Teenager wrongly arrested wins race discrimination claim against the Met
A jury has found the Metropolitan police discriminated against a Black teenager, Daryl McLune, because of his race during his arrest in July 2021. McLune, then 16, was wrongly arrested and held for 23 hours on suspicion of attempting to murder his mother after she attempted suicide at their London home.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedA jury has found the Metropolitan police discriminated against a Black teenager, Daryl McLune, because of his race during his arrest in July 2021. McLune, then 16, was wrongly arrested and held for 23 hours on suspicion of attempting to murder his mother after she attempted suicide at their London home. The court heard that officers arrested him despite not having an honest suspicion he committed the offense and detained him for an unreasonable period. The jury concluded McLune was treated less favorably than a non-Black boy would have been, constituting a breach of human rights. The Met acknowledged the distressing circumstances and stated they are committed to tackling discrimination. The judge will determine compensation at a later date.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedThe jury found that it was proved that McLune was treated less favourably than a non-black boy would have been by the police.
McLune was arrested and held for 23 hours on suspicion of attempted murder of his mother.
A jury found that the Met discriminated against Daryl McLune because he was black.
A teenager wrongly arrested for attempted murder has won a race discrimination claim against the Metropolitan police.
The ordeal had a profound effect on his life and he now suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder, nightmares and flashbacks.