Family of woman murdered by her partner launch legal challenge
The Guardian World ·

The family of Michaela Hall, who was murdered by her partner five years ago, has launched a legal challenge over failings by the police and probation service that could have prevented her death. …
The family of Michaela Hall, who was murdered by her partner five years ago, has launched a legal challenge over failings by the police and probation service that could have prevented her death. Lee Kendall, a serial violent offender, is serving a 21-year minimum sentence for stabbing Hall through the eye at her home in Truro, Cornwall on 1 June 2021. An inquest and a police watchdog investigation into the handling of the murder revealed a string of errors by public agencies that contributed to her death. On the fifth anniversary of Hall’s murder, her family has announced it is bringing a claim against Devon and Cornwall police and the Probation Service that they failed her right to life and right to be protected under the Human Rights Act. The Good Law Project (GLP), which is acting for the family, will focus on Kendall being wrongly assessed as “medium risk” by the Probation Service, despite being convicted for two previous assaults on Hall and the police receiving 34 pieces of intelligence about his domestic abuse against her. The case will also question why police officers failed to enter her home despite a Crimestoppers call on 31 May 2021 from a friend that raised the alarm Hall was being strangled. As they drove away from the property, one of the officers was recorded saying: “What can you do? She doesn’t help herself.” Shaun Hall, who was 13 when his mother was murdered, said he hoped the case would prevent similar deaths by known domestic abusers. …
Original source: The Guardian World