Hi Graham.
The Jenkins case is a complicated one, so I had to check it on Wikipedia, that less than reliable oracle. He was convicted, albeit on weak evidence, of murdering his step-daughter.
Instead of his guilt being overturned it was then decided a re-trial was required, since new forensic evidence had become available. I confess I do not understand how these decisions are reached- can a wise group of legal experts not determine what verdict the jury would have reached had the evidence been available at the time?
Anyhow at Jenkins' second trial the jury could not agree a verdict, and he was free to leave the court. Again, I am not sure what this means. Is that 10-2 which is often quoted in newspaper reports, or something less? I can understand why 'unanimous' was phased out (when did this happen?) since it means one 'ringer' can subvert the will of the people. But it has to be a concern that an accused has now much more chance of being convicted than at any other time in my lifetime, especially since the double jeopardy rule has been introduced. (A Russian friend once pointed out to me recently that the conviction rates in USA courts is now higher than in the USSR during the 1930s when Stalin was calling the shots. From what I can glean it seems he is correct.)
I think Jenkins can count himself lucky. I saw him interviewed once by Richard and Judy, two cretins of credulousness it would be hard to rival, and he struck me as a glib, Blairite character whose forging of his CV and accused wife beating seemed perfectly in character. Then again, I was not on the jury.
The Jenkins case is a complicated one, so I had to check it on Wikipedia, that less than reliable oracle. He was convicted, albeit on weak evidence, of murdering his step-daughter.
Instead of his guilt being overturned it was then decided a re-trial was required, since new forensic evidence had become available. I confess I do not understand how these decisions are reached- can a wise group of legal experts not determine what verdict the jury would have reached had the evidence been available at the time?
Anyhow at Jenkins' second trial the jury could not agree a verdict, and he was free to leave the court. Again, I am not sure what this means. Is that 10-2 which is often quoted in newspaper reports, or something less? I can understand why 'unanimous' was phased out (when did this happen?) since it means one 'ringer' can subvert the will of the people. But it has to be a concern that an accused has now much more chance of being convicted than at any other time in my lifetime, especially since the double jeopardy rule has been introduced. (A Russian friend once pointed out to me recently that the conviction rates in USA courts is now higher than in the USSR during the 1930s when Stalin was calling the shots. From what I can glean it seems he is correct.)
I think Jenkins can count himself lucky. I saw him interviewed once by Richard and Judy, two cretins of credulousness it would be hard to rival, and he struck me as a glib, Blairite character whose forging of his CV and accused wife beating seemed perfectly in character. Then again, I was not on the jury.
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