Upon further reflection...
The fine legal point appears to be whether Parry was aware that "M" had entered the house with a deadly weapon, in pursuit of a robbery. It seems not, as M probably didn't!
The Police were flummoxed ("how the hell do we pin anything on Parry?") as was Parry himself ("that (the bloodstained glove) would hang me!")
Far better to let a jury decide whether Wallace could have been guilty in a "simpler" scenario. Someone has to answer to this charge. Poor guy....
As an aside, I reckon Parkes' and Atkinson's testimony eventually filtered through the back-channels to the "Establishment", and even to the Court of Appeal. They gave no specific reasons for quashing the verdict against Wallace, but I bet they knew by then [the aforementioned only came forward after Wallace was convicted, remember...]
The fine legal point appears to be whether Parry was aware that "M" had entered the house with a deadly weapon, in pursuit of a robbery. It seems not, as M probably didn't!
The Police were flummoxed ("how the hell do we pin anything on Parry?") as was Parry himself ("that (the bloodstained glove) would hang me!")
Far better to let a jury decide whether Wallace could have been guilty in a "simpler" scenario. Someone has to answer to this charge. Poor guy....
As an aside, I reckon Parkes' and Atkinson's testimony eventually filtered through the back-channels to the "Establishment", and even to the Court of Appeal. They gave no specific reasons for quashing the verdict against Wallace, but I bet they knew by then [the aforementioned only came forward after Wallace was convicted, remember...]
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