CelebrityLegal battle

Survivors of 2017 Ariana Grande U.K. concert bombing take legal action against intelligence agency

An official inquiry reported last year that Britain’s domestic intelligence agency, MI5, didn’t act swiftly enough on key information and missed a significant opportunity to prevent the bombing.

 

Image: A girl leaves flowers for the victims of an attack on concert goers at Manchester Arena, in central Manchester
A girl leaves flowers for the victims of an attack on concertgoers at Manchester Arena in central Manchester, England, on May 23, 2017.Peter Nicholls / Reuters
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Lawyers from three law firms said Sunday they have submitted a group claim on behalf of more than 250 clients to the U.K.’s investigatory powers tribunal. They said they could not provide further details because it was an ongoing legal matter.

Suicide bomber Salman Abedi set up a knapsack bomb in Manchester Arena, in northwestern England, at the end of Grande’s concert on May 22, 2017, as thousands of young fans were leaving. More than 100 people were injured, many of them children and teenagers. Abedi died in the explosion.

An official inquiry reported last year that Britain’s domestic intelligence agency, MI5, didn’t act swiftly enough on key information and missed a significant opportunity to prevent the bombing, the deadliest extremist attack in the U.K. in recent years.

Abedi had been a “subject of interest” to MI5 officials in 2014, but his case was closed shortly after because he was deemed to be low-risk.

 

-NBC News