London police are considering a variety of criminal charges related to the June fire at Grenfell Tower that killed 71 people.
Police told an inquiry Monday [Dec. 11] that the possible charges include misconduct in public office, manslaughter, corporate manslaughter and breaches of fire safety regulation.
No one has yet been charged.
Jeremy Johnson, the lawyer representing the police at the inquiry, said the scope of the police investigation was “unprecedented” in a case that did not involve an extremist attack.
He said police are studying 31 million documents and 2,500 exhibits.
Johnson spoke at a hearing spelling out how a detailed inquiry into the disaster will be carried out.
Officials say the goal is to make sure there is never a repeat of the catastrophe.
Related:
- Compensation for London’s Grenfell Fire Victims May Be Capped at $5M: Reuters
- AIG Discloses It Could Face Claims from London’s Grenfell Tower Fire
- Grenfell Tower Insurer, Protector Forsikring, Raises Claims Estimate to $65M
- Arconic Stops Selling Cladding for High-Rises After Grenfell Tower Tragedy
- ABI Warned About Risks of Modern Building Materials Before Grenfell Tower Fire
- Norway’s Protector Forsikring Insured Grenfell Tower Fire; Price Tag Debated
- London Blaze-Tower Built with Cladding Used Across England
- Grenfell Tower Fire Puts Cloud over Energy Efficiency Industry’s Building Materials
- Whirlpool Fridge Started London’s Grenfell Tower Fire that Killed at Least 79
- Tragic London Fire Raises Questions About ‘Stay Put’ High-Rise Safety Rule
- Prime Minister May: ‘People Deserve Answers’ on London Tower Blaze
Topics Fraud Law Enforcement London
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