Finally the family and friends of Jean Charles de Menezes have justice for the day the innocent Brazilian was shot to death by our police for getting on the Tube - or do they?
Despite the Metropolitan Police being found guilty of breaking health and safety laws and endangering the public when they mistook the electrician for a suicide bomber on 22 July 2005, nobody seems to be taking responsibility for the atrocity.
Not the firearms teams who were allegedly in the wrong place, not the senior officers who prosecutors said failed to keep to the agreed plan, and not the police chief who led the operation, Cressida Dick, who the Old Bailey jury said bore "no personal culpability".
So if they are all innocent then what about the man in charge? Sir Ian Blair is on £228,000 per year as Met commissioner, and rather than give that up, he is going for a £25,000 performance bonus.
With respect, what would Blair have to do to lose that job? Buy a gun and shoot someone himself?
It seems that people at the top of organisations are increasingly becoming untouchables - and well paid ones at that.
No-one at the top of the BBC or ITV carried the can for the recent outrageous phone-in scandals, despite evidence of viewers being misled and ripped-off. Royal Mail chief executive Adam Crozier recently took home a £500,000 bonus at a time when his ground troops are still fighting to save their jobs amid falling profits.
For all the money they earn, is it too much to expect a little bit of decency when things go wrong? Let's hope Sir Ian does the right thing soon.
