Mahmood Mattan
Mahmood Mattan, 28, was the last person to be hanged in Cardiff 70 years ago for a crime he did not commit
The family of a man wrongly convicted of murder has been given a police apology for the âterrible sufferingâ the miscarriage of justice caused, 70 years after he was executed in a British prison.
Mahmood Mattan, a British Somali father of three, was hanged aged 28 in September 1952 after he was convicted of killing Lily Volpert in her Cardiff clothes store. He protested his innocence to the end.
However, in 1998 after tireless campaigning by his family, his conviction was the first Criminal Case Review Commission referral to be quashed at the court of appeal.
Jeremy Vaughan, chief constable of South Wales police, said: âThis is a case very much of its time â racism, bias and prejudice would have been prevalent throughout society, including the criminal justice system.
âThere is no doubt that Mahmood Mattan was the victim of a miscarriage of justice as a result of a flawed prosecution, of which policing was clearly a part.â
Detectives from Cardiff city police, now part of South Wales police, investigated the killing of Volpert, 41, whose throat had been slit at the shop in the docks area in March 1952.
Vaughan said that while the investigation âpre-dates the formation of South Wales policeâ, he added: âIt is right and proper that an apology is made on behalf of policing for what went so badly wrong in this case 70 years ago and for the terrible suffering of Mr Mattanâs family and all those affected by this tragedy for many years.
âEven to this day, we are still working hard to ensure that racism and prejudice are eradicated from society and policing.â
Mattanâs wife, Laura, and their three sons David, Omar and Mervyn, also known as Eddie, campaigned for 46 years for his name to be cleared but have all since died.
Tanya Mattan, a granddaughter of Mattan, told the BBC the apology was âfar too late for the people directly affected as they are no longer with us and still, we are yet to hear the words I am/we are sorry.â
Mattan, a former seaman who was originally from Hargeisa in what was then known as British Somaliland, was arrested within hours of Volpertâs murder.
He was charged and convicted by an all-white jury in a three-day trial in Swansea.
This was despite there being no forensic evidence and Mattan having his alibi backed up by witnesses.
Mattan spoke very little English and during the trial his own defence barrister called him a âsemi-civilised savageâ.
In 2001 the Mattan family received compensation from the Home Office but had not received an apology from the police until now.
SOURCE: The Guardian
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