Death of Colin Roach

{{Short description|Black British male who died following contact with police in 1983}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}

Colin Roach was a 21-year-old black British man who died as a result of a fatal gunshot wound having entered a police-station reception.{{cite web|url=https://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2009/02/420962.html|work=Indymedia UK|title=Who killed Colin Roach?|first=Tippa|last=Naphtali|date=1 February 2009|access-date=22 January 2023}}{{cite web|url= https://pasttense.co.uk/2022/01/12/today-in-london-policing-history-1983-colin-roach-dies-in-stoke-newington-police-station/ |title=Today in London policing history - Who killed Colin Roach?|date=12 January 2022|access-date=20 August 2023}}

The inquest ruled his death was suicide - Roach having put the barrel of a shotgun into his mouth before squeezing the trigger - inside the entrance of Stoke Newington police station, in the London Borough of Hackney, on 12 January 1983.{{cite news|work=The Times|location=London|date=29 June 1983|page=2|issue=61571|title=Inquiry ordered into Roach case|first=Peter|last=Evans}}{{cite news|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/the-wrong-side-of-the-law-the-people-of-stoke-newington-in-the-london-borough-of-hackney--the-poorest-in-england--have-lost-faith-in-their-police-allegations-of-fabricating-evidence-gratuitous-violence-and-drugdealing-have-blurred-the-line-between-lawenforcers-and-lawbreakers-1505753.html|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131004214429/http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/the-wrong-side-of-the-law-the-people-of-stoke-newington-in-the-london-borough-of-hackney--the-poorest-in-england--have-lost-faith-in-their-police-allegations-of-fabricating-evidence-gratuitous-violence-and-drugdealing-have-blurred-the-line-between-lawenforcers-and-lawbreakers-1505753.html|archive-date=4 October 2013|work=The Independent|title=The wrong side of the law: The people of Stoke Newington, in the London borough of Hackney - the poorest in England - have lost faith in their police. Allegations of fabricating evidence, gratuitous violence and drug-dealing have blurred the line between law-enforcers and law-breakers|first=Cal|last=McCrystal|date=21 November 1993}}

Amid allegations of a police cover-up, the case became a cause célèbre for civil rights campaigners and black community groups in the United Kingdom.{{cite news|work=The Times|date=21 June 1983|page=3|issue=61564|title=Youth's death used to fuel mistrust of the police}} The death was made famous by the late civil rights protester and singer Sinéad O'Connor's song "Black Boys on Mopeds".{{Cite web |title=Thank You for Hearing Me: I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got |url=http://www.thankyouforhearingme.com/releases/i_do_not_want_what_i_havent_got.html |access-date=2023-08-20 |website=www.thankyouforhearingme.com}}

Before Roach's death, Hackney Black People's Association had been calling for a public inquiry into policing in the area, alleging that there existed a culture of police brutality, wrongful detention of black people, racial harassment, and racially motivated "stopping and searching."{{cite news|work=The Times|date=28 January 1983|page=5|issue=61442|title=Why Colin Roach's death left legacy of unrest|first=Nicholas|last=Timmins}} Ernie Roberts, the MP for Hackney North and Stoke Newington, said that there had been "a complete breakdown of faith and credibility in the police" in the area and the Commission for Racial Equality called for a full inquiry into both the death of Roach and the policing in Hackney generally.

In June 1983 a coroner's jury returned a majority verdict of suicide.{{cite news|work=The Times|date=21 June 1983|page=3|issue=61564|title=Colin Roach shot himself, inquest jury decides by an eight to two majority|first=Nicholas|last=Timmins}} INQUEST, the United Kingdom pressure group founded following the death of Blair Peach at the hands of police in April 1979, was highly critical of the coroner's directions to the jury, and said that he had wrongly pointed them towards a verdict of suicide.{{cite book|first=Mick|last=Ryan|title=Lobbying From Below: INQUEST in Defence of Civil Liberties|publisher=Routledge|date=16 December 1996|isbn=978-1857282566|pages=31–32|edition=1}}

Discrepancies

In November 1982 Roach had been arrested and charged with theft of a wallet and possession of an offensive weapon (a penknife). He was sentenced to three months imprisonment: he entered Pentonville Prison on 9 December. He appealed against his sentence: he was released three weeks later on 29 December 1982.{{cite book |title=Policing in Hackney 1945-1984, a Report Commissioned by the Roach Family Support Committee |date=1988 |publisher=Karia Press |isbn=0-946918-74-0 |page=32}}

Following his release from prison, friends said Roach was worried about something but was not suicidal. On the night of his death he was a passenger in a car driven by his friend, a youth named Keith Scully, along with another passenger named Jim Joseph. During the hour-long drive, Roach appeared agitated and told Scully to keep moving, drive fast and take him somewhere where no one knew him.{{cite book |title=Policing in Hackney 1945-1984, a Report Commissioned by the Roach Family Support Committee |date=1988 |publisher=Roach Family Support Group |isbn=0-946918-74-0 |pages=38–47}}

After refusing his request to be dropped off at Bethnal Green Police Station, Roach told Scully he wanted to go see his brother in Stoke Newington. On dropping him near to where his brother lived, Roach said “It’s alright. I will be safe here”. Scully then saw Roach walk into the police station and so drove away to speak with Roach's father. When asked, Scully claimed Roach was ‘upset’ but not hysterical.{{cite web|url=https://www.isaacjulien.com/projects/who-killed-colin-roach/|title=Who killed Colin Roach?|first=Isaac|last=Julien|date=17 June 1983|access-date=22 January 2023}}

Roach had a sports bag with him when he entered the cell. However, the shotgun used for the suicide could only have fitted into the bag if dissassembled, and the driver who took Roach to the police station said that he did not see a bulge in Roach's bag. Additionally, no oil from the gun could be found on the bag, nor fibres from the bag on the gun. A fingerprint expert stated that, whilst no fingerprints were found on the weapon, it did not show any signs of having been wiped clean.

Irregularities were found in the records with regards to the officers present. Two police officers thought to have been present at Roach's arrest claimed they had not been there.

The police surgeon called in after Roach's death observed an inconsistency between the position of Colin Roach's body and suicide. Roach's hand was found to be uninjured, even though when the trigger of a shotgun is pulled facing oneself, the recoil damages, and may break, the thumb used to pull the trigger. The recoil should have propelled the shotgun across the room into the wall. In Roach's case, there was no sign of impact on the gun or on the police cell's wall. A gun being forced into Roach's mouth should have left marks, however, which were not found.

Aftermath

Roach's death spurred protests and demands for an independent public inquiry. Such an inquiry did not take place. The coroner conducted an inquest into the incident. The verdict of the inquest was that Roach had died by suicide.{{cite web|url=https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/record?catid=9067987&catln=6|work=UK National Archives|title=Causes of death: suicides; inquest into the death of Colin Roach at Stoke Newington...|date=1 January 1983 - 31 December 1984|access-date=22 January 2023}}

The Roach Family Support Committee commissioned its own Independent Committee of Inquiry, which published the book Policing In Hackney: 1945-1984 in 1989.{{cite book|title=Policing In Hackney 1945-1984|author=The Roach Family Support Committee|publisher=Karia Press|date=1 May 1989|isbn=978-0946918744}}

On January 12, 1993, on the 10th anniversary of the death of Colin Roach, a community facility named the Colin Roach Centre was founded by Hackney Community Defence Association and Hackney Trades Union Support Unit.{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2013/jun/24/metropolitan-police-spying-undercover-officers|work=The Guardian|title=Scotland Yard spied on critics of police corruption|first1=Rob|last1=Evans|first2=Paul|last2=Lewis|date=24 June 2013|access-date=22 January 2023}}{{cite web |last1=Bartholomew |first1=Emma |title=Colin Roach Centre: We look back at the Hackney institution that fought police brutality |url=https://www.hackneygazette.co.uk/news/22939590.colin-roach-centre-look-back-hackney-institution-fought-police-brutality/ |website=Hackney Gazette |date=16 February 2017 |access-date=24 November 2024}}

During the Undercover Policing Inquiry it emerged that several undercover police officers had spied on the Roach Family Support Committee and other groups campaigning for a public inquiry into the death of Colin Roach.{{cite web |title=UCPI Daily Report, 13 May 2021: Phil Cooper |url=https://campaignopposingpolicesurveillance.com/tag/phil-cooper/#phil-cooper |website=Campaign Opposing Police Surveillance |access-date=24 November 2024}}{{cite web |title=Special Branch report on a member of the SWP who acted as a steward on a Roach Family Support Committee demonstration |url=https://www.ucpi.org.uk/publications/special-branch-report-on-a-member-of-the-swp-who-acted-as-a-steward-on-a-roach-family-support-committee-demonstration/ |website=Undercover Policing Inquiry |access-date=24 November 2024}}{{cite web |title=Special Branch report on a private meeting of the Organising Committee of the Roach Family Support Committee |url=https://www.ucpi.org.uk/publications/special-branch-report-on-a-private-meeting-of-the-organising-committee-of-the-roach-family-support-committee/ |website=Undercover Policing Inquiry |access-date=24 November 2024}}

References

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