Day or night, you won't miss a story with the Liverpool Echo newsletter Sign me up now Thank you for subscribing We have more newsletters Show me See our privacy notice Invalid Email

This is the truth about Hillsborough - 96 Liverpool fans were unlawfully killed after a series of failures.

The Liverpool fans who died in the disaster were victims of gross negligence at the hands of match commander David Duckenfield, the inquest jury today concluded .

In a landmark verdict the inquests jury said those who died in the disaster had been killed unlawfully.

The decision - which sparked cries of joy in the packed courtroom - could now pave the way for criminal action following the inquests.

Revealing their decision just after 11am, the jury said the 96 victims were unlawfully killed.

The courtroom heard there were major omissions in the 1989 operational order, and that police response to increasing crowds outside the ground was "slow and uncoordinated"

On the question of unlawful killing, they said it was a majority decision. Seven agreed with this question.

The decision brings an end to a 27 year battle for the truth waged by campaigners following the 1989 tragedy

In reaching a decision over question six - widely seen as the most significant of the 14 asked of the nine person panel - the jury were told: “In order to answer ‘yes’ to that question [of unlawful killing], you would have to be sure that David Duckenfield, the match commander, was responsible for the manslaughter by gross negligence of those 96 people.

“When answering this question we are looking at Mr Duckenfield’s conduct and his responsibility.”

He said they would have to be sure that Mr Duckenfield owed a duty of care to the 96 people who died, that he breached that duty of care, that his breach caused their deaths and that the breach amounted to “gross negligence”.

Since retiring to consider their decisions on Wednesday, April 6 the question over whether the 96 fans unlawfully died had appeared to be the one that had troubled the panel the most.

On Monday coroner Lord Justice Goldring told the jury he would accept a majority verdict over the question - meaning at least seven people needed to agree on the issue.

Today their decision was revealed - to the joy of the campaigners who have fought for justice for 27 years.