Pathology into original Hillsborough inquests to be reviewed Home Office announces

The Hillsborough memorial for the 97 outside Anfield Credit: PA Images

A review of failures in pathology at the original Hillsborough inquests has been announced by the Home Office.

The department said it had established an independent review to consider what went wrong with the original pathology report into the deaths at the 1989 FA Cup semi-final.

It says it is to ensure similar mistakes were not made in the future.

Ninety-seven football fans died in the crush at the match between Liverpool and Nottingham Forest on 15 April 1989.

The pathology review, which will be chaired by forensic science expert Glenn Taylor, was set up following a recommendation in a 2017 report by Bishop James Jones.

St George's Hall illuminated following a special service to mark the outcome of the Hillsborough inquest Credit: PA

Original inquests, which were quashed by the High Court in 2012, heard no evidence from after 3.15 pm on the day of the disaster.

The decision was based on pathology evidence that all the victims suffered the injuries which caused their deaths before that time.

But the Hillsborough Independent Panel found the evidence was flawed and it was highly likely what happened after 3.15pm, when the first ambulance arrived on the pitch, was significant in determining whether the victims could have survived.

The Hillsborough memorial at Anfield. Credit: PA Archive/PA Images

In his 2017 report The Patronising Disposition Of Unaccountable Power, Bishop Jones said: “It is difficult to overstate the impact of the failures of pathology at the first inquest.

“The impact is deeply personal for those families who feel they will now never know how their loved one died, but it also has a wider resonance – leading as it did to the necessity for new inquest proceedings 25 years after the disaster occurred.”

The review, commissioned by the Pathology Delivery Board (PDB) and overseen by the Home Office, began in July and Mr Taylor is expected to report his findings to the Home Secretary in summer 2023.

The Hillsborough memorial outside Anfield. Credit: PA

Its terms of reference include recognising the failures in pathology, assessing whether there is risk of similar failings being made again and considering if there are lessons learnt which can be built into the development of Home Office registered forensic pathologists and the wider provision of pathology services.

Bishop Jones, the former Bishop of Liverpool, set out 25 points of learning as part of his report on the experiences of the Hillsborough families.

He recommended the Government give full consideration to a Hillsborough Law, which would include a duty of candour for police officers.

At its party conference last week, Labour pledged to bring in the Hillsborough Law if elected.

Earlier this week, panic at an Indonesian football match left at least 125 dead, most of whom were trampled to death in one of the deadliest sports events in the world.