Ian Airlie died at his home in Greenwich, southeast London, one month after the fall down the escalator for the Jubilee Line at Waterloo Station in central London ...
A family man who died after falling down a Waterloo Station escalator was 'not pushed' but ... His family had believed the 48-year-old was pushed down the Jubilee Line escalator at the underground ...
A man who died weeks after falling down an escalator in London had not been pushed, the Met Police has said. An appeal for information was made after Ian Airlie's family contacted detectives to say he ...
Mr Airlie's family told officers he had been pushed down Waterloo Station’s Jubilee Line escalator at 5.05pm on September 15. His cousin Sarah Strugnell, 50, said he had been set upon by a group ...
After his death, his family told police that Ian had reportedly been pushed down Waterloo Station’s Jubilee Line escalator at 5.05pm on Sunday, 15 September. Mr Airlie is believed to have spoken ...
Mr Airlie's family told officers that they believed he had been pushed down Waterloo Station’s Jubilee Line escalator at 5.05pm on September 15. However, police have since confirmed that they ...
His family informed the police that he had been reportedly pushed down the Jubilee Line escalator at Waterloo Station at 5.05pm on Sunday, September 15. Following the fall, Mr Airlie is believed ...
Police believe Ian Airlie spoke to a number of people after he fell, and are now appealing for them to come forward.
Ian Airlie, 48, was found dead at his home in Greenwich, south-east London, on October 10 last year, weeks after the fall at Waterloo station’s Jubilee line escalator at 5.05pm on Sunday September 15.
His family told the force Mr Airlie had reportedly been pushed down Waterloo Station’s Jubilee Line escalator at 5.05pm on September 15. Following his fall, Mr Airlie is believed to have spoken ...