The FA "could face corporate criminal charges as detectives examine claims that officials ignored safety warnings before the Hillsborough disaster," according to White & Morgan of the London TELEGRAPH. Sheffield Wednesday is "also under suspicion over the governing body's decision" to let the club host the 1989 FA Cup semifinal, despite its checkered safety history. A £40M ($58M) police inquiry "is being stepped up." John Stoddart, the lead officer on Operation Reserve, confirmed that "the FA and Sheffield Wednesday were part of his investigation as he prepares to send files to the Crown Prosecution Service." On Tuesday, the jurors at the two-year inquest into the tragedy concluded that preparation of the stadium "caused or contributed to the dangerous situation which developed on the day of the match." Families believe that "the FA should also have been included in a direct question for the jury at Lord Justice Goldring's inquest." Prof Phil Scraton, who chaired the HIP and was at the coroner's court in Warrington to hear the delivery of the verdicts on Tuesday, said, "There is no question that the one significant omission is the FA. They hired the stadium. They considered it an appropriate place to stage an event of that magnitude. It was for them to check the safety. That did not occur" (TELEGRAPH, 4/28).