Originally posted by Spitfire
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For a moment there, I thought you had the whole transcript of the 2002 appeal. Ah well!
As often, I follow your reasoning to the bottom line. I just cannot shake the feeling that for such an important aspect of the Hanratty case, an agreement or presumption of this sort is unnecessarily casual. I would like there to be as much medical proof as feasible and consider that only reasonable.
As a bit of an aside, I take your point totally about the problems in fully understanding all aspects of a case without the whole transcript and the related expert reports.
I've recently read the Court of Appeal judgement for the Cameo murders case. In their 2003 judgement, the Court of Appeal allowed the posthumous appeals made upon behalf of George Kelly and Charles Connolly and absolutely tore into the police and prosecution witnesses from the original 1950 trials. In setting out the reasons for their findings, the Court highlighted the lies that had been told and the evidence that had been deliberately suppressed. Just going from that judgement, it would seem that no case could now be made against Kelly and Connolly. However, I found it interesting that the Court in their judgement referred (without commenting on the validity) to the Crown QC's view that a retrial would have been sought had Kelly and Connolly still been alive and the appeal held at a much earlier time. Either the Crown's QC was being particularly ungracious to the memories of the two dead men or there was more against them than was (or needed to be) stated in the Court's judgement.
Best regards,
OneRound
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