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London defiant after month of turmoil
09:43 - Source: CNN

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Police confirmed there are "reasonable grounds" to pursue corporate manslaughter charges

At least 80 people were killed in the disaster

CNN  — 

Testing in Britain found that the cladding in 82 high-rise residential buildings doesn’t meet fire safety standards.

The announcement on Friday was made in the wake of the Grenfell Tower fire in London last month.

The conclusion was made after large-scale tests of buildings’ cladding, or insulation systems. The structures have a combination of materials in their wall cladding systems that does not meet “current building regulation guidance,” government officials said.

At least 80 people were killed on June 14, when a blaze engulfed a residential tower block in North Kensington. To date, only 42 of the victims have been formally identified.

Officials also announced an independent review of building regulations and fire safety.

The review will be led by Dame Judith Hackitt and will look at current building regulations and fire safety, with a focus on high-rise residential buildings. It will report to Communities Secretary Sajid Javid and Home Secretary Amber Rudd.

“This independent review will ensure we can swiftly make any necessary improvements. Government is determined to make sure that we learn the lessons from Grenfell Tower fire, and to ensure nothing like it can happen again,” Javid said.

The review will focus on the “regulatory system around the design, construction and ongoing management of buildings in relation to fire safety, “related compliance and enforcement issues; “and “international regulation and experience in this area.”

“Reasonable grounds to pursue charges”

Campaigners for the victims of the Grenfell Tower fire say individuals as well as local authorities should be held accountable for the disaster, after police confirmed there are “reasonable grounds” to pursue corporate manslaughter charges.

On Thursday, London’s Metropolitan Police sent a letter addressed to those “directly affected by the fire” to update them on the progress of the investigation.

The letter, which has been seen by CNN, says police have “seized a huge amount of material” and after an “initial assessment” they believe there are “reasonable grounds” to suspect that the local council and the tenant management organization “may have committed the offense of corporate manslaughter.”

“Our residents deserve answers about the Grenfell Tower fire and the police investigation will provide these. We fully support the Metropolitan Police Investigation and we will cooperate in every way we can,” Elizabeth Campbell, the new leader of Kensington and Chelsea Council, the group responsible for the management of the building, said in a statement sent to CNN.

“It would not be appropriate to comment further on matters subject to the police investigation,” she added.

Grenfell Tower as it appears today.

The Kensington and Chelsea Tenant Management Organization told CNN in a statement, “Following the tragic events at Grenfell Tower, we made it an immediate priority to cooperate fully with the investigation process. We will continue to do so.”

The police letter was not publicly released by police, but was sent by the former chairman of the Grenfell Residents’ Association, David Collins, who says the letter shows “progress, a move in the right direction.”

Campaign group Justice4Grenfell “welcomes” the letter, according to a statement released Thursday, but adds that the police should go further by ensuring that individuals involved are also “named, charged and put on trial.”

Under UK law, individuals cannot be charged with corporate manslaughter, only companies or organizations, and the maximum punishment is a fine. Individuals can be criminally charged under separate statutes of gross negligence manslaughter. But, as of now, no criminal charges have been filed.

“A fine would not represent justice for the Grenfell victims and their families,” David Lammy, a British lawmaker whose friend Khadija Saye perished in the fire, said on his official Twitter account.

“Gross negligence manslaughter carries a punishment of prison time and I hope that the police and the CPS (Crown Prosecution Service) are considering charges of manslaughter caused by gross negligence,” Lammy added.

Police say their investigation is ongoing.

Londoners share a moment of silence for the Grenfell Tower fire victims.

“The Met started an investigation into the cause and spread of the fire at Grenfell Tower on 14 June. Since then we have stated that it is a criminal investigation, considering the full range of offences from corporate manslaughter to regulatory breaches,” the Metropolitan Police said in a Metropolitan Police statement obtained by CNN. “This is a complex and far reaching investigation that by its very nature will take a considerable time to complete.”

Several leading figures of The Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea, which has been criticized for its handling of the tragedy’s aftermath, have resigned from their posts. The UK government even appointed a task force to take over parts of the council.

Some residents of Grenfell Tower say they had made multiple complaints to the council about the fire safety of the building.

A few days after the disaster, the UK Treasury Secretary Philip Hammond said he believed that the cladding apparently used in a recent refurbishment of the building is banned in Britain for buildings above a certain height.

Protester Michael Bradley leads the Grenfell Tower demonstrators down Regent Street in central London.

Samples of insulation from the tower and equivalent aluminum composite tiles sent by police for analysis have failed safety tests, according to Detective Chief Superintendent Fiona McCormack from the Metropolitan Police.

The government is conducting a full public inquiry into the disaster, and Prime Minister Theresa May apologized for what she called “a failure of the state.”

“Trust in the authorities across the entire community has been seriously undermined by events since the fire, to say nothing of everything that happened in the years before the disaster,” the Justice4Grenfell statement says.

“This announcement will go someway towards the rebuilding of trust.”

CNN’s Vasco Cotovio, Seb Shukla and Joe Sterling contributed to this report.