THE family of shot PC David Rathband last night remained defiant after losing a High Court negligence case against Northumbria Police and being ordered to pay at least £100,000 costs. 

Mr Justice Males found the force was not negligent in failing to pass on a warning that gunman Raoul Moat made when he called 999 to say he was "hunting for officers".

Less than nine minutes later, he blasted PC Rathband twice in the face as he sat in his patrol car, alone and defenceless on a roundabout above the A1 in Newcastle - leaving him blinded and fighting for his life.

The judge said he was "desperately unlucky to be the victim of Moat's cruelty and hatred" and was surprised he survived the July 2010 attack.

But he ruled Superintendent Jo Farrell, in charge of the manhunt for the murderer that night, was not negligent by not immediately warning officers of the threat. 

Even if she had ordered it to be sent out, it might have been too late for PC Rathband to act upon, he said.

He ordered that the claimants must pay the force's costs with an interim payment of £100,000 due in 21 days.

The cost of the eight-day trial, involving QC barristers on both sides, plus hundreds of hours of legal preparation, was not revealed.

After the judgment was handed down yesterday at Newcastle's Moot Hall, PC Rathband's sister Debbie Essery and his twin Darren branded the force as arrogant and insensitive.

Their statement said they were "disappointed although not surprised" by the judgment, adding: "Mistakes were made, policies and procedures have been changed, that fact remains.

"The arrogance and insensitivity of Northumbria Police throughout has been cruel to say the least.

"The public perception appears to be that police officers are looked after by their own force, this was definitely not the case for David, he was left alone on July 4 and thereafter not only by the force he was so proud to serve but by others whom he loved too."

Former nightclub doorman Moat, 37, shot and wounded former girlfriend Sam Stobbart, 22, in Birtley, Gateshead, and killed her new boyfriend, karate instructor Chris Brown, 29 - who he wrongly believed was a police officer.

The next day, Moat, who shot himself in Rothbury, Northumberland, after a week-long manhunt, shot PC Rathband twice as he sat alone in his patrol car.

Mr Justice Males ruled it was "well established law" that the police did not owe the public or officers a "private law duty of care" when making operational decisions, "particularly when such decisions have to be made under pressure of crime".

Although this led to hardship in individual cases, it has been held to be in the public interest, he said.

Issuing such a warning could have adversely affected officers' ability to protect the public throughout the force area on a busy night, the judge said.

Northumbria Police Chief Constable Steve Ashman said the judgment "emphatically" showed that PC Rathband, who killed himself almost four years ago, was not let down.

"This has been a sad and difficult case for all concerned," he said. "Moat's actions created an unprecedented situation for Northumbria Police but the judge has recognised that operational officers have to make high pressure, complex decisions in tight timescales and in doing so they must focus not only on officer safety but on the safety and welfare of the public."

His predecessor Sue Sim said: "My thoughts, prayers and best wishes remain with Kath and their two children, together with the other close family members who have been affected by these terrible events.

"David was acting in the best tradition of policing when he was brutally shot by Raoul Moat."