Roger Goad (explosives officer)
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Captain Roger Philip Goad, GC, BEM, was an explosives officer with London's Metropolitan Police Service who was posthumously awarded the George Cross for the heroism he displayed on 29 August 1975. He had previously been awarded the British Empire Medal in 1958 for gallantry whilst serving with the Royal Army Ordnance Corps in Cyprus, for repeated acts of deliberate courage in the disarming of bombs and booby traps set by terrorists.[1]
Following a telephone tip-off, police officers found a suspicious package placed in a shop doorway in Kensington Church Street in London. Goad was the senior bomb disposal expert on the scene. A bomb, fitted with an anti-handling device, had been placed by Provisional Irish Republican Army members. Goad attempted to defuse the bomb but it exploded, killing him instantly. He was a 40-year-old married man with two children.[2] His citation was published in The London Gazette of 1 October 1976.[3]
The bomb had been placed by the active service unit responsible for the 1974–1975 terror campaign in London, who were later captured at the conclusion of the Balcombe Street siege.[4]
See also
References
- ^ London gazette
- ^ Police Memorial roll
- ^ London Gazette
- ^ "The Road to Balcombe Street", Dr. Steven Moysey, Haworth, (2007)
- Use dmy dates from April 2012
- 1975 deaths
- Royal Army Ordnance Corps soldiers
- Royal Army Ordnance Corps officers
- People killed by the Provisional Irish Republican Army
- Metropolitan Police officers
- Recipients of the British Empire Medal
- British recipients of the George Cross
- Bomb disposal personnel
- Deaths by improvised explosive device in England
- British terrorism victims
- British police officers killed in the line of duty
- Terrorism deaths in England
- Murdered British police officers
- British military personnel of the Cyprus Emergency
- United Kingdom law enforcement biography stubs