Ooft
Well this is interesting, but hardly surprising in a way...
And some interesting stuff about the badging process as well from a historical perspective. I mean, when he was licensed almost three decades ago it took him three years to get a Sefton PH badge?
Taxi driver who waited 50 minutes to report Southport killer 'to face council probe'https://www.liverpoolecho.co.uk/news/li ... 0-32552969Sefton Council said Gary Poland will be investigated to see if his behaviour on July 29 last year was appropriateThe taxi driver who waited 50 minutes to call 999 after the Southport killer stormed a child's dance party will be investigated to see if his behaviour was "inappropriate". Gary Poland told the ongoing Southport Inquiry on Thursday this week that he drove away from the Hart Space after hearing screams and seeing children fleeing the building because he heard "four or five gunshots".
The driver recalled seeing six and seven-year-old children "stampede for their lives" out of the building within 30 seconds of Axel Rudakubana's attack. But following the incident, Mr Poland called his friend twice and picked up an extra fare before he eventually went home and called the police to provide details about what he knew about the teenage killer.
Rudakubana, who is only being referred to in proceedings as AR, murdered Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, Bebe King, six, and Alice da Silva Aguiar, nine, and attempted to murder 10 others when he "specifically targeted" the Taylor Swift-themed dance party on July 29 last year.
Giving evidence to the inquiry, sitting at Liverpool Town Hall, Sefton Council's head of taxi licences Mark Toohey was asked about Mr Poland's delay in calling the emergency services.
Richard Boyle, junior counsel for the inquiry, asked Mr Toohey: "Do you agree that when Mr Poland left the immediate scene he was aware that AR had made off without paying…that he had heard what he believed to be four or five gunshots…that he believed that AR had actually shot people…and that he had a loaded gun that he was using?" Mr Toohey agreed to all.
Mr Boyle then asked: "Do you agree because of his role as the taxi driver who had transported AR, he was uniquely placed to assist the police because he knew the address that AR had been collected from…and he could give a description of AR’s appearance and demeanour immediately before the attack…and that he also had dashcam footage on his vehicle?"
After Mr Toohey agreed again, Mr Boyle asked: "Do you agree that Mr Poland should have called 999 immediately after he was satisfied it was safe to do so?" The council employee replied: "I would say yes," and said the decision to wait 50 minutes to make the 999 call went against advice provided by a handbook issued to all Sefton Council drivers.
Mr Boyle asked if Mr Poland's actions amounted to "inappropriate behaviour". Mr Toohey said: "I think it warrants an investigation into the actions of Mr Poland, yes." Mr Boyle added: "It is not my role in any way to make a suggestion as to the outcome of any such investigation but do I take it...that the council intends to do so?"
Mr Toohey said: "Yes, I don’t make decisions in isolation. We have a licensing panel and a driver such as Mr Poland would be invited to make representations and supply any information that he thought was relevant to support him before any decision was made."
In his own evidence Mr Poland confirmed he was an "experienced private hire taxi driver" and had been doing it for 27 years at the time of the attack. He told the inquiry it took him three years to qualify as a taxi driver which included nights at college.
He said "nowadays they give licences to anybody" and added: "I get picked up when I get a cab, they are foreigners that can't even speak English." Mr Toohey told the inquiry that since the end of 2013 new taxi drivers in Sefton were tested on the contents of the council-issued handbook, while drivers renewing their licences such as Mr Poland did not have to take the same test.
Also giving evidence to the inquiry was Liam Rice, general manager of One Call Taxis. He was asked by the inquiry's senior counsel, Nicholas Moss KC, "in this situation, your expectation of any of your drivers, if they thought there had been something so extreme that gunshots had been fired, you would have expected them to call 999 as soon as they got to a safe position?"
Mr Rice responded: "Yes, as with anyone, we would expect them to ring 999." He confirmed there had not been any disciplinary action taken against Mr Poland since the incident.
However, it appeared Mr Rice was not aware of some of the details about the incident until the inquiry began, confirming in his written statement "I now know I was not fully aware of what Mr Poland reported to the police about what happened".
Mr Rice added: "In my mind he had accepted a job and then obviously come out, was in shock and then phoned but obviously there was a lot more of a delay than I thought."
The inquiry heard Mr Poland had collected Rudakubana from his home at 10 Old School Close in Banks under the false name "Simon" before driving him to Hart Street because he thought the teenager was collecting his car from a local garage.
The inquiry heard when Rudakubana left the taxi and walked away, Mr Poland followed him and said "you pay now or the police are on their f***ing way you k***". When asked if he would have still confronted Rudakubana in the same way if he knew he had a knife, Mr Poland said: "If I thought he had a knife, I probably would have got out and disarmed him…it is only a knife."
Mr Poland said he had "accidentally" accepted a new fare after he had driven away from the scene. His dash-cam revealed he told his female passenger "he's in a rush" when they passed a police car with its sirens and blue lights on, likely on its way to the scene of the crime.
Mr Poland drove home, spoke to his wife and then called 999 - 50 minutes after he had dropped off Rudakubana. However, the inquiry heard his delay in making the call would not have affected the response time from the police and ambulance service because dance teacher Leanne Lucas had already phoned 999.
In his statement to the inquiry, Mr Poland said: "On reflection of events I do consider that I should have called the police earlier, in hindsight I wish I had done and it is something I think about every day, what I should have done and how this is my fault because I drove him there.
"I should have checked on the welfare of the children and helped. I thought there was a gunman shooting at people and I believed this to be a person who I had just been shouting at to pay a fare. I did believe I was in danger of being a target.
"I regret not helping the children, their screams were harrowing and I can still hear them when I think back to that day. I cannot imagine what the victims and the families of the victims have been through and they have my deepest sympathy for what happened that day."
Rudakubana was jailed for life with a minimum term of 52 years in January at Liverpool Crown Court, after admitting the "sadistic" murders and attempted murders.
Sir Adrian Fulford, chairman of the inquiry, previously said: "What occurred on that day has made it critically necessary, moreover, to identify all the changes that need to be implemented in order to ensure, as best as our society is able, that there is no repetition."
The first phase of the inquiry, which is expected to run until November, continues.