One Round - Your assumption that I was not a member of the jury that rightly convicted James Hanratty is correct. If I had been on the jury I believe I would be committing a contempt of court if I were to reveal its deliberations.
I just do not think that there was any local prejudice particular to Bedford and its environs as opposed to any other area of the country. Hanratty's crime made national headlines and all people in all localities were revolted by it. This revulsion was not peculiar to Bedford.
In sending the case to Bedford Hanratty was given the liberal and Liberal Bill Gorman as trial judge. If he had gone on trial at the Old Bailey he could have landed with Melford Stevenson or someone of similar persuasion.
Looked at objectively before the trial, Hanratty had said at the time of the crime he was elsewhere with his criminal associates whom he would not name. On any view of the matter this was a lie, and a lie which Hanratty maintained from the very first time he was questioned over the telephone by Acott until he changed his story in the middle of the trial. This would have been devastating to Hanratty's defence (IMHO).
The jury must have decided that the new story was also a tissue of lies (IMHO) and indeed Mike Sherrard did not think much of it as he never sought to adduce further evidence in support of Hanratty's appeal in 1962.
Of course there will be some people that will hold to their deaths the fond belief that Hanratty was framed, that the cartridge cases in the Vienna were planted, that the identification by Miss Storie and the Redbridge witnesses was flawed, that the barefaced lie as to three criminal chums in Liverpool was an understandable lapse, that any jury empanelled from the citizens of the fair county of Bedfordshire would be hopelessly biased and that the DNA testing, initially requested by the Hanratty defence team, was unreliable. I, on the other hand, speaking for myself and not as any part of any judicially assembled body from the early 1960s, believe, like Mike Sherrard, that the wrong man was not hanged.
I just do not think that there was any local prejudice particular to Bedford and its environs as opposed to any other area of the country. Hanratty's crime made national headlines and all people in all localities were revolted by it. This revulsion was not peculiar to Bedford.
In sending the case to Bedford Hanratty was given the liberal and Liberal Bill Gorman as trial judge. If he had gone on trial at the Old Bailey he could have landed with Melford Stevenson or someone of similar persuasion.
Looked at objectively before the trial, Hanratty had said at the time of the crime he was elsewhere with his criminal associates whom he would not name. On any view of the matter this was a lie, and a lie which Hanratty maintained from the very first time he was questioned over the telephone by Acott until he changed his story in the middle of the trial. This would have been devastating to Hanratty's defence (IMHO).
The jury must have decided that the new story was also a tissue of lies (IMHO) and indeed Mike Sherrard did not think much of it as he never sought to adduce further evidence in support of Hanratty's appeal in 1962.
Of course there will be some people that will hold to their deaths the fond belief that Hanratty was framed, that the cartridge cases in the Vienna were planted, that the identification by Miss Storie and the Redbridge witnesses was flawed, that the barefaced lie as to three criminal chums in Liverpool was an understandable lapse, that any jury empanelled from the citizens of the fair county of Bedfordshire would be hopelessly biased and that the DNA testing, initially requested by the Hanratty defence team, was unreliable. I, on the other hand, speaking for myself and not as any part of any judicially assembled body from the early 1960s, believe, like Mike Sherrard, that the wrong man was not hanged.
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