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Jess Phillips does not rule out new national inquiry into grooming gangs | Politics News

Jess Phillips has said “nothing is off the table” when dealing with the grooming gangs scandal – including a new national inquiry if victims want one.

The safeguarding minister told Sky’s political editor Beth Rigby on the Electoral Dysfunction podcast that she would listen to victims on a new panel that was announced by the government this week.

“Nothing is off the table,” she said.

“And if the victims come forward to me in this victims panel and they say, ‘actually, we think there needs to be a national inquiry into this’, I’ll listen to them.”

Politics latest: Tories told to ‘put up or shut up’

Beth Rigby and Jess Phillips

Her comments come days after it emerged she had rejected calls from Oldham Council to hold a government inquiry into grooming gangs in the town, and said the council should commission one instead.

That has led to tech billionaire Elon Musk attacking her and Sir Keir Starmer for not holding a national inquiry and accusing the prime minister of being “complicit” in the abuse.

Professor Alexis Jay finished an eight-year national inquiry into child sexual abuse in 2022 and set out recommendations for the government.

Read more:
What happened in the grooming gangs scandal?

Why the Tories’ attempts to force inquiry won’t work

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Education sec ‘not interested’ in Musk comments

The Conservatives tabled an amendment to the Children’s Safeguarding and Schools Bill on Wednesday to require a statutory inquiry into grooming gangs.

However, Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson told Sky News the Tories “don’t care about children” as the amendment could prevent the entire bill from going forward.

She said: “The measures that I’m setting out today and the legislation in many ways go further because it puts a requirement on all councils to have teams working to keep children safe.

“And the bandwagon jumpers that have come along in recent days, they don’t care about children, they don’t care about making sure that we stop this and we take action.

“They had years to do it and they didn’t do it.”

The Conservatives also rejected a call from Oldham Council for a government inquiry in 2022.

You can listen to Beth’s full interview with Jess Phillips in a special episode of Electoral Dysfunction released on Thursday.

Soldiers concerned at time SAS had ‘golden pass to get away with murder’ in Afghanistan, inquiry hears | UK News

Soldiers working within the UK’s special forces discussed concerns that Afghans who posed no threat were being murdered in raids against suspected Taliban insurgents, an inquiry has been told.

One soldier, who was reading operational reports of SAS actions, said in an email in 2011 that they feared that UK special forces seemed “beyond reproach”, with “a golden pass allowing them to get away with murder”.

Another soldier said they were aware of rumours of special forces soldiers using “dropped weapons” – which were munitions allegedly placed next to targets to give the impression they were armed when they were shot.

It was also suggested that the act was known as a “Mr Wolf” – supposedly a reference to the fixer “Winston Wolfe” from the film Pulp Fiction.

The claims come from hundreds of pages of documents detailing evidence given to a public inquiry into alleged war crimes committed by British special forces soldiers in Afghanistan between 2010 and 2013.

The independent inquiry was ordered by the Ministry of Defence (MoD) after the BBC reported claims that SAS soldiers from one squadron had killed 54 people in suspicious circumstances during the war in Afghanistan more than a decade ago.

The inquiry is examining a number of night-time raids carried out by British forces from mid-2010 to mid-2013.

On Wednesday, it released evidence from seven UK special forces (UKSF) witnesses who gave their evidence in secret for national security reasons and cannot be named.

None of the soldiers who gave evidence to the inquiry, which opened in 2023, said they had witnessed any such behaviour themselves.

‘Fighting age males’

One of the soldiers, known only as N1799, told the inquiry they had raised concerns in 2011 about a unit referred to as UKSF1 after having a conversation about its operations with one of its members on a training course.

“During these operations it was said that ‘all fighting age males are killed’ on target regardless of the threat they posed, this included those not holding weapons,” their witness statement said.

“It was also indicated that ‘fighting age males’ were being executed on target, inside compounds, using a variety of methods after they had been restrained. In one case it was mentioned a pillow was put over the head of an individual before being killed with a pistol.”

The soldier said he was also informed that weapons were being “dropped” next to victims “to give the impression that a deceased individual had been armed when shot”, the inquiry heard.

Such a dropped weapon was colloquially known as a “Mr Wolf”, but N1799 stated he had “no idea at all” where the term came from.

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Counsel to the inquiry Oliver Glasgow KC asked: “When you heard it described as a ‘Mr Wolf’, was that used by one person or by more than one person or can you not remember?”

N1799 replied: “At least two or three people.”

Mr Glasgow continued: “Have you seen the film Pulp Fiction by Quentin Tarantino, where the individual who introduces himself as Mr Wolf says ‘I’m Mr Wolf and I’m here to solve problems’? Do you remember that?

The witness said: “No, I don’t.”

Mr Glasgow said: “Well, it is probably not essential viewing for anyone, but that particular individual in that film, he acts to clear up problems and to make crimes go away, does he not?”

N1799 responded: “Right. I had not put two and two together.”

The inquiry heard that N1799 escalated their concerns to other senior officers who took them seriously.

But, questioned by Mr Glasgow on whether they had any concerns for their own personal wellbeing after making allegations, the witness said: “I did then and I still do now.”

‘Mud-slinging’

Another officer, referred to as N2107, emailed colleagues expressing his disbelief at summaries of operations which suggested detained suspects had been allowed back into compounds where they were then said to have picked up weapons and attempted to attack the unit.

Meanwhile, a special forces commanding officer told the inquiry he believed reporting allegations of murder to his counterpart in another unit may have been seen as “mud-slinging”.

He said there was an “at times fractious and competitive” relationship between his unit and the accused unit.

In one of the hearings, he was asked whether he thought about reporting the allegations to his direct counterpart within the unit, but said it was a “deliberate act” to report up rather than sideway as it may be seen as “mud-slinging”.

British military police have previously conducted several inquiries into allegations of misconduct by forces in Afghanistan, including those made against the SAS.

However, the MoD has said none found enough evidence for prosecutions.

The inquiry’s aim is to ascertain whether there was credible information of extra-judicial killings, whether investigations
by the military police years later into N1799’s concerns were properly conducted, and if unlawful killings were covered up.

Murder inquiry launched into death of man attacked in Uddingston | UK News

A murder inquiry has been launched into the death of a man who was fatally attacked while walking alone in South Lanarkshire.

David Graham, 38, was set upon in General’s Gate, Uddingston, at around 7.35pm on Sunday.

Mr Graham, from Cambuslang, was taken to Glasgow’s Queen Elizabeth University Hospital but was pronounced dead on arrival.

Police are keen to trace a silver car seen parked near the scene of the crime, which then drove off.

Detective Chief Inspector Graham McCreadie said: “Our thoughts are with Mr Graham’s family and friends at this extremely difficult time.

“A dedicated team of officers are working to get them answers and identify those responsible.

“We have already spoken to a number of people who came to Mr Graham’s aid until the ambulance arrived and I would like to thank them for their assistance.

“However, I am still keen to speak to anyone else who was in the area at the time, and may have seen or heard anything suspicious.”

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Motorists with dashcams who were in the General’s Gate or Old Glasgow Road areas on Sunday evening are being urged to check their footage for anything that could help the investigation.

An online portal has been set up to allow members of the public to submit information directly to the inquiry team.

Read more from Sky News:
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DCI McCreadie added: “We understand that incidents of this nature can cause concern for the local community but please be assured we are doing everything we can to identify those involved.

“There will be additional patrols in the area as we carry out our enquiries and anyone with any concerns can approach these officers.”

Lampard Inquiry: Sister of woman who took her own life vows to ‘get her voice heard’ | UK News

In a photo her sister treasures, Paula Parretti smiles brightly. It was taken soon after she had decided to colour half of her hair bright pink.

“She was an amazing auntie, like the fun aunt,” Sam Cook recalls.

“She’d always be there for my children. Laughing, joking, buying them the noisiest toys, all that fun stuff and she wanted to see them grow.”

But Paula died in January 2022. It was Sam who discovered her in her flat.

“I want to see her beautiful face as a memory. But I don’t. I see that last image,” Sam says.

Read more:
What is the Lampard Inquiry – and what is it investigating?
Deaths of thousands of mental health patients in Essex to be investigated
Number of mental health deaths in Essex significantly in excess of 2,000

Sam Cook
Image:
Sam Cook with her favourite photo of her sister

Weeks earlier Paula had been discharged from hospital, despite being visibly distressed.

“They dropped her bags at my feet and said, ‘You’ve got to take her home, we need the bed’,” Sam recalls.

“I said, ‘Can you not see she’s having a panic attack?’ And they said, ‘Sorry, but we need the bed. There’s lots of people that need help’. So, I had to take her home and all she kept saying was Nobody listens. I’m never going to get any help. Nobody’s listening to me. There’s no point’.”

Sam is set to become one of the first relatives to speak on behalf of loved ones at a public inquiry into thousands of deaths of mental health patients in Essex.

The Lampard Inquiry began last week with its chair Baroness Lampard saying the number of deaths that will be looked at will be significantly in excess of the 2,000 that were being considered by a previous investigation.

The patients all died between 2000 and 2023.

Sam says her sister never felt listened to. During a previous stay at the Linden Centre, a mental health unit in Essex, she says Paula suffered broken ribs and bruising at the hands of staff. She says the NHS Trust admitted fault following that incident and paid some compensation.

Paula Parretti
Image:
Paula was ‘an amazing auntie’

Paul Scott, chief executive officer of Essex Partnership University NHS Foundation Trust, said in a statement to Sky News: “My thoughts are with Paula’s family at this difficult time and I am sorry for the distress caused during Paula’s care, and send my deepest condolences for their loss.”

Sam says she’s determined to keep fighting for change so other patients don’t suffer like her sister.

“I promised myself after she passed away that I’d get her voice heard… now I’m finally, finally giving her her voice,” she says.

Before her sister’s death, Sam had also lost a cousin and a friend who were both suffering with their mental health.

Since posting online about her loss, she’s been contacted by people concerned about mental health services around the country.

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‘It was a cull of the most needy’: Warning – the following video contains details some readers may find distressing

“It’s nationwide,” Sam says. “People are saying they’re having the same treatment. They’re begging for help.

“I think people think they won’t speak up. And if they do speak up, are they going to get believed? Or are people going to put it down to their mental health?

“I think it needs us families to really put it out there that these were people. Just because they have mental health problems, it doesn’t mean that they’re anything less than a person. They have family, they’re mothers, fathers, brothers, sisters, aunts, uncles. They’re loved.”

Anyone feeling emotionally distressed or suicidal can call Samaritans for help on 116 123 or email jo@samaritans.org in the UK. In the US, call the Samaritans branch in your area or 1 (800) 273-TALK.

Why the damning first COVID inquiry report may be the most important | UK News

While this may be the first report of many to come from an inquiry expected to last at least four years – it is perhaps the most important.

Of the catalogue of failures, flaws or missed opportunities that played out during the pandemic, many stemmed from the UK’s lack of a plan and resources to deal an inevitable threat.

Perhaps inquiry chair Baroness Hallett’s most damning conclusion is that in 2019 the UK believed itself to be one of the countries best prepared for a pandemic.

Back in 2010, David Cameron’s government set up a National Security Council with responsibility for biological threats, like pandemics.

Plans were made, exercises across Whitehall were conducted, stockpiles of medicines and PPE were established.

But what COVID taught us – through 230,000 deaths, two million more living with long COVID, families destroyed and around £370bn in costs to taxpayers alone – is that plans and preparations were totally inadequate.

There’s no doubt COVID blindsided scientists. Previous coronavirus outbreaks were very different in terms of the way the disease behaved.

The focus on plans for an influenza pandemic is understandable – it was, and remains, one of the most grave pandemic threats we face.

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‘Planned for wrong pandemic’

But what this report has found is even the lessons learned from planning for the wrong pandemic could have improved the response to COVID, had they been properly acted on and shared beyond central government.

The fact, for example, that those with physical or learning disabilities, pre-existing conditions, those in ethnic minorities or living in deprived areas would be disproportionately affected.

The fact that social care, particularly care homes, would bear the brunt of a respiratory virus’s harm – and a huge surge in resources there would be needed in the event of a pandemic.

These issues, which were central to the loss of life and suffering caused between 2020 and 2022, were known. Just some of the “fatal strategic flaws” in assessing risks to society before the pandemic, according to Baroness Hallett.

Her recommendations hope to ensure we are significantly better prepared in future.

Ensuring a single cabinet-level committee responsible for civil emergencies like pandemics seems an obvious and sensible step and whatever strategy is put in place is reviewed, at least every three years along with rehearsals for a pandemic.

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Scale of children who have parents in prison revealed

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But also, whatever they learn or conclude should be informed by and shared with local authorities, voluntary and community organisations to ensure Whitehall plans work in the places where the harm is greatest – as cruelly demonstrated by COVID.

What the chair of this inquiry wants to see – echoing calls from other recent inquiries like that into the infected blood scandal – is some mechanism is established that requires governments to act.

The economic and political landscape is in constant flux, but so too are the deadly pathogens that mutate and spread in an increasingly connected world.

Implementing the lessons learned from the COVID pandemic isn’t just necessary, it’s urgent.

Former Post Office boss Paula Vennells hands over 50 new documents ahead of scandal inquiry appearance | UK News

The Post Office scandal inquiry has said it will “urgently” review dozens of new documents it has received from former chief executive Paula Vennells.

The inquiry heard her legal team had conducted further searches ahead of her appearance next week and found 50 additional documents that had previously not been shared.

A spokesperson for the inquiry told Sky News: “Lead counsel to the inquiry Jason Beer KC confirmed this morning that the document was received by the inquiry at 11:17pm last night.

“The inquiry expects to receive further documents from Ms Vennells today, which it will review urgently.”

Mr Beer has previously raised questions about the necessity of receiving documents quickly – and reminded witnesses he “will not hesitate” to call them back to the inquiry if required.

It came as Ms Vennells‘s former colleague Alisdair Cameron, the Post Office’s former chief financial officer, faced questions on Friday about what he knew about the scandal.

He began his session with an apology to the sub-postmasters affected.

Screen grab taken from the Post Office Horizon IT Inquiry of Alisdair Cameron, chief financial officer and former interim chief executive of Post Office Ltd, giving evidence to the inquiry at Aldwych House, central London, as part of phases five and six of the probe, which is looking at governance, redress and how the Post Office and others responded to the scandal. Picture date: Friday May 17, 2024.
Image:
Alisdair Cameron gave evidence to the inquiry on Friday. Pic: PA

Mr Cameron was also quizzed on a document he had written titled “what went wrong” in November 2020 for current chief executive Nick Read.

The ex-senior executive wrote: “We should have been tackling these issues 10 years ago.

“However, I do not believe that an earlier settlement was practically possible because the serious claimants believed there had been a miscarriage of justice and required recognition and an apology as much as they wanted money.

“Paula did not believe there had been a miscarriage and could not have got there emotionally.

“She seemed clear in her conviction from the day I joined that nothing had gone wrong and it was very clearly stated in my very first board meeting. She never, in my observation, deviated from that or seemed to particularly doubt that.”

Mr Beer asked: “So she was unwavering in her conviction that there had been no miscarriages of justice?”

Mr Cameron replied: “As far as I was concerned, yes.”

He said he had concluded that the Post Office had a “victim mentality” and its defence of the faulty accounting software was a “waste of public money”.

Read more:
Ex-head of IT ‘blocked Vennells’s number’
Post Office spin doctor said he was in a ‘corporate cover up’
Ex-Post Office boss accused of ‘lying throughout’ at inquiry

Mr Cameron also noted that the business was criticised for being “over-reliant on Horizon when we knew its weaknesses” and that the original prosecutions of sub-postmasters were a “deliberate miscarriage of justice”.

The final criticism was that the company should have “apologised and moved on years ago” and that defending itself had led to a “waste of public money and a postponement of justice”.

In the 2020 document, which was shown to the inquiry, Mr Cameron wrote: “At the heart of everything, the original sin of Post Office – and this may go back a very long time – is that: our culture, self-absorbed and defensive, stopped us from dealing with postmasters in a straightforward and acceptable way.”

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Sub-postmaster cases may be ‘tainted’

More than 700 sub-postmasters were prosecuted by the Post Office and handed criminal convictions between 1999 and 2015 as Fujitsu’s faulty Horizon system made it appear as though money was missing at their branches.

Hundreds of sub-postmasters are still awaiting full compensation despite the government announcing those who have had convictions quashed are eligible for £600,000 payouts.

Good maternity care ‘exception rather than the rule’, birth trauma inquiry finds | UK News

Good care for pregnant women “is the exception rather than the rule”, a landmark inquiry has said.

A parliamentary inquiry into birth trauma has found there was “shockingly poor quality” in maternity services, which resulted in care that lacked compassion and a system where “poor care is all too frequently tolerated as normal”.

The inquiry’s report is set to be released later this morning and was first reported by The Times.

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The report also found that women were “treated as an inconvenience” and errors were covered up by hospitals that “frustrated parents’ efforts to find answers”.

Victoria Atkins, the health secretary, said that the experiences uncovered in the report were “harrowing”.

The Times reported that the inquiry found new mothers had been left on blood-soaked sheets for hours, berated by midwives, or in one case been dismissed as an “anxious mother” when her baby then later died from complications that she was warning about.

The report calls for a new maternity commissioner who will report to the prime minister.

Each year, around 30,000 women will suffer a negative experience before, during or after delivery.

In 2011, Sarah Embleton suffered a serious birthing tear which was missed by doctors for more than a year – leading to complications.

Sarah Embleton
Image:
Sarah Embleton

“I was in a lot of pain a lot of the time because obviously things that healed by themselves in a way that they shouldn’t have done, she told Sky News.

“So, urgency, not being able to hold in, needing to go to the loo, that sort of physical side was pretty horrendous.”

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She added: “Also the psychological side as well, I was diagnosed with PTSD.

“There is no area of my life that was untouched by it.”

Mother of trans boy who died in mental health unit calls for public inquiry | UK News

The mother of a transgender boy who died after self-harming in a mental health unit is calling for a public inquiry into his care.

Charlie Millers, 17, from Stretford, Greater Manchester, died from a brain injury five days after being found unconscious on the Junction 17 wing at Prestwich Hospital in December 2020.

An inquest at Rochdale Coroners’ Court found there were multi-agency failings leading up to his death and that he didn’t intend to end his life.

The inquest jury found that a lack of one-to-one nursing care and the decision not to place Charlie on constant observations at the ward probably contributed to his death.

His mother, Sam Millers, had repeatedly called for more support to keep him safe.

She told Sky News: “All these failings, it upsets me that I’ll never get the opportunity to say I’m sorry. He was at risk of death and as his mum, I said I didn’t think he’d be here for Christmas.”

Charlie was a talented artist who loved football and animals, but he struggled with his mental health from an early age.

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He had been diagnosed with ADHD and was severely bullied after publicly identifying as a boy from the age of 12.

Charlie Millers and his mother
Image:
Charlie with his mother, Sam Millers

The court heard Charlie was receiving support from Trafford Council children’s services as he was in a cycle of self-harm and suicide attempts. He was admitted to Junction 17 due to a deterioration in his mental health.

Charlie was the third young person to die at the hospital in less than a year.

His mother said: “Three deaths in nine months due to the same observation failings is really concerning and we are going to push for a public inquiry.”

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The senior coroner at the inquest, Joanne Kearsley, also said she was concerned and told jurors she would write to the Department for Health and Social Care to seek recommendations to prevent future deaths.

In the months before he died, Charlie had been admitted three times to the unit, which is run by Greater Manchester Mental Health (GMMH) NHS Foundation Trust.

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GMMH said: “A wide range of actions have already been taken to improve inpatient mental health services both in response to Charlie’s death, and as part of our wider improvement plan.”

Meanwhile, Trafford Council said: “We are actively working with our safeguarding partnership to enhance our practice when young people are in crisis to improve their care.”

Anyone feeling emotionally distressed or suicidal can call Samaritans for help on 116 123 or email jo@samaritans.org in the UK. In the US, call the Samaritans branch in your area or 1 (800) 273-TALK

Officers who failed to spot murder victim had been shot could face misconduct inquiry | UK News

Officers who failed to spot a murder victim had been shot could face a misconduct inquiry, a former senior detective has told Sky News.

Recently retired Brian Low, 65, was discovered dead on a secluded path near Aberfeldy, Perthshire in February.

Police Scotland initially classed his death as a “medical event” before launching a murder hunt a week later when they found gunshot wounds on his body.

Brian Low. Pic: Jacqui Low
Image:
Brian Low. Pic: Jacqui Low

The force, which has faced claims of a botched investigation, has admitted it still has no suspect and no motive two months on from the cold-blooded execution despite 30 officers working to crack the case.

The initial seven-day delay in declaring a murder inquiry is being examined by Scotland’s police watchdog, The Police Investigations & Review Commissioner (Pirc).

Former superintendent Martin Gallagher, who retired from the force in 2022, says there are concerns over the officers who discovered Mr Low’s body and wrote the case off as non-suspicious.

Mr Gallagher told Sky News vital clues could have been lost and the killer may even have returned to the scene given the area was not cordoned off for days.

Martin Gallagher
Image:
Martin Gallagher

He said: “You’ve had officers attend a crime scene who have misidentified what has happened. There are questions to be asked about their ability and about their conduct.

“Police Scotland made a mistake at the start which is very unfortunate, but that happens.

“Police Scotland will learn from this and hopefully a training programme will be looked at in terms of how we deal with crime scenes initially in terms of homicide.”

Police Scotland refused to take questions from Sky News in an interview.

A spokeswoman said: “The circumstances have been referred by Police Scotland to the Police Investigation and Review Commissioner.

“It would therefore be inappropriate to comment further.”

Police at the scene in the Pitilie area on the outskirts of Aberfeldy, Perthshire after 65-year-old Brian Low was found dead next to his dog, he had suffered a fatal gun shot wound. Picture date: Thursday February 29, 2024.
Image:
Pic: PA

Officers have visited 478 properties and interviewed more than 800 people in the Perthshire area as part of the probe which is now entering its third month.

Local resident Chris Clear told Sky News he believes officers are examining a theory the suspect may have fled the scene on a bike.

He said: “Yesterday they were asking me if we had bicycles. They are really just looking for people who used the track where Brian was killed.

“Someone has done it. They probably live here. It puts a bad feeling across the whole of the village.”

Fatal accident inquiry to be held into death of pedestrian hit by Edinburgh tram | UK News

A fatal accident inquiry is to be held into the death of a pedestrian who was hit by an Edinburgh tram on his way home from work.

Bus driver Carlos Hernan Correa Palacio, 53, died after he was struck at a crossing in the Saughton area of the capital on 11 September 2018.

Edinburgh Trams Limited (ETL) was fined £240,000 last year after admitting a breach of health and safety legislation over the incident in a hearing at Edinburgh Sheriff Court.

The court heard how the driver sounded his bell a number of times and began to slow the tram down when he spotted Mr Correa.

He applied the emergency brake, which also set off the tram’s warning horn, but Mr Correa was killed.

The Crown Office said there were no issues with the tram driver and he had responded to the situation in accordance with his training.

The tram was in working order and the braking system functional.

Saughton Mains crossing around the time of the incident. Pic: Crown Office
Image:
Saughton Mains crossing around the time of the incident. Pic: Crown Office

Prosecutors said there had been no assessment of a foreseeable risk to pedestrians at the Saughton Mains crossing from an approaching tram prior to the incident, despite a near miss in November 2016.

ETL failed to carry out a sufficient risk assessment of the layout of the crossing, and to ensure it provided sufficient notice and warning to pedestrians, the court heard.

The company also failed to assess the loudness of audible warning devices, or the emergency braking distances of trams approaching the crossing.

The Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service (COPFS) has now lodged a first notice to begin the court process for a fatal accident inquiry (FAI) into Mr Correa’s death.

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The purpose of an FAI includes determining the cause of death, the circumstances in which the death occurred, and establishing what, if any, reasonable precautions could have been taken, and could be implemented in the future, to minimise the risk of future deaths in similar circumstances.

The FAI will explore the circumstances of Mr Correa’s death, with a focus on the process of risk assessment and safety management at ETL.

Issues surrounding pedestrian safety at non-motorised user (NMU) crossings and an assessment of the audibility of warning systems fitted to ETL trams will also be looked at.

The inquiry is also expected to consider the structure for oversight and information sharing within the tram sector, including among regulators, operators, and other interested parties.

Unlike criminal proceedings, FAIs are inquisitorial in nature, and are used to establish facts rather than to apportion blame.

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Procurator Fiscal Andy Shanks, who leads on death investigations for COPFS, said: “The tragic death of Carlos Correa occurred in circumstances giving rise to significant public concern and as such a discretionary fatal accident inquiry will be held.

“The lodging of the first notice enables FAI proceedings to commence under the direction of the sheriff.

“Mr Correa’s family will continue to be kept informed of significant developments as court proceedings progress.” 

A preliminary hearing will take place on 31 May at Edinburgh Sheriff Court.