchange of fire between Finch and the passenger A third Detective Constable Jardine arrived to see the passenger slumped across the driver s seat and hanging out of the car door Jardine believed the passenger was reaching for a weapon and fired three times 14 15 The subsequent investigation found that the officers had fired a total of 14 shots 8 16 17 The passenger was hit several times and seriously injured After running out of ammunition Finch verbally abused him and pistol whipped him until he lost consciousness 8 16 17 He was then handcuffed and dragged to the side of the road At this point it was discovered that the passenger was not Martin but Stephen Waldorf a 26 year old film editor Waldorf suffered five bullet wounds which damaged his abdomen and liver as well as a fractured skull and injuries to one hand caused by the pistol whipping 16 18 Martin s girlfriend was grazed by a bullet Both were taken to St Stephen s Hospital Within an hour a senior officer at Scotland Yard issued a public apology and promised an immediate investigation by the Metropolitan Police s Complaints Investigation Bureau CIB 16 19 He described the incident as a tragic case of mistaken identity 16 Waldorf was in hospital for six weeks When he regained consciousness a senior Met officer visited him to apologise 16 20 Aftermath editThe CIB investigation began almost immediately led by Detective Chief Superintendent Neil Dickens Dickens and his team conducted initial interviews with all the officers involved in the shooting within hours and then again the following day 21 The incident attracted considerable scrutiny from journalists and the public who expressed concern at the lack of restraint shown by the officers the danger their actions posed to the public and the potential breach of police policies on the use of firearms The matter was raised in parliament The Home Secretary William Whitelaw promised that the CIB report would be reviewed by the independent Police Complaints Board PCB and passed to the Director of Public Prosecutions DPP to consider whether criminal charges should be brought against the officers Whitelaw further promised that he would take steps to ensure that no such incident could happen again 16 22 The three officers who fired their weapons were suspended from duty during the investigation 16 Finch was a local detective Deane and Jardine both worked for C11 Deane was later reinstated when the DPP declined to bring charges against him Five days after the shooting on 19 January Jardine and Finch were charged with attempted murder and inflicting grievous bodily harm with intent Finch was charged with a second count of grievous bodily harm in relation to the pistol whipping They went on trial at the Old Bailey in October 1983 Their defence teams argued that they had a genuine albeit mistaken fear for their lives They were acquitted of all charges 5 23 24 In protest at the decision to prosecute Finch and Jardine multiple armed officers relinquished their firearms authorisation The Police Federation which represents rank and file officers suggested that armed police officers should be given a degree of legal immunity for actions taken in the course of their duties 25 Following the trial the CIB report was considered by the PCB and the Met s deputy commissioner who oversees disciplinary issues who concluded that the officers would not face disciplinary proceedings They were returned to duty though their firearms authorisations were withdrawn and Finch was returned to front line policing duties 26 27 Waldorf eventually made a full recovery He sued the police who did not contest the case and was awarded compensation variously reported as 120 000 and 150 000 in an out of court settlement early in 1984 17 28 29 Martin s girlfriend also sued the Met and was awarded 10 000 29 Later events edit nbsp Hampstead tube station where Martin was eventually recaptured by Flying Squad officersAs a result of the Waldorf shooting the manhunt for David Martin was taken away from local detectives and assigned to the Flying Squad 30 Martin s girlfriend was charged with handling his stolen property and released on bail In exchange for leniency she agreed to help the police recapture Martin and set up a date with him at a restaurant in Hampstead on 28 January 1983 Over 40 officers many armed lay in wait for him Martin spotted the officers and a foot chase ensued which entered Hampstead tube station Martin jumped onto the tracks and ran into the tunnel towards Belsize Park He was arrested by armed officers after hiding in a recess in the tunnel 31 Martin was charged with 14 offences including the attempted murder of a police officer and multiple counts of robbery and burglary He stood trial at the Old Bailey in September 1983 was found guilty and was sentenced to 25 years imprisonment Martin took his own life in prison in March 1984 23 32 Several documentaries have been made about the incident The first was an episode of TV Eye broadcast on ITV on 14 December 1983 which included a reconstruction of the events Waldorf contributed to the programme and described it as a fair representation of events The Police Federation called it trial by television and felt that it would prejudice potential disciplinary proceedings against the officers 33 In 1994 the same channel broadcast Open Fire a made for television film by Paul Greengrass The film starring Rupert Graves as David Martin dramatised the manhunt for Martin and Waldorf s shooting including the subsequent investigation An episode of the BBC s flagship current affairs programme Panorama titled Lethal Force and featuring an interview with Waldorf was broadcast in December 2001 34 Effects on policing editThe shooting caused significant public concern and was discussed extensively in the media According to Dick Kirby a retired police officer and police historian there was such a public outcry following Waldorf s shooting that the government knew something had to be done with regards to police firearms training 35 The Metropolitan Police commissioner s annual report for 1983 acknowledged that professionalism declared policy and training failed to prevent the incident 36 In March two months after the shooting Whitelaw issued a circular to all police forces in England and Wales titled Guidelines on the Issue and Use of Firearms by Police Individual forces previously set their own policies but were effectively compelled to implement the new national guidelines The guidelines raised the minimum rank of an officer who could authorise the issuing of firearms from inspector to a much more senior officer commander in London assistant chief constable in all other forces A superintendent could grant authorisation in an emergency when lives were at risk but a sufficiently senior officer was required to be notified as soon as possible and the more senior officer had the option to rescind the authority 17 37 38 With regards to training the guidelines stated Every officer to whom a weapon is issued must be strictly warned that it is to be used only as a last resort where conventional methods have been tried and failed or must be unlikely to succeed if tried They may be used for example when it is apparent that a police officer cannot achieve the lawful purpose of preventing loss or further loss of life by any other means 39 nbsp Geoffrey Dear later Lord Dear pictured in 2009 authored a report on improvements to police firearms training Whitelaw also convened a working group with a brief to examine and recommend means of improving the selection and training of police officers as authorised firearms officers with particular reference to temperament and stress 38 The party was chaired by Geoffrey Dear a Metropolitan Police assistant commissioner It published its conclusions which became known as the Dear Report in November 1983 Among the recommendations were that all potential firearms officers should undergo psychological testing before selection that initial firearms training should be more extensive and that refresher courses should be more frequent 38 39 40 The Metropolitan Police implemented the first two recommendations but the third was indefinitely postponed because of budgetary concerns partly because the Met was in the middle of a major restructuring 39 41 The increased training focused in particular on Section 3 of the Criminal Law Act 1967 which codified the use of reasonable force in self defence or to prevent the commission of a crime 17 The working group standardised practices across police force Among those the term authorised firearms officer AFO became the standard national designation for a police officer trained in the use of firearms 38 The group s work resulted in the publication of the first Manual of Guidance on Police Use of Firearms under the auspices of the Association of Chief Police Officers 22 42 43 An article in The Independent ten years after the incident described the incident as the error to force change 16 The criminologists Peter Squires and Peter Kennison in a study on police use of firearms compared Waldorf s shooting to several other mistaken police shootings 44 They believed that the shooting particularly the way that other officers opened fire after hearing the initial shots suggested a gung ho attitude to firearms discharge falling well short of professionalism 45 a view shared by Maurice Punch another academic specialising in policing Punch concluded that the unprofessional almost chaotic nature of the incident raised critical questions about the command and control of the operation 40 Timothy Brain a former chief constable and author of a history of British policing described the incident as a disaster for the Met He went on to say that the episode seemed to confirm what critics were asserting more generally that the police were out of control and oppressive 46 Squires and Kennison s thesis was that there is no coordinated approach to the development of police firearms policy in Britain and that the response Waldorf s shooting was an example of the British police s event driven policy making They noted that the reforms emanating from the Dear Report did not prevent similar incidents and believed that each incident exposed failings at several levels of police critical incident management and execution 47 The use of firearms by police had long been the subject of debate in Britain Although officers carried weapons for certain duties many politicians and senior officers were keen to preserve the image of an unarmed police force The debate was particularly intense throughout the 1980s fuelled by a series of policy developments and several questionable shootings including Waldorf s 48 In 1986 the Home Office established another working group to build on the Dear Report following two more mistaken police shootings those of Cherry Groce which sparked the 1985 Brixton riot and John Shorthouse a five year old boy accidentally shot dead in Birmingham 22 49 50 Peter Waddington a sociologist specialising in police policy on the use of force suggested that these incidents taken together with Waldorf s shooting caused a permanent shift in the public s perception of armed policing and that police shootings even of armed criminals and where police procedure had been followed correctly became much more controversial from then on 51 The report endorsed Dear s recommendations on training and selection of AFOs Its main recommendation was that police forces place greater emphasis on specialist teams of armed officers such as the Met s D11 and concentrate the use of firearms on a smaller but better trained group of officers 52 It also suggested research into roving armed patrols which in the 1990s became armed response vehicles 49 and recommended that local detectives as Finch was should no longer be AFOs members of central squads such as C11 or the Flying Squad would be the only plainclothes officers to hold AFO status As a result of these reforms the number of AFOs in the Met reduced by about almost half over the following decade Many of the report s other findings were overtaken by the 1987 Hungerford massacre which prompted further reforms to armed policing 52 53 54 In a 2023 book chapter Squires argued that the effects of Waldorf s shooting continued to be felt and that the lessons from it and other incidents remained relevant 55 See also editPolice use of firearms in the United Kingdom Shooting of Jean Charles de Menezes 2005 another mistaken identity police shooting incident in LondonReferences editBibliography edit Benn Melissa Worpole Ken 1986 Death in the City London Canary Press ISBN 9780950996745 Brain Timothy 2010 A History of Policing in England and Wales from 1974 A Turbulent Journey Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199218660 Gould Robert Waldren Michael 1986 London s Armed Police London Arms and Armour Press ISBN 9780853688808 Ingleton Roy 1996 Arming the British Police The Great Debate London Frank Cass amp Co ISBN 9780714642994 Kirby Dick 2016 The Wrong Man The Shooting of Steven Waldorf and the Hunt for David Martin Stroud The History Press ISBN 9780750964135 McKenzie Ian K Gallagher Patrick 1989 Behind the Uniform Policing in Britain and America Hemel Hempstead Harvester Wheatsheaf ISBN 9780745006307 Punch Maurice 2011 Shoot to Kill Police Accountability Firearms and Fatal Force Bristol The Policy Press ISBN 9781847423160 Rogers Michael David September 2003 Police Force An Examination of the Use of Force Firearms and Less Lethal Weapons by British Police The Police Journal Theory Practice and Principles 76 3 189 203 doi 10 1350 pojo 76 3 189 19443 S2CID 110817892 Smith Stephen 2013 Stop Armed Police Inside the Met s Firearms Unit Ramsbury The Crowood Press ISBN 9780719808265 Squires Peter 2023 Armed Responses and Critical Shots Learning Lessons from Police Involved Shootings in England and Wales In Clare Farmer Richard Evans eds Policing amp Firearms New Perspectives and Insights London Springer pp 81 102 ISBN 9783031130137 Squires Peter Kennison Peter 2010 Shooting to Kill Police Firearms and Armed Response Chichester Wiley Blackwell ISBN 9780470779279 Waddington P A J 1991 The Strong Arm of the Law Armed and Public Order Policing Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198273592 Waddington P A J Hamilton Malcolm February 1997 The Impotence of the Powerful Recent British Police Weapons Policy Sociology 31 1 91 109 doi 10 1177 0038038597031001007 ISSN 0038 0385 JSTOR 42855771 S2CID 146122497 Waldren Michael 2007 Armed Police The Police Use of Firearms Since 1945 Stroud Sutton ISBN 9780750946377 Citations edit Punch pp 30 32 Waldren pp 13 15 Kirby pp 42 53 Kirby p 60 a b c Smith p 57 Kirby p 76 Waddington pp 19 20 a b c d Squires amp Kennison p 72 Kirby pp 82 83 Kirby p 92 Kirby pp 100 101 Ingleton p 86 Kirby p 102 Kirby pp 105 107 Ingleton pp 84 86 a b c d e f g h i The error to force change The Independent 10 January 1993 Archived from the original on 5 November 2012 Retrieved 5 November 2012 a b c d e Smith p 58 Kirby pp 107 108 Kirby p 117 Benn amp Worpole p 57 Kirby pp 129 140 a b c Squires amp Kennison p 75 a b Man shot by police hunting David Martin BBC News 14 January 1983 Archived from the original on 17 October 2012 Retrieved 4 September 2012 Kirby pp 210 211 Benn amp Worpole p 61 Kirby p 218 Gould amp Waldren p 188 Benn amp Worpole p 58 a b Kirby p 228 Kirby p 147 Kirby pp 165 172 Kirby pp 195 206 226 Kirby pp 217 218 Kirby pp 228 229 Kirby p 229 McKenzie amp Gallagher p 145 Kirby pp 229 230 a b c d Waldren p 94 a b c Kirby pp 230 231 a b Punch p 108 Waldren p 96 Waldren p 95 Summers Chris 24 July 2005 The police marksman s dilemma BBC News Archived from the original on 10 September 2005 Retrieved 19 March 2023 Squires amp Kennison p 148 Squires amp Kennison p 195 Brain pp 83 84 Squires amp Kennison p 195 Waddington amp Hamilton p 102 a b Waldren p 127 McKenzie amp Gallagher p 144 Waddington pp 23 24 a b Rogers pp 191 192 Squires amp Kennison p 76 Punch p 50 Squires p 84 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shooting of Stephen Waldorf amp oldid 1187947804, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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