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Two convicted of Menson racial killing

Terri Judd,Jason Bennetto
Wednesday 22 December 1999 00:02 GMT
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THE FAMILY of a black musician who was turned into a fireball as a racist "joke" launched a scathing attack on police as his killers were convicted yesterday.

Three years after Michael Menson's death - initially dismissed as suicide by Scotland Yard - a jury at the Old Bailey found his killers guilty. A third man was convicted of the killing a month ago. Mario Pereira, 26, was found guilty of murder, while Harry Constantinou, 27, was cleared of murder but found guilty of manslaughter. The third man, Ozguy Cevat, 22, who fled to the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, was convicted there of manslaughter and sentenced to 14 years.

Pereira and Constantinou, with Husseyin Abdullah, 50, all from Edmonton, north London, were also convicted of perverting the course of justice by obstructing the police inquiry. They will be sentenced today.

Mr Menson, 30, who suffered from mental illness, was set on fire in January 1997 and died 16 days later. On his deathbed he insisted to his family that he had been attacked and they pushed police to take the matter seriously.

The case, which bears disturbing similarities to the murder of Stephen Lawrence in 1993, has proved yet another serious embarrassment for the Metropolitan Police.

It was not until an inquest jury returned a verdict of unlawful killing earlier this year that Scotland Yard's race and violent crimes taskforce took over the case. Within a few months, officers gathered enough evidence to arrest the killers in an operation that cost pounds 1.2m.

Speaking at a press conference yesterday, Kwezi Menson, the dead man's brother, said: "It can't be right that a family like mine are left to battle for three years against insuperable odds and to continue to fight until we are taken seriously."

Earlier, his sister, Essie, said: "We have no doubt that had Michael been white a greater investigation for witnesses would have been launched and the police would have taken what he said more seriously. It was a failure of motivation and will. There's nothing to suggest anything has changed."

Deputy Assistant Commissioner John Grieve said: "The family's role was pivotal. They have been utterly steadfast in their pursuit for justice."

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