Chris Kaba shooter may avoid misconduct hearing after rule change
Auf einen Blick
- The police marksman who shot Chris Kaba in 2022 may no longer face misconduct proceedings after the government raised the legal test for officers' use of force to match criminal law standards.
- The IOPC paused disciplinary proceedings pending the change and now believes the case should not proceed, though they will consult the Kaba family.
KI-generierte Zusammenfassung
Warum es wichtig ist
The legal test for misconduct in officers' use-of-force cases has been raised to the same used in criminal law. This change follows the acquittal of Sgt Martyn Blake, who shot Chris Kaba in 2022.
The police marksman who shot Chris Kaba may no longer face misconduct proceedings after the government changed the rules on how officers' use of force is judged.
Sgt Martyn Blake shot 24-year-old Kaba in Streatham, south London, in 2022 after he tried to ram his way past police cars.
Blake was cleared of murder following a trial in 2024 but was subject to a separate disciplinary hearing, which the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) paused while it waited for the changes to be published.
The legal test for misconduct in officers' use-of-force cases has been raised to the same used in criminal law, meaning conduct that would not amount to a crime should not amount to misconduct either.
After Blake's acquittal, then home secretary Yvette Cooper said she would raise the legal test used to decide whether to charge officers over use of force.
On Wednesday, the watchdog said it now believes the case should not go ahead. It will consult the Kaba family, who argue there are exceptional circumstances why it should still proceed.
Dozens of other non-fatal use-of-force cases could also be affected if forces take the same approach.
IOPC director of strategy and policy Andrew Johnson said: "We carefully considered the law change and its stated intent to address the perceived unfairness and lack of proportionality of the civil law test.
"We believe this position provides consistency across impacted cases and is fair to officers who are facing potential dismissal for misconduct, which if it occurred now, would not amount to misconduct under the new law.
"We expect the number of relevant cases that are affected by this law change to be relatively small."
Metropolitan Police deputy commissioner Matt Jukes, referring to Blake by his cypher NX121, said: "We have consistently said since the criminal trial that there is no basis for further action against this officer and that remains our position.
"That is why I welcome the recent changes to the law, introducing a presumption of anonymity for firearms officers during court proceedings until conviction, and restoring the criminal test for the use of force in misconduct cases."
On the night Kaba died, police had followed and boxed in the Audi he was driving because it had been linked to three firearms incidents in the previous five months.
Officers did not know his identity at the time. He was later reported by police to have links to a street gang and to two shootings in the six days before his death.
Worauf zu achten ist
KI-Ausblick — Möglichkeiten, keine Fakten
The Kaba family will challenge the IOPC's decision to halt proceedings.
Wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Wochen
Offene Fragen
- Will the Kaba family accept the IOPC's decision?
- How many other cases will be affected?
- What was the specific change in the legal test?






