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Posted By col
Further to the thread which was censored due to the court case being ongoing, please find below the conclusion. I would also appreciate it if some one could explain how she was not grossly negligent and only negligent.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/...land/cumbria/5232086.stm
A COUNCIL architect was cleared of manslaughter but fined £15,000 yesterday
for her role in Britain's worst outbreak of Legionnaires Disease.
Gillian Beckingham was convicted of breaking health and safety laws by
cancelling a contract which meant necessary tests were not carried out on
the air conditioning at an arts centre in Barrow, Cumbria.
Beckingham, 48, head of the Design Services group at Barrow Borough Council,
and the council itself received sentences on similar charges at Preston
Crown Court yesterday.
Five people died and about 172 others were infected after the Forum 28 arts
centre air conditioning system became faulty and sprayed deadly Legionnaires
bacteria into the air in summer 2002.
Among those who recovered from the illness were two men from North Yorkshire
who had visited Barrow.
Yesterday Beckingham, from Grange-over-Sands, Cumbria, who was born in York
and studied at Leeds School of Architecture, was cleared of manslaughter
after an eight-week retrial. The council pleaded guilty to health and safety
failures at the first trial in February 2005.
The court heard she cancelled a contract that provided for the upkeep of the
air conditioning unit and negotiated another one that did not require the
new contractor to use necessary water cooling chemicals.
The judge, Mr Justice Burnton, told her: "In my opinion, your failings were
repeated and serious. But for the context in which your failings occurred...
the result of this trial might have been very different."
The judge criticised Beckingham for failing to plead guilty at the first
opportunity and said the fine would have been more but for her "limited
means".
Barrow Borough Council, which was fined £125,000 with £90,000 in costs,
ignored repeated warnings about health and safety, the judge said.
"This outbreak was a tragedy which should never have happened," he said.
"The failings were not only at the lowest levels or at the levels of Ms
Beckingham. These failings were all the way to the top of the council."
Families of the victims have called for council chief executive Tom Campbell
to take responsibility for the council's failures and resign. Until now he
has resisted those calls.
Speaking outside court, relatives of victims complained about the "whispered
apology" from the council which had to be repeated three times in court
because it could not be heard from the public gallery.
"All the warning signs were there and those responsible didn't do anything
about the problem," said Andy Macaulay, whose grandfather Richard died in
the outbreak.
The prosecution claimed the deaths were "avoidable and unnecessary" and
pointed the finger squarely at Beckingham.
But she told the court she had never received any health and safety training
and denied responsibility for the air conditioning unit.
During July and August 2002 thick brown sludge built up inside the cooling
towers at the centre because cleaning chemicals were not replaced.
The temperature was not controlled and the towers became a perfect breeding
ground for the Legionella bacteria.
As the bacteria multiplied, they were spewed out into the air, exposing
visitors to the centre and shoppers using the adjoining alleyway.
At least five people were fatally infected; Richard Macaulay, 88, Wendy
Milburn, 56, Georgina Somerville, 54, Harriet Low, 74, and Christine
Merewood, 55.
The defence claimed two others, Elizabeth Dixon, 80, and June Miles, 56,
died from other causes.
The jury at the original trial was unable to reach a verdict on the
manslaughter charges. Beckingham was found guilty of breaking health and
safety rules but cleared by the Court of Appeal.
Barrow Borough Council was cleared of corporate manslaughter on the orders
of the judge at the first trial but admitted health and safety failures.
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