In 2012, following the publication of the HIP Report, the then Attorney General applied to the High Court to have the Popper Inquests’ verdicts, of accidental death, quashed. The application was successful, and the Goldring Inquests began in 2013.
The IOPC and Operation Resolve conducted enquiries for the Goldring Inquests and provided more than one million pages of investigative material, such as witness statements and documents, together with hundreds of hours of AV material. Operation Resolve also produced a comprehensive timeline of the movements of each of those who died, built from AV material and witness statements, and its senior investigating officer presented detailed background evidence about the disaster.
The Goldring Inquests hearings ran for 308 days, spread over two years, and heard evidence from more than 1,000 individuals. Having heard the evidence, the jury concluded that all of those who died in the Hillsborough disaster were unlawfully killed—a profound and momentous change from the conclusion of the original inquests.
As part of its conclusions, the jury was also asked to answer a series of questions. One of these was, “Was there any behaviour on the part of football supporters which caused or contributed to the dangerous situation at the Leppings Lane turnstiles?” The jury responded “no”. They were then asked if there was any such behaviour which may have caused or contributed to the dangerous situation; again, the answer was “no”.