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UK police on trial accused of footballer's murder

Dalian Atkinson, 48, a former Aston Villa star, went into cardiac arrest on the way to a hospital and died around 90 minutes after officers used a Taser on him to subdue him during an altercation in 2016.

Reported by: AP London Published on: May 05, 2021 11:12 IST
dalian atkinson
Image Source : GETTY IMAGES

Prosecutors allege that West Mercia Police Constable Benjamin Monk, 42, used a stun gun for 33 seconds against Dalian Atkinson (in photo) — more than six times longer than was standard.

British prosecutors accused a police officer of murder for allegedly using unnecessary force against a Black former Premier League football player, who died after being kicked in the head and shot with a stun gun.

Dalian Atkinson, 48, a former Aston Villa star, went into cardiac arrest on the way to a hospital and died around 90 minutes after officers used a Taser on him to subdue him during an altercation in 2016.

Prosecutors allege that West Mercia Police Constable Benjamin Monk, 42, used a stun gun for 33 seconds against Atkinson — more than six times longer than was standard.

Authorities charged Monk with murder and manslaughter after a three-year inquiry.

Monk’s colleague, Police Constable Mary Ellen Bettley-Smith, 31, is also facing trial charged with assault. The two appeared at Birmingham Crown Court Tuesday for the start of their trial. Both officers deny wrongdoing.

The case has touched off a debate about the use of stun guns in a country where police rarely carry firearms.

Black people were three times more likely to be involved in stun gun incidents than white people from 2011 to 2015, according to Home Office statistics obtained by the BBC.

Prosecutor Alexandra Healy told the court that officers were called to a disturbance at Atkinson's father's home in Telford after midnight on Aug. 15, 2016, after neighbors reported hearing the soccer player shouting in the street.

She said Atkinson, who had serious health problems including end-stage renal failure, moved towards the officers and Monk used his stun gun twice ineffectively. The third deployment of the stun gun incapacitated Atkinson and caused him to fall forward onto the road, she said.

"The standard default setting of a Taser is a five-second phase, but it is possible to override that by continuing to depress the trigger,'' the prosecutor told the jury.

"And PC Monk continued to depress the trigger for over six times the length of a standard five-second phase."

Prosecutors also allege that Monk kicked Atkinson in the head hard enough to leave the imprints of his laces on the man's forehead.

Healy said Monk wasn't acting in self-defense when he kicked Atkinson twice in the head.

"He was no doubt angry that he had been put in fear by this man. He chose to take that anger out on Dalian Atkinson by kicking him in the head," she said.

Prosecutors maintain that although Atkinson's underlying health conditions meant he was “at a greatly increased risk of dying," he would not have died that night were it not for the third stun gun deployment and the kicks to his head.

Atkinson was a forward who played in England’s top division for Sheffield Wednesday and Aston Villa. It was at Villa where he scored one of the most famous Premier League goals – against Wimbledon in October 1992 – when he ran from inside his own half, evaded a number of challenges, then chipped the ball over the goalkeeper and into the net.

He scored 20 Premier League goals for Villa and also netted in the 1994 League Cup final in the team’s 3-1 win over Manchester United.
Atkinson had spells with Real Sociedad in Spain, Fenerbahce in Turkey and also in South Korea. His one season at Sociedad came in the 1990-91, a time when English players seldom played abroad.

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