Prosecutors are to consider charges against a Metropolitan police officer who fired a Taser at a young black man as he jumped over a wall in north London, leaving him paralysed from the waist down.
Jordan Walker-Brown, 24, said he had his back to police and was running away because he was carrying a small amount of cannabis, when he was shot with the stun gun on 4 May last year. He is now paraplegic.
The police complaints watchdog, the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC), has referred a file of evidence to the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) after determining there was an indication the officer may have committed grievous bodily harm (GBH). The CPS are responsible for deciding whether the officer should be charged.
The IOPC investigated the incident in Burgoyne Road in Finsbury Park, after a mandatory referral from the Met.
The IOPC regional director, Sal Naseem, said: “Following thorough and careful analysis of the evidence we have decided there is an indication an officer may have committed grievous bodily harm (GBH) in relation to their use of Taser and a file has been sent to the CPS.
“It is important to note that a referral to the CPS does not necessarily mean that criminal charges will follow. The CPS will decide whether charges should be brought and if so what charges those should be.
“We have provided the man and the Met with updates throughout our investigation and we continue to engage with the local community affected by this incident.”
Walker-Brown said last year that he believed he would not have been stopped had he not been black.
He was stopped by Met police officers from the Territorial Support Group (TSG) on two consecutive days, 3 and 4 May. Both times he was carrying a small amount of cannabis for personal use.
On 4 May, he was in Burgoyne Road when the TSG police spotted and followed him. He said two officers got out of their van and he started to run away.
He was jumping over a wall, which was approximately 1.2 metres (4ft) high on one side but had a 1.8 metre (6ft) drop on the other, when he was struck by the Taser. He fell over the wall.
Black people are five times more likely to have force used against them by police in England and Wales than white people, official figures show.
Taking use of Taser-like weapons alone, black people are seven times more likely to have this tactic used against them than white people, although this includes “non-discharge” incidents when the electric-shock devices are drawn but not fired.