Media portrayal Initial media coverage – spurred by what
Phil Scraton calls in
Hillsborough: The Truth "the
Heysel factor" and
"hooligan hysteria" – began to shift the blame onto the behaviour of the Liverpool fans at the stadium, making it a
public order issue. As well as
The Suns 19 April 1989 "The Truth" article (see below) other newspapers published similar allegations; the
Daily Star headline on the same day reported "Dead fans robbed by drunk thugs"; the
Daily Mail accused the Liverpool fans of being "drunk and violent and their actions were vile", and
The Daily Express ran a story alleging that "Police saw 'sick spectacle of pilfering from the dying'." Peter McKay in the
Evening Standard wrote that the "catastrophe was caused first and foremost by violent enthusiasm for soccer and in this case the tribal passions of Liverpool supporters [who] literally killed themselves and others to be at the game" In Liverpool local journalist John Williams of the
Liverpool Daily Post wrote in an article titled "I Blame the Yobs" Many of the more serious allegations – such as stealing from the dead and assault of police officers and rescue workers – appeared on 18 April, although several evening newspapers published on 15 April 1989 also gave inaccurate reporting of the disaster, as these newspapers went to press before the full extent or circumstances of the disaster had been confirmed or even reported. This included the
Wolverhampton-based
Express & Star, which reported that the match had been cancelled as a result of a "pitch invasion in which many fans were injured". This article was presumably published before there were any reports that people had been killed. These media reports and others were examined during the 2012 Hillsborough Independent Panel report.
The Sun '', 19 April 1989 On 19 April, four days after the disaster, Kelvin MacKenzie, editor of
The Sun, ordered "The Truth" as the front-page headline, followed by three sub-headlines: "Some fans picked pockets of victims", "Some fans urinated on the brave cops" and "Some fans beat up
PC giving
kiss of life". Mackenzie reportedly spent two hours deciding on which headline to run; his original instinct being for "You Scum" before eventually deciding on "The Truth". The information was provided to the newspaper by
Whites Press Agency, a
news agency in Sheffield; the newspaper cited claims by police inspector Gordon Sykes, that Liverpool fans had pickpocketed the dead, as well as other claims by unnamed police officers and local Conservative MP
Irvine Patnick.
The Daily Express also carried Patnick's version, under the headline "Police Accuse Drunken Fans" which gave Patnick's views, saying he had told Margaret Thatcher, while escorting her on a tour of the ground after the disaster, of the "mayhem caused by drunks" and that policemen told him they were "hampered, harassed, punched and kicked". The story accompanying
The Sun headlines claimed "drunken Liverpool fans viciously attacked rescue workers as they tried to revive victims" and "police officers, firemen and ambulance crew were punched, kicked and urinated upon". A quotation, attributed to an unnamed policeman, claimed a partially unclothed dead girl had been verbally abused, and that Liverpool fans were "openly urinating on us and the bodies of the dead". In fact many Liverpool fans helped security personnel stretcher away victims and gave first aid to the injured.
The Guardian later wrote that "The claim that supporters higher up the Leppings Lane terrace had urinated on police pulling bodies out of the crush appeared to have roots in the fact that those who were dying or sustaining serious injuries suffered
compression asphyxia and many
involuntarily urinated, vomited and emptied their bowels as they were crushed." In their history of
The Sun, Peter Chippendale and
Chris Horrie wrote: MacKenzie maintained for years that his "only mistake was to believe a Tory MP". In 1993, he told a
House of Commons committee, "I regret Hillsborough. It was a fundamental mistake. The mistake was I believed what an MP said", but privately said at a 2006 dinner that he had only apologised under the instruction of
Rupert Murdoch, believing: "all I did wrong was tell the truth ... I was not sorry then and I'm not sorry now". On
Question Time the next year, MacKenzie publicly repeated the claims he said at the dinner; he said that he believed some of the material they published in
The Sun but was not sure about all of it. Widespread boycotts of the newspaper throughout
Merseyside followed immediately and continue to this day. Boycotts include both customers refusing to purchase it, and retailers refusing to stock it. The
Financial Times reported in 2019 that Merseyside sales were estimated to drop from 55,000 per day to 12,000 per day, an 80% decrease.
Chris Horrie estimated in 2014 that the tabloid's owners had lost £15million per month since the disaster, in 1989 prices. In 2004, after
Wayne Rooney gave exclusive interviews to
The Sun, causing backlash in Liverpool,
The Sun ran a front-page story apologising for "the most terrible mistake in its history", saying "We long ago apologised publicly... We gladly say sorry again today: fully, openly, honestly and without reservation". It said criticism of Rooney was wrong and co-ordinated by the
Liverpool Echo and
Liverpool Post. The
Liverpool Echo condemned the apology as "cynical and shameless". In 2012, under the headline "The Real Truth",
The Sun made a front-page apology, saying "we are profoundly sorry for false reports". The editor at the time, Dominic Mohan, wrote: "We published an inaccurate and offensive story about the events at Hillsborough. We said it was the truth – it wasn't... for that we're deeply ashamed and profoundly sorry". Following the second inquest in 2016,
The Suns eighth and ninth pages carried images of the 96 victims and an editorial which apologised "unreservedly", saying "the police smeared [supporters] with a pack of lies which in 1989 the Sun and other media swallowed whole". A lengthier apology was published online.
James Murdoch made a full apology for
The Sun coverage when he appeared at a hearing of the House of Commons
Select committee dealing with the
News International phone hacking scandal in 2012. On 12 September 2012, after the publication of the report exonerating the Liverpool fans, MacKenzie issued the following statement: In response, Trevor Hicks, chairman of the Hillsborough Family Support Group, rejected MacKenzie's apology as "too little, too late", calling him "
lowlife, clever lowlife, but lowlife". A press conference held by families of the victims also banned all
Sun reporters from entering, with a sign on the door reading "NO ENTRY TO SUN JOURNALISTS". On the night of the verdict coverage, more than 124,000 tweets used the term
The Sun. However, on
Sky News,
The Sun Political Editor
Tom Newton Dunn defended this decision, saying: "I don't think it should all be about
The Sun – it was not us who committed Hillsborough." In February 2017, Liverpool F.C. issued a ban on
The Sun journalists from entering their grounds in response to the coverage of Hillsborough by the newspaper.
Everton F.C. followed in April 2017 on the eve of the 28th anniversary of the disaster after a column by Kelvin MacKenzie concerning Everton footballer
Ross Barkley. MacKenzie was suspended as a contributor to the newspaper.
The Times The journalist
Edward Pearce was criticised for writing a controversial article in the aftermath of the disaster, at a time when a number of victims' funerals were taking place. His column in
The Sunday Times on 23 April 1989, included the text: Pearce went on to reflect that if South Yorkshire Police bore any responsibility, it was "for not realising what brutes they had to handle." Phil Scraton described Pearce's comments as amongst the "most bigoted and factually inaccurate" published in the wake of the disaster. A number of complaints were made to the
Press Council concerning the article, but the Council ruled that it was unable to adjudicate on comment pieces, though the Council noted that tragedy or disaster is not an occasion for writers to exercise gratuitous provocation. On 27 April 2016,
Times staffers in the sports department expressed their outrage over the paper's decision to cover 26 April inquest, which ruled that the 96 dead were unlawfully killed, only on an inside spread and the sports pages, with some in the newspaper claiming there was a "mutiny" in the sports department. The
Times later tweeted that "We made a mistake with the front page of our first edition, and we fixed it for our second edition." The
Times was the only major UK newspaper not to give the story front-page coverage other than fellow News UK-owned
Sun.
Gary Lineker described the incident as "disgusting as it is unsurprising", and
David Walsh, chief sports writer at the
Sunday Times, said it was a "shocking misjudgment" to not include this story on the front page. However, insiders dismissed any suggestion that a visit by News UK owner Rupert Murdoch to the
Times newsroom on the day of the verdict had anything to do with the editorial decision. As a result,
Emap Australia, who owned
FHM at the time, pledged to make a donation to the families of the victims. Although the original apology was not printed in the magazine as it was not considered "serious enough", its Australian editor, Geoff Campbell, released a statement: "We deeply regret the photograph captions published in the November issue of the Australian edition of
FHM, accompanying an article about the Hillsborough disaster of 1989. The right course of action is to withdraw this edition from sale – which we will be doing. We have been in contact with the Hillsborough Family Support Group and the Hillsborough Justice Campaign to express our deep regret and sincere apologies." Although the editor
Boris Johnson did not write this piece, journalist
Simon Heffer said he had written the first draft of the article at Johnson's request. Johnson apologised at the time of the article, travelling to Liverpool to do so, and again following the publication of the report of the Hillsborough Independent Panel in 2012; Johnson's apology was rejected by Margaret Aspinall, chair of the Hillsborough Family Support Group, whose son James, 18, died in the disaster: The
Spectator comments were widely circulated following the April 2016 verdict by the Hillsborough inquest's second hearing proving
unlawful killing of the 96 dead at Hillsborough.
Charles Itandje Liverpool goalkeeper
Charles Itandje was accused of having shown disrespect towards the Hillsborough victims during the 2009 remembrance ceremony, as he was spotted on camera "smiling and nudging" teammate
Damien Plessis. He was suspended from the club for a fortnight and many fans felt he should not play for the club again. He was omitted from the first team squad and never played for the club in any capacity again.
Jeremy Hunt On 28 June 2010, following
England's departure from the
2010 FIFA World Cup in South Africa, the UK's Culture and Sport Secretary
Jeremy Hunt praised the England fans for their behaviour during the competition, saying "I mean, not a single arrest for a football-related offence, and the terrible problems that we had in Heysel and Hillsborough in the 1980s seem now to be behind us." He later apologised and said "I know that fan unrest played no part in the terrible events of April 1989 and I apologise to Liverpool fans and the families of those killed and injured in the Hillsborough disaster if my comments caused any offence." Margaret Aspinall, chair of the Hillsborough Family Support Group, asked for a face to face meeting with Hunt before deciding if she would accept the apology.
Fans' chants Fans of rival clubs have been known to chant about the Hillsborough disaster at football matches, in order to upset Liverpool fans. Following the findings of the Independent Panel in September 2012,
Alex Ferguson and two Manchester United fan groups called for an end to the "sick chants". Leeds United chairman
Ken Bates endorsed this call in the club programme and stated, "Leeds have suffered at times
with reference to Galatasaray; some of our so-called fans have also been guilty as well, particularly in relation to
Munich." "Munich" is a reference to the deaths of eight Manchester United players in the
Munich air disaster of 1958.
Oliver Popplewell In October 2011,
Sir Oliver Popplewell, who had chaired the public inquiry into the 1985
Bradford City stadium fire at
Valley Parade that killed 56 people, called on the families of the Hillsborough victims to look at the "quiet dignity and great courage relatives in the West Yorkshire city had shown in the years following the tragedy". He said of the Bradford families: "They did not harbour conspiracy theories. They did not seek endless further inquiries. They buried their dead, comforted the bereaved and succoured the injured. They organised a sensible compensation scheme and moved on. Is there, perhaps, a lesson there for the Hillsborough campaigners?" Popplewell was criticised for the comments, including a rebuke from a survivor of the Bradford fire. Labour MP
Steve Rotheram, commented: "How insensitive does somebody have to be to write that load of drivel?"
David Crompton In 2013, a formal complaint was made against
David Crompton, South Yorkshire's chief constable, over internal emails relating to the Hillsborough disaster. On 8 September 2012, just four days before the Hillsborough Independent Panel Report was published, Crompton had emailed the force's assistant chief constable Andy Holt and head of media Mark Thompson. In the email, which came to light as the result of a
Freedom of Information request, Crompton had said that the families' "version of certain events has become 'the truth' even though it isn't". South Yorkshire's police and crime commissioner Shaun Wright appointed chief constable Simon Parr of
Cambridgeshire Constabulary to head an investigation into the matter. Wright said: "The request has been submitted by a firm of solicitors in Liverpool acting on behalf of a number of individuals affected by the event." In March 2016, Crompton announced that he would retire in November. On 26 April 2016, after the inquest jury delivered a verdict affirming all the charges against the police, Crompton "unequivocally accepted" the verdicts, including unlawful killing, said that the police operation at the stadium on the day of the disaster had been "catastrophically wrong", and apologised unreservedly. Following continued criticism of Crompton in the wake of the unlawful killing verdict,
South Yorkshire Police and Crime Commissioner Alan Billings suspended Crompton from duty on 27 April 2016.
Civil servant In June 2014, an unnamed 24-year-old British civil servant was sacked for posting offensive comments about the disaster on
Wikipedia.
Steven Cohen In 2009, nearly twenty years to the day after the disaster, Steven Cohen, a presenter on
Fox Soccer Channel and
Sirius satellite radio in the United States (an Englishman and Chelsea fan), stated on his radio show that Liverpool fans "without tickets" were the "root cause" and "perpetrators" of the disaster. A boycott of advertisers by American Liverpool fans eventually brought about an apology from him. Despite this he was replaced as presenter of Fox Football Fone-in. His actions were disowned by Chelsea Football Club and he no longer works as a broadcaster.
Bernard Ingham In 1996,
Sir Bernard Ingham, former press secretary to former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, caused controversy with his comments about the disaster. In a letter addressed to a victim's parent, Ingham wrote that the disaster was caused by "tanked up yobs". In another letter written to a Liverpool supporter, also written in 1996, Ingham remarked that people should "shut up about Hillsborough". On the day of the inquest verdict, Ingham refused to apologise or respond to the previous comments he made, telling a reporter, "I have nothing to say."
Topman In March 2018, British clothing retailer
Topman marketed a T-shirt which was interpreted by members of the public, including relatives of Hillsborough victims, as mocking the disaster. The T-shirt was red with white details like a Liverpool shirt, and had the number 96 on the back like a football shirt, with the text "Karma" and "What goes around comes back around", and a white rose, as associated with Yorkshire. Topman stated that the T-shirt was in reference to a
Bob Marley song
re-released in 1996 and apologised and withdrew the item. ==Radio, television and theatre==