Police give evidence at inquest

Thornhill Road Police Station from Socialist Worker Online
9th December 2009

Police officers have been giving evidence to the inquest into the death of Mikey Powell who died in police custody in 2003.

Sergeant Russell Tringham, who was a police constable stationed at Walsall Road Police Station at the time, told the inquest that he had been attending to another call when he received an emergency radio message to go to Wilton Road.

When he arrived, he saw Mikey on his back, handcuffed with his arms above him, resisting arrest by three police officers. Sergeant Tringham did not assist with the restraint and went looking for missing police equipment for a couple of minutes.

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Policeman tried to revive man who died in custody

Mikey Powellfrom Birmingham Post
3rd December 2009

A policeman has told and inquest how he tried to revive a Birmingham man who died in custody.

Sergeant Russell Tringham gave mouth-to-mouth resuscitation until paramedics arrived when he realised that Michael Powell was no longer breathing. The father-of-three had been arrested following a violent struggle outside his mother’s address in Wilton Road, Lozells, in September 2003, and died shortly after he was taken to Thornhill Road Police Station.

Sgt Tringham, who was a police constable stationed at Walsall Road Police Station at the time, told an inquest that he had been attending to another call when he received an emergency radio message to go to Wilton Road.

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Jail death man was ‘alive and conscious’ on arrival at police station, inquest hears

The Juryfrom Birmingham Mail
3rd December 2009

A young police officer who witnessed the death of Michael Powell said he “was still alive and conscious” on arrival at a police station.

Mr Powell died shortly after he was detained outside his home in Lozells and taken to nearby Thornhill Road police station. An inquest jury at Sutton Coldfield Town Hall heard from PC Luke Gill, was 20 years-old when Mr Powell died and had been patrolling the streets for less than one year.

He told the court his first impressions of the area was that there were “a lot of gun crime” incidents. PC Gill said when he arrived in Wilton Road on September 7, 2003, he saw the 38-year-old factory worker being restrained by three police officers.

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