An Angolan deportee was
heard by air passengers to cry out "you're killing me" as he was pinned
down in his seat by G4S security guards, a jury heard.
Three G4S guards killed Jimmy Mubenga, 46, as they restrained him on a flight from the UK, the Old Bailey was told.
Colin Kaler, 51, from
Bedfordshire, Terrence Hughes, 53, from Hampshire, and Stuart Tribelnig,
38, from Surrey, deny the manslaughter of Mr Mubenga.
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Angolan national Jimmy Mubenga had been living in the UK for a
number of years with his wife and children, the youngest of which was a few months old.
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In an unprecedented
move, a section of the Boeing 777 with three rows of three seats has
been specially constructed inside Court 16 of the Old Bailey to
demonstrate to the jury how Mr Mubenga died.
The security guards
ignored his desperate pleas and "disregarded their duty of care" by
assuming that the married father was "feigning" illness as the British
Airways flight prepared to take off, jurors were told.
He said that a few
minutes after boarding, Mr Mubenga was returning from the lavatory,still
accompanied by the three officers, when all four became "embroiled in a
commotion which quickly escalated into a physical struggle" as the
officers tried to force him to sit down.
Colin Kaler and Terence Hughes (right) deny manslaughter
"He was then further
restrained by the application of rigid handcuffs with his arms, hands
bound in that way behind his back and his seat belt being applied around
his waist thereby holding him into the seat," he said.
He said such physical
restraint should have been enough to hold Mr Mubenga in his seat and
make him realise there was no point in struggling further.
Stuart Tribelnig also denies manslaughter
One officer sat either
side of Mr Mubenga, with the other leaning over from the seat ahead, and
between them pinned him into his seat, Mr Dennis said.
"In doing so, they held
Mubenga in such a position bent forward that his ability to breathe
properly was inevitable impaired," he said.
"Each officer would have
known from their training and from common sense that keeping someone in
such a position was likely to cause a person harm yet they did so over a
prolonged period and did so ignoring shouts from Mubenga that he was in
trouble - 'I can't breathe' shouts that were heard by many a passenger
seated further away.
"His shouts that he was unable to breathe were disregarded."
Mr Mubenga shouted out: "Please let me go, I want to see my family... you're killing me. Please help," the court heard.
Mr Dennis said while Mr
Mubenga was seated motionless and "simply staring open-eyed ahead of
him", the officers appeared to have "disregarded their duty of care" and
assumed he was feigning his condition.
He said it was only when
one officer realised Mr Mubenga was in a critical state that the
"medical emergency" was reported to the control tower.
"By then, however,
Mubenga had almost certainly already suffered a cardiac arrest and was,
in all likelihood, beyond recovery as sadly proved to be the case."
The whole incident lasted 35 minutes, the court heard.
Mr Mubenga was an
Angolan national who had been living in the UK for a number of years
with his wife and children, the youngest of which was a few months old,
the court heard.
1 comment:
How sad.
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