Hi Caz
On what other basis, other than the other Rhyl witnesses, at the time of the appeal could Hanratty's team have used for fresh evidence? He was going to die anyway so what did he have to lose? I don't understand your argument one bit! His only other chance was a plea for clemency, which the barbarous bastards at the time turned down, knowing full well that further investigations could have been made.
It wasn't until some 30 years later that the majority of the now known undisclosed material came to public awareness. This was all available to the Crown at the time of Hanratty's state murder.
You have totally missed the point. It wasn't just a case of people nodding in agreement when a picture was thrust under their noses.
Between them they corroborated Hanratty's own account of his time in Rhyl on those 2 days. Some, Dutton for instance, obviously remembered things better than Hanratty did.
Anyone can chip away at individual aspects of it (you can do this with any account by anyone of any event in the history of mankind) but overall the combined testimony of the Rhyl witnesses is to me compelling evidence. From what has been produced since the original case I stick by this as Foot did. Hang Foot and me together if you like.
You still don't get it do you? Those that came forward corrobated Hanratty and each other. It wasn't a case of a free for all to see who could identify Hanratty better than the next person. You make little sense here if any at all.
Valerie Storie only had one glimpse of the killer. That was in the back of the car when she didn't have her glasses on. Even if one is to believe that she did see the killer when she was wearing her glasses then it was, to her admission for a "second or two". The vocal identification excludes other suspects on the first parade who if asked to speak may have made Ms Storie pick someone other than Clark.
All in all, with all we know now, Ms Storie's identikit picture, parade picks, statements and testimony don't make her a very convincing eyewitness as far as I'm concerned.
I would always take the eyewitness testimony of a disinterested party above that of those directly involved for obvious reasons of emotion, shock etc. The Adolf Beck case which lead to the founding of the Court Of Appeal backs up this supposition. Denning said much the same after the Maxwell Confait debacle in the '70's.
I believe the Rhyl witnesses because they corroborate Hanratty's alibi. I don't believe Ms Stories eyewitness testimony because she was, fundamentally, unable to identify the killer from first principles, that is she didn't know what he looked like. That is about as simple as I or anyone can put it.
Derrick
Originally posted by caz
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It wasn't until some 30 years later that the majority of the now known undisclosed material came to public awareness. This was all available to the Crown at the time of Hanratty's state murder.
Originally posted by caz
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Between them they corroborated Hanratty's own account of his time in Rhyl on those 2 days. Some, Dutton for instance, obviously remembered things better than Hanratty did.
Anyone can chip away at individual aspects of it (you can do this with any account by anyone of any event in the history of mankind) but overall the combined testimony of the Rhyl witnesses is to me compelling evidence. From what has been produced since the original case I stick by this as Foot did. Hang Foot and me together if you like.
Originally posted by caz
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Originally posted by caz
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All in all, with all we know now, Ms Storie's identikit picture, parade picks, statements and testimony don't make her a very convincing eyewitness as far as I'm concerned.
I would always take the eyewitness testimony of a disinterested party above that of those directly involved for obvious reasons of emotion, shock etc. The Adolf Beck case which lead to the founding of the Court Of Appeal backs up this supposition. Denning said much the same after the Maxwell Confait debacle in the '70's.
Originally posted by caz
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Derrick
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