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A police officer known as W42 was stood behind Mr Duggan at the time and the bullet that went through him hit the officer who was not hurt as the bullet instead became lodged in their police radio.
Officers of the Metropolitan Police Service stopped a minicab which was carrying Duggan as a passenger at about 18:15 BST on 4 August 2011.[34] There was no CCTV coverage of the place where they stopped the cab, and some witnesses allege that police chased away onlookers.[35]
According to an unnamed firearms officer at the trial of Kevin Hutchinson-Foster in September 2012, Duggan pivoted out of the cab and pulled a selfloading pistol or handgun from his waistband.[36] According to the taxi driver, Mark Duggan left the car and ran:
[ Officer W70] He told the trial of Kevin Hutchinson-Foster, who is accused of providing Mr Duggan with a handgun minutes before he was killed on 4 August last year, that Mr Duggan started to get out and raised the gun, before he was shot twice.
Half-an-hour later, the 29-year-old was dead, fatally wounded by two police bullets after he got out of the car. The authorities wrongly said that he had been hit in an exchange of fire.
Mark Duggan might have "flicked" a gun it is claimed he was holding over a fence in the seconds after he was shot, an inquest has been told.
An unloaded gun was found over a fence on a patch of grass about 10ft-20ft away from where Mr Duggan was shot.
More evidence came from ‘Witness B’, who said he saw the incident from the open window of his ninth-floor flat across the road. He said that he saw Duggan holding a mobile phone, adding that Duggan had been “trapped” when attempting to leave the taxi and had his hands held up when he was shot by an officer.
The jury also heard an independent pathologist, who found it “very unlikely” that Duggan had thrown the firearm away after being shot, due to the extent of the injuries he would have received. The weapon was found 20 feet away from the taxi behind a set of railings. The jury eventually decided by a majority of nine to one that Duggan had posession of the gun in the taxi but had thrown it before police arrived.
One theory the jury may consider is that Duggan – who was travelling in a cab that was stopped at gunpoint by police – tossed the weapon away before police got to him. But W42, an experienced firearms officer, said this could not have happened.
Leslie Thomas, barrister for the Duggan family, asked: "Did you see anything being thrown from the cab?"
"No sir I didn't," W42 said.
Thomas said: "If he had thrown the firearm from the minicab, [would] you get there too late to see it?"
W42 said: "I disagree." He added that, for that to be the case, Duggan would have had to have thrown the gun from the cab while it was still in motion.
Driver says he saw Duggan holding nothing in his hands when Duggan ran from taxi moments before shooting by police
Police denied suggestions from the family's lawyer that they had planted the gun, which was wrapped in a sock and had no trace of Mr Duggan's DNA or fingerprints.
However, his prints were found on a shoebox police said had been used to carry the gun inside the minicab.
Ms Landais told jurors that neither Mr Duggan’s fingerprints nor his DNA was found on the gun.
She said: “No fingerprints or DNA attributable to Mark Duggan were recovered from the gun or the sock.”
Ms Landais added that because guns are made up of lots of smaller pieces it can sometimes be difficult to recover usable fingerprints.
She also gave evidence about a shoebox which police claim had been used to carry the gun.
The expert said Mr Duggan’s fingerprints were found on the outside of the box but not on the inside.
Lawyer Adam Straw, who represents Mr Duggan’s family, asked Ms Landais if there was any evidence to suggest the 29-year-old had opened the shoebox.
She replied: “No, there is nothing showing Mr Duggan opened the box carrying the gun.”
midicon
reply to post by mr-lizard
I have always thought our armed police are a scary trigger happy lot.
Even in cases where no firearm or weapon is involved they are always heavy handed.
Nasty people.
iskander683
I can't believe that you people are so defensive of this scumbag. He was a gangster and had a gun in his possession. Whatever you say won't change that fact. And, if you really think that British armed officers are trigger happy, you need your heads examined. If you knew what happened to firearm officers after they shot somebody then you wouldn't think this at all. It really is the final option, unlike in the USA.
I know that you're all going to give me sh*t after reading this but I live in the real world and know reality. Some of you need to join me.
alldaylong
reply to post by mr-lizard
There is an old saying
Live By The Sword Die By The Sword
The lead IPCC investigator, Colin Sparrow, said he was unaware of the existence of a crucial piece of evidence - the shoebox - until a week after the shooting. Police officers said it was found in the passenger footwell of the car. The jury heard that when an IPCC investigator finally saw the box, a week later, it was in the boot of the car
Cobaltic1978
alldaylong
reply to post by mr-lizard
There is an old saying
Live By The Sword Die By The Sword
He didn't have a sword and he was shot.
He didn't have a gun and he was shot.
I would say this is another BS case and the officer involved has got away with, well literally murder.
All those claiming he was a gangster, so what? He wasn't armed, end of story. They found a gun 6 metres away from the scene, his fingerprints weren't on it. Are you all advocating that the police should act as judge and jury and kill all criminals? Seriously? I don't want to live in that kind of society, justice wasn't carried out today, another police officer has got away with murder.
I wonder if this officer has a previous history of criminal activity, just like in the Ian Tomlinson case? I doubt we will ever know.
alldaylong
Cobaltic1978
alldaylong
reply to post by mr-lizard
There is an old saying
Live By The Sword Die By The Sword
He didn't have a sword and he was shot.
He didn't have a gun and he was shot.
I would say this is another BS case and the officer involved has got away with, well literally murder.
All those claiming he was a gangster, so what? He wasn't armed, end of story. They found a gun 6 metres away from the scene, his fingerprints weren't on it. Are you all advocating that the police should act as judge and jury and kill all criminals? Seriously? I don't want to live in that kind of society, justice wasn't carried out today, another police officer has got away with murder.
I wonder if this officer has a previous history of criminal activity, just like in the Ian Tomlinson case? I doubt we will ever know.
He did have a gun. It was supplied to him 15 minutes before the incident:-
www.theguardian.com...
No fingerprints were on the gun because it was covered with a sock.
Duggan had a gun ILLEGALLY. He tossed it away.
Most of you don't even know this, but did you know the officers who shot Lee Rigby's killers were also brought up on whether they should've discharged their guns? Oh yeah that's not public knowledge, but this is what's happening internally.
Cobaltic1978
alldaylong
Cobaltic1978
alldaylong
reply to post by mr-lizard
There is an old saying
Live By The Sword Die By The Sword
He didn't have a sword and he was shot.
He didn't have a gun and he was shot.
I would say this is another BS case and the officer involved has got away with, well literally murder.
All those claiming he was a gangster, so what? He wasn't armed, end of story. They found a gun 6 metres away from the scene, his fingerprints weren't on it. Are you all advocating that the police should act as judge and jury and kill all criminals? Seriously? I don't want to live in that kind of society, justice wasn't carried out today, another police officer has got away with murder.
I wonder if this officer has a previous history of criminal activity, just like in the Ian Tomlinson case? I doubt we will ever know.
He did have a gun. It was supplied to him 15 minutes before the incident:-
www.theguardian.com...
No fingerprints were on the gun because it was covered with a sock.
Duggan had a gun ILLEGALLY. He tossed it away.
Are you happy for this officer to be in possession of a firearm within our community?
alldaylong
Cobaltic1978
alldaylong
Cobaltic1978
alldaylong
reply to post by mr-lizard
There is an old saying
Live By The Sword Die By The Sword
He didn't have a sword and he was shot.
He didn't have a gun and he was shot.
I would say this is another BS case and the officer involved has got away with, well literally murder.
All those claiming he was a gangster, so what? He wasn't armed, end of story. They found a gun 6 metres away from the scene, his fingerprints weren't on it. Are you all advocating that the police should act as judge and jury and kill all criminals? Seriously? I don't want to live in that kind of society, justice wasn't carried out today, another police officer has got away with murder.
I wonder if this officer has a previous history of criminal activity, just like in the Ian Tomlinson case? I doubt we will ever know.
He did have a gun. It was supplied to him 15 minutes before the incident:-
www.theguardian.com...
No fingerprints were on the gun because it was covered with a sock.
Duggan had a gun ILLEGALLY. He tossed it away.
Are you happy for this officer to be in possession of a firearm within our community?
The answer is yes.
If an armed officer is a form of deterrent to criminals arming themselves then i say so be it.
Some people think that the police have a "Shoot To Kill" policy. They don't. Look for instance at the killers of Lee Rigby.
SecretFace
Most of you don't even know this, but did you know the officers who shot Lee Rigby's killers were also brought up on whether they should've discharged their guns? Oh yeah that's not public knowledge, but this is what's happening internally.
editby]edit on 9-1-2014 by SecretFace because: (no reason given)