Death of Jack Avery
Jack Avery | |
---|---|
Born | 1911/1912 |
Died |
6 July 1940 (aged 28) St. Mary's Hospital, London, England |
Police career | |
Department | Metropolitan Police Service |
Badge number | 890A |
Rank | War Reserve Constable |
Jack William Avery (1911/1912 – 6 July 1940) was a War Reserve Constable who was murdered in Hyde Park, London, on 5 July 1940, having served less than one year with the Metropolitan Police Service.
Avery was stabbed in the groin by Frank Stephen Cobbett, after Avery approached him having been advised by a member of the public that Cobbett was acting suspiciously. Cobbett, then aged 42 and of no fixed address, was originally sentenced to death for murder, but after an appeal served 15 years penal servitude for manslaughter instead.[1]
In 2007 Ian Blair, then Metropolitan Police Commissioner, unveiled a memorial to Avery in Hyde Park, close to the place where he was attacked.[2]
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