Managers of Grenfell Tower May Face Criminal Inquiry By CEYLAN YEGINSU and STEPHEN CASTLEJULY 27, 2017 LONDON — The London police investigating the fire at Grenfell Tower that left at least 80 people dead have told survivors that there are "reasonable grounds to suspect" that the organizations managing the high rise might have committed corporate manslaughter. Michael Lockwood, who is managing the recovery of the site, said that scaffolding would be erected around the tower in the next two weeks and that the building would be wrapped to assist in the forensics investigation and to allow the recovery of materials without spreading dust and ash across the neighborhood. Grenfell said that After the police letter was made public, David Lammy, a Labour Party lawmaker who has been campaigning on b The Metropolitan Police made the statement in a letter to the relatives of those who died and the families that escaped one of Britain’s deadliest fires, which broke out on June 14 in the 24-story tower in the North Kensington section of West London.