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Chandler's Ford railway station

1847 establishments in EnglandBeeching closures in EnglandDfT Category E stationsFormer London and South Western Railway stationsPages with no open date in Infobox station
Railway stations in Great Britain closed in 1969Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1847Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 2003Railway stations in HampshireRailway stations served by South Western RailwayReopened railway stations in Great BritainSouth East England railway station stubsUse British English from May 2017
2022 at Chandlers Ford station main building
2022 at Chandlers Ford station main building

Chandler's Ford railway station serves the Chandler's Ford area of Eastleigh in Hampshire, England. It is on the Eastleigh to Romsey Line, 75 miles 25 chains (121.2 km) measured from London Waterloo.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Chandler's Ford railway station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Chandler's Ford railway station
Station Lane,

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Wikipedia: Chandler's Ford railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 50.983055555556 ° E -1.3844444444444 °
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Address

Station Lane
SO53 4DW , Millers Dale South
England, United Kingdom
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2022 at Chandlers Ford station main building
2022 at Chandlers Ford station main building
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Chandler's Ford shooting
Chandler's Ford shooting

The Chandler's Ford shooting (codenamed Operation Hurlock by the police) was the shooting of armed robbers in the town of Chandler's Ford, Hampshire, in southern England, on 13 September 2007. Two men were shot dead by Metropolitan Police officers while they were robbing a cash-in-transit van at gunpoint. The Metropolitan Police's Flying Squad had been tracking a gang of armed robbers from South London who were estimated to have stolen £500,000 (£738,000 today) from 18 robberies of security vans. The Flying Squad received intelligence that the gang intended to target the HSBC branch in Chandler's Ford and planned to lie in wait and apprehend the suspects as they attempted the robbery. Armed police officers arrived in Chandler's Ford in the early hours of the morning of 13 September and concealed themselves in a public toilet close to the bank, supported by snipers in overlooking buildings. At 10:05, shortly after the arrival of the G4S van, Mark Nunes (wearing a mask) approached the guard and pointed a gun at him, demanding he hand over the cash box. A police sniper opened fire, hitting Nunes in the chest. As officers were deploying from their hiding place, a second gang member, Andrew Markland, ran over and picked up Nunes's weapon; he was shot twice by a second sniper. Police officers attempted first aid but Markland died at the scene. Nunes was airlifted to hospital but died later that day. At the trial of the remaining gang members, the jury was shown footage from a police surveillance post at Chandler's Ford, including the moment Nunes and Markland were shot. The shooting was investigated by the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC), which concluded that the armed officers had acted properly, though it found flaws in the planning of the operation. An inquest held in 2011 reached a verdict of lawful killing, after which the IPCC published its full report, recommending that a firearms commander independent of the investigation be appointed to lead future operations. The Metropolitan Police implemented the recommendation.