Maria de Menezes is the mother of Jean Charles de Menezes. She has issued an emotional call for viewers to watch a new dramatisation of her son’s killing. It was an event that shook Britain. It also exposed serious flaws in police accountability. Maria spoke ahead of the premiere of Suspect: The Shooting of Jean Charles de Menezes. She said: “In my opinion, I think everyone should watch it.”

The four-part series will launch on Disney+ on April 30. It revisits one of the most devastating miscarriages of justice in recent UK history. Jean Charles was a 27-year-old Brazilian national. He was mistakenly identified as a terrorist. Police fatally shot him seven times in the head at Stockwell Underground station on July 22, 2005.
His death came in the fraught aftermath of the July 7 London bombings, which killed 52 people and injured hundreds. Just a day before Jean Charles was killed, there were four would-be suicide bombers. They attempted to carry out a second wave of attacks. Amid heightened panic and confusion, surveillance officers were confused. They wrongly concluded that de Menezes was one of the suspects. He was on his way to work as an electrician.
He wasn’t wearing a heavy coat. He wasn’t running. And he wasn’t carrying explosives. But after being followed, restrained, and pinned down, he was shot in front of horrified passengers. His only “crime” was looking vaguely similar to a suspect and boarding the same tube line.
The new drama was created by BAFTA-winning writer Jeff Pope. It stars Daniel Mays (Line of Duty, Des) as Cressida Dick. She was the officer who was gold commander on the day. Russell Tovey (Years and Years, Being Human) plays a supporting role as a surveillance officer. Pope’s previous work in true-crime storytelling brings both sensitivity and rigorous attention to detail to the production.
Pope spoke at a press conference. He said the aim was not to sensationalise but to humanise:
“This isn’t about pointing fingers. It’s about telling the story of a man who shouldn’t have died, and asking how a chain of decisions in a climate of fear could lead to such irreversible tragedy.”
Maria de Menezes flew from Brazil for the launch. She shared harrowing memories of the day she learned of her son’s death:
“I was not expecting that moment. It was terrible and then I started to shake. I sort of died then too.”
Her voice cracked with emotion. She described her ongoing fight to keep her son’s name and story alive:
“People forget. Time passes, and they forget. But I don’t. He was kind. He was working hard to support us. And they took him away.”
“He was just going to work”
Jean Charles had lived in London for over three years. Friends described him as cheerful, hardworking, and generous. He was sending money home to help his family build a better life. On the morning of his death, he was simply trying to reach a job site in north London.
Initial police statements claimed that Jean Charles had vaulted a ticket barrier. They also claimed he was wearing a bulky jacket and ran from officers. These claims were later proven false. CCTV footage showed him entering the station at a normal pace, using his Oyster card, and boarding a train calmly. The Metropolitan Police’s narrative unraveled under scrutiny, triggering widespread condemnation and multiple investigations.
In 2007, the Metropolitan Police Service was found guilty of endangering public safety and fined £175,000. No individual officer was ever prosecuted. This decision outraged the de Menezes family. It also outraged civil liberties groups across the UK and abroad.
Amnesty International, Liberty, and Justice for Jean have long campaigned for greater transparency. They highlight the case as a turning point in debates over armed policing, racial profiling, and counter-terrorism measures.
The Long Shadow of 7/7
Suspect examines the intense climate of fear and pressure gripping Britain’s security services in the wake of 7/7. In the scramble to prevent another attack, senior officers authorised a shoot-to-kill policy, known as Operation Kratos. The guidelines aimed to prevent suicide bombers from detonating devices. However, they also reduced the scope for restraint or correction once a mistaken identity was made.
Professor Conor Gearty, a leading human rights barrister, has called the operation “a legally dubious framework that prioritised pre-emptive killing over due process.”
Critics argue that de Menezes’ case exemplifies how institutional racism can override civil rights. Operational panic often exacerbates this issue. This is especially true when the victim is a migrant or person of colour. Jean Charles, like many others, became collateral damage in a system built on fear and haste.
A Drama with Purpose
Initial responses to the drama have praised its sensitivity and restraint. Early reviews highlight Daniel Mays’ complex performance and the script’s refusal to resort to easy villains or simplistic resolutions.
One reviewer from The Guardian wrote:
“What makes Suspect so effective is that it doesn’t scream. It lets the facts speak for themselves—and in doing so, delivers a gut-punch to the conscience.”
Maria hopes that this portrayal will reframe public memory. It is especially important for younger viewers unfamiliar with the case:
“We need to remember. We need people to learn from this, so no other mother has to go through what I did.”
She remains clear-eyed about the limitations of a drama, but sees it as a vital tool:
“Justice didn’t come through the courts. Maybe it will come through the truth being shown on screen.”
Suspect: The Shooting of Jean Charles de Menezes will be available to stream on Disney+ from April 30. It is a haunting account of one man’s life—and the system that ended it too soon.
By Pat Harrington