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The man cleared of the murder of Rachel Nickell on Wimbledon Common in 1992 has been awarded £706,000 damages by the Home Office.
Colin Stagg, 45, spent a year in custody before the case against him was thrown out at the Old Bailey in 1994 on the grounds that the police used a “honey trap” plot to encourage him to confess.
Ms Nickell, a 23-year-old former model, was stabbed 49 times as she walked on the common with her two-year-old son.
Mr Stagg, from Roehampton, southwest London, lived near by and was arrested for her murder, which he always denied. The Metropolitan Police tried to build a case against him using the female undercover officer who befriended him. Even after the case collapsed, the Metropolitan Police said they were not looking for anyone else in connection with the murder. After a review of Ms Nickell's killing, police charged Robert Napper, 41, with murder last November. He is due to face trial in November.
Mr Stagg said yesterday that the award was like “winning the lottery”, adding: “I am feeling a sort of peace for the first time since my arrest 15 years ago. I am now slowly realising that I have a future after all, and that is a great feeling.”
Last year Mr Stagg was told that he was eligible under a discretionary compensation scheme, with the amount to be set by an independent assessor, Lord Brennan, QC.
His solicitor, Alex Tribick, said that the offer was made in a letter from the Office of Criminal Justice Reform on Tuesday after an application for compensation. He said his client did not believe him initially when he told him the amount.
He said that Lord Brennan submitted a “carefully considered and reasoned” 70-page document supporting the award in which he described the police tactics as “highly unusual and legally bizarre”. He said they had contributed to his decision to award such a large sum.
“I am quite satisfied that this amounts to misconduct in the investigation and prosecution of this case and I categorise it egregious,” Lord Brennan concluded.
Mr Tribick said that he had been asked by Mr Stagg to look at the possibility of suing the Metropolitan Police for malicious prosecution, but thought this would be “jolly tricky” because of time limits that may have expired to begin such a claim.
Of the compensation, he said: “This is an offer that has been made and that offer has been accepted. Naturally Colin is relieved and it will go some way to compensating him for the vilification that he has received at the hands of the public and media for the last 16 years.
“It will allow him to try and rebuild his life and to have some sort of normal existence. But of course what he really wanted was an apology from the Metropolitan Police and I think he has accepted that is something he will never get.
“He is not angry - he is hurt and disappointed. He is gradually getting his life back on track and this will act as a catalyst.”
Mr Stagg said yesterday: “I would like to buy my council flat where I have lived for over 30 years and I want to put in a new bathroom and kitchen and make a few changes in the garden and, of course, make sure that I have got food on the table and my bills paid.
“The best thing is being able to get off the dole. I am a proud man who has never been afraid of work, but nobody in the countless interviews I have attended has wanted to take me on. Now I have got a couple of small business ideas I can afford to try out, but I want to take my time and not rush into things.
“I am still coming to terms with all the implications that go with the award. I am not going on a spending spree. I plan to bank most of it. That is what I have got to live on for the rest of my life.”
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What about all the men that are jailed every year for false allegations of rape and only released after a trial and a not guilty verdict???
What about them?
Jo, london, uk
The principle must be right - if the state destroys life wrongly, it must compensate. Brennan has assessed damages at more than he would have earned.
But the system and law doesn't always work. Read my book - "Easy Touch" - the omerta of the English legal establishment. A very frightening story
Simon Kaberry, West Yorkshire,
Here in the US the law says you are innocent until proven guilty. However, the attorneys as well as law inforcement disregard that. It's all about winning the case whether the person is guilty or not. 16 years of a persons life has been destroyed. What is the cost of someones life?
Robert, Stuarts Draft, USA
No amount of money can compensate for jailing a person for a crime they did not commit. I wish he had gotten over 5 million pounds, and all those in the police force who arrested him, and planed this dispicable confession should have been fired. Good luck and God bless Mr.Stagg,
Jeffrey Churchill, Pierrefonds, Quebec. CANADA
Why did it take 16 years? Did they hope he would die in the meantime so they wouldn`t have to dip into their pockets? Quick to judge and jail. Snail-like to (try to) make good. And yes, it is different when it`s the government that does it to you rather than an individual.
Jim, Herts,
It is amazing that he seems to have grown to be such a level-headed person after all this misery. He was certainly quite lost and vulnerable16 years ago
Suzanne, Wimbledon, UK
Lock me up for a couple of years please, I could do with 700k.
Victims of crime get peanuts, and Stagg gets all this for admiting to murder?
Peterr, Northants, UK
I struggle to understand most of the outrage about the award to Colin Stagg. If I had suffered such a loss of freedom and reputation, with exposure to the dangers of prison life, all because of police actions, the very least I'd deserve would be substantial compensation
Simon Back, Sutton Coldfield, UK
That is just a fraction of what Barry George will get.
Phil, Aberdeen,
I think the whole system of compensation payments needs to be addressed as a matter of urgency. £700k for Stagg, a fraction of that for the victims son. Is that right, is it the 'decent' and honourable thing to do? Probably not but when did doing the 'right' thing matter when the law is involved
Dean Page, Surrey, England
Good luck to him. It's a pity the corrupt police aren't being made to pay it out of their own pockets.
Ron Sizely, Cambridge,