eastlondonseagull
Well-known member
Interesting this, taken from my local rag. Wonder whether Liverpool thugs are using Hillsborough as an excuse...
Lions Fans Are Cleared
A Millwall supporter's group has welcomed a police report which clears fans of inciting crowd violence with chants about the Hillsborough disaster.
Liverpool fans ripped up more than 70 seats and hurled them at police during the Merseyside club's 3-0 Carling Cup win at The Den last month.
Some Liverpool supporters said the trouble was caused by distasteful chanting from the Millwall section, but a Metropolitan Police report has rejected the claim.
In his report, acting Chief Superintendent Dean Higgins refers to terrace banter between rival fans, no worse than at other matches up and down the country.
No specific mention is made of the disaster at the Sheffield ground, where 96 Liverpool fans lost their lives in April 1989.
Supporters' group the Lions Trust has welcomed the report, claiming the Hillsborough connection was exaggerated by an anti-Millwall section of the media.
Trust chairman Bob Asprey said: "The way this was picked up by the national press was no more than we have come to expect. They need no encouragement to knock the club and its fans.
"I was at the game and didn't hear any songs about Hillsborough.
"There was not much evidence to suggest we were at fault. The Liverpool fans ripped up 70 seats but we didn't hear much about that.
"The police report confirms what I though in the aftermath of the trouble, the Liverpool fans had no justification for reacting in the way they did."
A police spokesman said a report had been produced for the FA, to clear up the allegations surrounding the match.
Millwall Football Club said it would not comment until the FA has carried out a full investigation into the trouble.
Lions Fans Are Cleared
A Millwall supporter's group has welcomed a police report which clears fans of inciting crowd violence with chants about the Hillsborough disaster.
Liverpool fans ripped up more than 70 seats and hurled them at police during the Merseyside club's 3-0 Carling Cup win at The Den last month.
Some Liverpool supporters said the trouble was caused by distasteful chanting from the Millwall section, but a Metropolitan Police report has rejected the claim.
In his report, acting Chief Superintendent Dean Higgins refers to terrace banter between rival fans, no worse than at other matches up and down the country.
No specific mention is made of the disaster at the Sheffield ground, where 96 Liverpool fans lost their lives in April 1989.
Supporters' group the Lions Trust has welcomed the report, claiming the Hillsborough connection was exaggerated by an anti-Millwall section of the media.
Trust chairman Bob Asprey said: "The way this was picked up by the national press was no more than we have come to expect. They need no encouragement to knock the club and its fans.
"I was at the game and didn't hear any songs about Hillsborough.
"There was not much evidence to suggest we were at fault. The Liverpool fans ripped up 70 seats but we didn't hear much about that.
"The police report confirms what I though in the aftermath of the trouble, the Liverpool fans had no justification for reacting in the way they did."
A police spokesman said a report had been produced for the FA, to clear up the allegations surrounding the match.
Millwall Football Club said it would not comment until the FA has carried out a full investigation into the trouble.