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Repeat warning at Menezes inquest Officers fear repeat of Menezes
(30 minutes later)
An innocent person could be shot dead by police again, a senior officer has admitted at the inquest into the death of Jean Charles de Menezes.An innocent person could be shot dead by police again, a senior officer has admitted at the inquest into the death of Jean Charles de Menezes.
Deputy Assistant Commissioner Cressida Dick said police aimed to minimise the risk to the public.Deputy Assistant Commissioner Cressida Dick said police aimed to minimise the risk to the public.
But Ms Dick, who was in charge of the operation on the day Mr de Menezes was killed, said this could only be done to a "less than perfect extent". But Ms Dick, who was in charge of the operation on the day Mr de Menezes was killed, said this could be done only to a "less than perfect extent".
Mr de Menezes was shot dead in mistake on 22 July 2005. Mr de Menezes, 27, was mistaken for a suicide bomber and shot dead in 2005.
The 27-year-old Brazilian was shot seven times in the head at Stockwell Tube station, south London by police who believed he was failed bomber Hussain Osman. The Brazilian was shot seven times in the head at Stockwell Tube station in south London on 22 July 2005, by police who believed he was failed bomber Hussain Osman.
'High risk'
Michael Mansfield QC, counsel for the de Menezes family, asked Ms Dick if such an incident could happen again.
"I'm afraid, sir, I do believe that this or something like this could happen again. The nature of these operations is that they are incredibly high risk to all concerned," she said.
"And that is because of the nature of the threat that we face from suicide terrorists, and the difficulty that there is in dealing with such a threat and the very fast timescale in which these things can happen."
She added: "Our job is to reduce the risk to everybody as best as we possibly can all the time. That is what we set out to do.
"But I do fear that in the future a bomber might not be prevented from setting a bomb, and there would be a huge scrutiny of why we did not manage to prevent that.
"And equally, I pray it doesn't happen, but it is possible that an innocent member of the public might die in circumstances like this.
"Our job is to minimise the risks. Given the huge scale of the risks, we may only be able to do that to a less than perfect extent."
Ms Dick was the designated officer for Operation Kratos, the Metropolitan Police's codename for special tactics to deal with a suicide bomber.Ms Dick was the designated officer for Operation Kratos, the Metropolitan Police's codename for special tactics to deal with a suicide bomber.