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Yet another miscarriage of justice
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Anonymous
PostPosted: 13-11-2002 17:38    Post subject: Yet another miscarriage of justice Reply with quote

see http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/2456951.stm

Another day.... another man who has 25 years inside for a crime he probably did not do...

Last time it was Stephen Downing, now it's Robert Brown.

I find it worrying that when a defendant denies a crime and says that the police used wrongfull means to extract the confession then a jury always seems to believe the police, even a dimwitt should realise this is unsafe.

And why is it that to get a job in a burger bar you have to do an aptitude test, but to be a juror, the most responsible job a normal person will ever do, you can be any level or moron? the only qualification is that you have to be too dumb to get out of jury service...

Very worrying..........
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Anonymous
PostPosted: 13-11-2002 18:53    Post subject: Reply with quote

I was supposed to be doing jury service today, but the trial didn't go ahead. Must've been a change of plea or something. Anyway, I got up at 0800 and went all the way in to the Sheriff Court in the rain for nothing. Hmph.
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Anonymous
PostPosted: 13-11-2002 19:24    Post subject: Change the law Reply with quote

If Robert Brown had admitted his guilt, he would of course have been let out a decade ago - time to change the law on this perhaps, such that you don't have to admit guilt to be eligible for parole. It seems that a lot of innocent people have served a large number of years in jail cos of this. And society won't lose out, because if they were guilty in the first place, they'd have been let out anyway (does that make sense?). After all, it would take a very determined guilty person to carry on saying they were innocent and give up the chance of immediate freedom, for the possible chance of being cleared/compensated later. That's it.
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DerekH16Offline
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PostPosted: 13-11-2002 22:43    Post subject: Reply with quote

And of course, 25 years wrongful imprisonment will gain him quite a few bob in compensation (although never enough for what he's lost).

Whose pocket is that going to come out of? The rozzers who set him up? No, Joe Public, as per usual.
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BreakfastologistOffline
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PostPosted: 14-11-2002 14:16    Post subject: Reply with quote

The major reasons criminals want to preserve their right to jury trials is that they are far more likely to be let off if they get one.

At least we didn't execute him.
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JamesWhiteheadOffline
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PostPosted: 14-11-2002 15:04    Post subject: Reply with quote

"At least we didn't execute him."

So that's all right then!

The case in question appears to have arisen from the actions or
influence of a corrupt policeman. If conviction rates are to be an
index of justice then we should all be campaigning for more corrupt
policemen. roll eyes (sarcastic)
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IoetheOffline
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PostPosted: 14-11-2002 15:10    Post subject: Re: Change the law Reply with quote

cycleboy wrote:

It seems that a lot of innocent people have served a large number of years in jail cos of this. And society won't lose out, because if they were guilty in the first place, they'd have been let out anyway (does that make sense?). After all, it would take a very determined guilty person to carry on saying they were innocent and give up the chance of immediate freedom, for the possible chance of being cleared/compensated later. That's it.


The reasoning behind letting people who admit their guilt out isn't as simple as that. They must show that they have come to some understanding of their crime and are unlikely to reoffend. People sitting there saying "But I didn't do anything wrong" don't come under this category. Prison sentences have to operate on the assumption that the original trial came to the right conclusion, otherwise what's the point? If you have someone utterly unrepentant you can't let them out on the basis the conviction might just have been wrong.

That said, I agree it looks bloody odd when someone continues to maintain their innocence even when that means another ten years in jail, and surely ought to prompt some sort of investigation of the original facts - then this poor bugger wouldn't have been in jail for the last 10 years.

Poor bloke.
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eljubbo
PostPosted: 14-11-2002 16:08    Post subject: Reply with quote

So Robert Brown didn't do it, and has spent 25 years rotting behind bars for a crime he didn't commit?

Yeah right, what's happened is that the original, trial and sentencing has been considered unsafe and owing to this he's been let out.

In the late seventies a couple of rozzers got out-of-hand with the old interrogation techniques and ended up eliciting a confession that is now to be considered unsound.

It didn't mean he didn't do it, indeed it reminds me of the "Birmingham Six". If memory serves it was Lord Justice Lawton that said of those miscreants he "had never been more sure" their original conviction was the right decision.

Sometimes the wrong people get let out for the right reasons:(
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Anonymous
PostPosted: 14-11-2002 16:21    Post subject: Reply with quote

I can't remember who said it but it was along the lines of "Better 100 guilty men go free than one innocent man be imprisoned"
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Jerry_BOffline
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PostPosted: 14-11-2002 16:23    Post subject: Reply with quote

But in the eyes of the Law, he didn't do it - he is thus innocent, whatever your opinion.
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ShadowPrimeOffline
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PostPosted: 14-11-2002 17:51    Post subject: Reply with quote

Ah, but Jerry, I think there is a meaningful distinction - which is increasingly lost as we become ever-more legalistic in our thinking - between being innocent / not guilty in the eyes of the law, and being innocent / not guilty in a more basic, if sometimes more difficult to discern, MORAL or "real" sense. In the eyes of the law, for example, OJ Simpson is not guilty of murder... Wink

I have no opinion on the guilt or innocence of the individual whose case prompted the start of this thread, but if his conviction was tossed because of an improperly obtained confession, I think the best that can be said is that he is now legally innocent. That is important, no question! BUT... that is NOT the same thing as saying that the wrong man sat in prison all those years. The press often plays a bit fast and loose in these cases, it seems to me... and does a disservice to us all.

Shadow
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Anonymous
PostPosted: 14-11-2002 20:17    Post subject: Reply with quote

Adrian Veidt wrote:

I can't remember who said it but it was along the lines of "Better 100 guilty men go free than one innocent man be imprisoned"


Silly bugger had obviously never had his house broken into...
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Jerry_BOffline
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PostPosted: 15-11-2002 13:27    Post subject: Reply with quote

Shadow - it doesn't matter one jot if you or I think any person in this sort of case is guilty or not. As long as the Law says he's innocent, he is. People's presumptions based on morality doesn't matter either. And alot of the time with cases like this the accused is actually innocent in more general terms, the real criminals being the police who stitched the whole thing up in the first place.
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Anonymous
PostPosted: 15-11-2002 19:16    Post subject: Reply with quote

There's actually a good deal of evidence to really question Robert Brown's guilt very seriously. I wouldn't fancy serving a sentence based on a confession beaten out of me by someone who… later served time for police corruption. And I think that you'll find very few people who have ever read anything about the Birmingham Six could still believe they're guilty. The IRA siad they were innocent, though that of course doesn't mean they are; Chris Mullin demonstrated I believe that they were innocent; confessions were beaten out of them (that should have gone out with the inquisistion); the forensic evidence was poor beyond belief. With a bit of digging I'm sure I could find more, but it's not easy to get let out of British jails by the appeal court. It's not something they do on a whim or even when therer is a good deal of pressure. There have been some staggeringly awful miscarriages of justice perpetrated by the British courts - and then the prisoners are let out to the widespread cries of 'well, they probably did it anywat'. No wonder the Birmingham Six are angry. I'd be livid beyond belief…
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ogopogo3Offline
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PostPosted: 15-11-2002 20:15    Post subject: Reply with quote

Just had a case in town yesterday where a man was exonorated in a rape case after seventeen years. DNA proved conclusively that he didn't do it. But DNA showed he IS guilty for a double murder which he's still in prison for.

Police know the identity of the real rapist now through DNA evidence obtained in other rapes, but the rapist remains free because the statute of limitations has expired.

Snafu, as usual.
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