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  • Originally posted by Natalie Severn View Post
    The main issue was perfectly clear on that page that Michael Sherrard made the statement about Valerie Storie
    Hi Norma,

    No, I disagree, I think Sherrard was smart enough to realise it does apply to all identification witnesses, which is why he deliberately phrased it the way he did - hence you had to add in "[-referring to Valerie Storie"s statement]" in post #7587.

    By raising the more general point about other witness statements you are failing to appraise each of their statements in context.
    Not at all, a large proportion of the Rhyl statements are from a bunch of relatives or friendly neighbours who would have discussed it and managed to positively reinforce eachother and convince themselves that they'd definitely seen Hanratty, when it was another young man.

    and she composed an identikit picture that looked nothing like Hanratty but was the image of Alphon!
    That's entirely subjective, and lots of people hold the opposite viewpoint - including Charlotte France who would actually have had the benefit of comparing it to Hanratty in all 3 dimensions, rather than a bunch of poorly resolved photographs.

    Blackhall composed the other image---and is on record as saying the man Skillett and he saw looked nothing like Hanratty.
    Well he can't speak for Skillett who positively identified Hanratty - and the example you've given is probably why the 2nd identikit image could not be reconciled with Valerie's, because Blackhall has a poor recollection for faces, or he was distracted by te stripes on the rear bumper, and yet was insistent he had input to the identikit.

    KR,
    Vic.
    Last edited by Victor; 01-20-2011, 01:34 PM.
    Truth is female, since truth is beauty rather than handsomeness; this [...] would certainly explain the saying that a lie could run around the world before Truth has got its, correction, her boots on, since she would have to chose which pair - the idea that any woman in a position to choose would have just one pair of boots being beyond rational belief.
    Unseen Academicals - Terry Pratchett.

    Comment


    • However, a former trial juror said last night the jury made the right decision based on the evidence presented to them.
      from http://www.independent.co.uk/news/ha...c-1279254.html

      The jury should have been able to consider the following.
      • VS's withheld statements that were contrary to her confidence over identifying MG's killer, coupled with the true nature of VS and MG's relationship.
      • The mileage done by the car before it was finally abandoned in Redbridge, along with testimony of other witnesses who contradicted the prosecutions case.
      • The testimony of all of the known Rhyl witnesses at the time.
      • Michael Clark bore no resemblance to Hanratty whatsoever. This is the crux of the identification of MG's killer which was so plainly wrong. Why then should anyone place any confidence in VS to get it right the next time? Acott fudged the issue of Clarks appearance in court and left the jury none the wiser.
      The comment and surety of just one of the jurors is not enough to suggest that there was not dissent in the jury room and if the above points had been put forward it would have swayed the jury, if not at Bedford then certainly at the Old Bailey.

      Looks like and sounds like a fit up job to me. Still going on as well.

      Derrick

      Comment


      • Originally posted by Derrick View Post
        The comment and surety of just one of the jurors is not enough to suggest that there was not dissent in the jury room and if the above points had been put forward it would have swayed the jury, if not at Bedford then certainly at the Old Bailey.
        Ah, but it was in Bedford and not the Bailey and we all know about Bedfordshire juries.

        Comment


        • The jury at the 1961 trial in Bedfordshire were out over ten hours.After six hours had gone by one of the jury came back with specific questions and a request for general guidance from the judge."May we have a further statement from you regarding the definition of reasonable doubt? Must we be certain and sure of the prisoner"s guilt to return a verdict?" David Lines,Under- Sherrif of Bedfordshire and also a lawyer,saw this as meaning they clearly were not sure.
          The judge,it seemed thought the same way
          "If you have reasonable doubt,then you are not sure.You understand that,do you not?"

          Comment


          • The cartridge case question

            The jury had to ask a further question about the cartridge cases.

            The judge told them:

            "Those cartridge cases,it is said,were left before 24 August.They were not found until 11 September.You have heard another person used that room,that there were other people in the hotel,that there was a way outside from this bedroom,and you must not jump to the conclusion that the mere finding of these cartridge cases there denoted that they were left there by the prisoner."

            Comment


            • I imagine that a cockney geezer type like Hanratty would have stood out big time in a Welsh town back then

              Like, as they say, a sore thumb.
              allisvanityandvexationofspirit

              Comment


              • Originally posted by Stephen Thomas View Post
                I imagine that a cockney geezer type like Hanratty would have stood out big time in a Welsh town back then

                Like, as they say, a sore thumb.
                Good point Stephen and very true.

                Comment


                • Are you seriously suggesting that Hanratty was the only young cockney man wandering around a highly popular resort like Rhyl at the height of the holiday season? Come on!

                  Graham
                  We are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze

                  Comment


                  • I'm reading Jane Robins' excellent book on the Brides In The Bath case, and have just come across this instruction given to the jury by Mr Justice Strutton at the trail of George Joseph Smith:

                    "The jury must bear in mind that a good many people who have seen nothing, when they are told something, they see a lot. There is a good deal of that in all this evidence"

                    A comment which I think applies to the Rhyl "witnesses".

                    Also, even though it was glaringly obvious that Smith was not only a serial murderer but a complete and total rogue, he maintained his innocence right to the very end, twice telling James Ellis the hangman that "I am innocent".


                    Graham
                    We are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by Graham View Post
                      Are you seriously suggesting that Hanratty was the only young cockney man wandering around a highly popular resort like Rhyl at the height of the holiday season? Come on!

                      Graham
                      This young man was in a holiday resort which mainly catered for couples with young families.His presence in the late evening of August 22nd,looking for a B&B was, as Betty Davies said rather" late" to be looking for accomodation.

                      Mrs Betty Davies,33 of 19 South Kinmel Street,Rhyl.May 26 1968.

                      "I gave birth on July 20th 1961 to a baby girl in Chatsworth House,Prestatyn.The baby was ill when I returned home on Friday 28th July..........My baby died on July 31st and was buried on August 3rd.This was a busy season and the house was full of guests.The house remained full for some time but towardsthe end of August,as the end of season approached,the guests began to leave.
                      One evening ,late in August-I cannot remember the exact date*-I was alone in the house with my small daughter.It was late evening and growing dark.The bell rang and I answered the door.A young man was standing on the pavement outside.I"d say he was in his twenties.He had dark hjair and was softly spoken.
                      He asked if I could take him in for Bed and breakfast.....I said we couldnt and suggested he tried further down the street..........
                      I went into my mother"s house which backed onto mine.......
                      some months later a man came to the door from a London firm of solicitors.He asked if the house had a green bath in the attic.We said wehadn"t and he went away.A uniformed policeman also called and showed me a sketch of a man and asked if I recognised it.I said I didn"t ."

                      Mrs Betty Davies was backed up on the date of her encounter and her description which tallied with that of Mrs Margaret Walker who remembered the young man calling at her house and also remembered his hair looking "streaky" in colour.Mrs Ivy Vincent living a little further along the street, remembered seeing the man call at Mrs Walker"s and then coming to ask her the same question.
                      Mrs Walker had not wisedh to get involved in a case of murder and her husband had warned her not to,but when she realised the man was on trial for his life and that she believed she had seen him on the 22nd of August and had seen Mrs Margaret Davies,Betty"s mother in law and Betty later that evening,she went to the police shortly before the end of the trial in February.
                      Mrs Davies stated that Betty,after seeing the man, had run in to her house and told her about the incident.It is clear it was the same young man as the other women saw.
                      Moreover, Mrs Davies senior had told her daughter in law that she was right not to take in " any young man on his own, when it was growing dark, especially when she was on her own.
                      Graham, when you piece together their statements it is quite clear that this was
                      a] a rather unusual time to call ,and that
                      b] for one reason or another -the incident did stand out in their memory.

                      * Mrs Margaret Walker remembered the exact date because of a family incident that took place later that week.She had gone to talk about this matter with Mrs Margaret Davies and she was there when Betty,the daughter-in-law had run in to see her Mrs Davies senior and told her about her "late evening caller".
                      Last edited by Natalie Severn; 01-21-2011, 10:14 AM.

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by Derrick View Post
                        [*]The testimony of all of the known Rhyl witnesses at the time.
                        Hi Derrick,

                        That's the problem with Ambush Alibis - and of course Sherrard didn't use them for the appeal.

                        [*]Michael Clark bore no resemblance to Hanratty whatsoever. This is the crux of the identification of MG's killer which was so plainly wrong.
                        That's just not true - we have Dr Rennie's comment that he looked quite similar to Alphon, which completely contradicts the "heavily built" comment, so it's just impossible to conclude he looks nothing like Hanratty without knowing more.

                        KR,
                        Vic.
                        Truth is female, since truth is beauty rather than handsomeness; this [...] would certainly explain the saying that a lie could run around the world before Truth has got its, correction, her boots on, since she would have to chose which pair - the idea that any woman in a position to choose would have just one pair of boots being beyond rational belief.
                        Unseen Academicals - Terry Pratchett.

                        Comment


                        • Also, even though it was glaringly obvious that Smith was not only a serial murderer but a complete and total rogue, he maintained his innocence right to the very end, twice telling James Ellis the hangman that "I am innocent"

                          And in this notorious case there was at least a great deal of real evidence against the murderer.

                          The whole point about Hanratty is that most of "the evidence" if it deserves the name, appears to have been a set of "manufactured and astonishing coincidences" from the moment Janet Gregsten /William Ewer "saw him at the cleaners"---two yards opposite their shop on 31st August.....which was only the first of a whole series of "astonishing coincidences" that are supposed to have happened; like Alphon being arrested in his Finsbury Park Hotel after police asked for information on anybody " acting strangely" and being interrogated for the A6 murder,[ later confessing to it] to when Valerie Storie "identified" heavily built Michael Clark as her rapist and the murderer therefore releasing Alphon and Acott then leapfrogging back to the Vienna Hotel to Mr Nudds [alias Uncle Tom Cobley} "cos when Mr Nudds was sacked from the Vienna Hotel on September 11th ,hadn"t the cartridge cases suddenly made their truly "magical appearance"!!!!!WOW!!!!! and not in Alphon"s room either but below Alphon"s where Hanratty had stayed at the Vienna Hotel
                          ....so erm -Acott decided it must have been Hanratty then " cos Nudds "told them so " and even was willing to alter his evidence --yet again to help Det. Supt. Acott!

                          You "come on"-!

                          Luckiest Det.Supt. in the force it would appear!
                          Last edited by Natalie Severn; 01-21-2011, 10:45 AM.

                          Comment


                          • Originally posted by Natalie Severn View Post
                            "Those cartridge cases, it is said, were left before 24 August. They were not found until 11 September. You have heard another person used that room,that there were other people in the hotel,that there was a way outside from this bedroom,and you must not jump to the conclusion that the mere finding of these cartridge cases there denoted that they were left there by the prisoner."
                            Hi Norma,

                            That's absolutely correct they shouldn't jump to conclusions - now just who's word do we have to listen to to put someone else in that room (other than the Indian guy who definitely wasn't the gunman)? Ah yes, your great nemesis the "ganster" Nudds - you'll have to big him up to believe that Alphon was anywhere near the basement.

                            KR,
                            Vic.
                            Truth is female, since truth is beauty rather than handsomeness; this [...] would certainly explain the saying that a lie could run around the world before Truth has got its, correction, her boots on, since she would have to chose which pair - the idea that any woman in a position to choose would have just one pair of boots being beyond rational belief.
                            Unseen Academicals - Terry Pratchett.

                            Comment


                            • Originally posted by Derrick View Post
                              The comment and surety of just one of the jurors is not enough to suggest that there was not dissent in the jury room and if the above points had been put forward it would have swayed the jury, if not at Bedford then certainly at the Old Bailey.Derrick
                              Originally posted by RonIpstone View Post
                              Ah, but it was in Bedford and not the Bailey and we all know about Bedfordshire juries.
                              RonIpstone I have asked you more than once to explain your arrogant aspersions towards the people of Bedfordshire.

                              As someone who is Bedfordshire born and bred, I cannot help but regard your comments as a personal insult, as would anyone else from Bedfordshire

                              so I ask you again to either explain yourself or apologise.

                              Admin I request that if no satisfactory reply from RonIpstone is forthcoming, he be banned for further posting on this forum. I think it's unacceptable that we form Bedfordshire should be subject to RonIpstones blatant, bigotted prejudice.
                              Silence is Consent!

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by Natalie Severn View Post
                                This young man was in a holiday resort which mainly catered for couples with young families.
                                Hi Norma,

                                What about Alexei Sayle's dad who definitely stayed in the Ingledene becasue he signed the guest book? He was there alone on a Union trip, so presumably with other union people - so there could be lots of single men around Rhyl at that time!

                                This was a busy season and the house was full of guests.The house remained full for some time but towards the end of August,as the end of season approached, the guests began to leave.
                                So lots of places were full meaning that potentially lots of people would be wandering around looking for accomodation, and it'd be a long search seeing as so many of them were full.

                                KR,
                                Vic.
                                Truth is female, since truth is beauty rather than handsomeness; this [...] would certainly explain the saying that a lie could run around the world before Truth has got its, correction, her boots on, since she would have to chose which pair - the idea that any woman in a position to choose would have just one pair of boots being beyond rational belief.
                                Unseen Academicals - Terry Pratchett.

                                Comment

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