‘Panic’ is one of these catch all terms that we are all likely to resort to when we struggle to find a logical explanation for human behaviour. It has a long and undistinguished history in murder cases, those ones where the accused claims to have panicked upon seeing a dead body for which he was not responsible, then proceeded to dismember the body before stuffing it in a suitcase. Juries are rightly sceptical of this interpretation of ‘panic’ when it is in stark contrast to the supporting actions of the accused.
This same stark contrast is visible in the JFK prosecution case against Lee Oswald, a man cool enough to shoot dead the President of the USA before nipping down for a bottle of coke and brushing off a policeman who had raced into the building. He then sauntered out of the building, directing a reporter to a payphone in doing so and when questioned by police after arrest impressed them with his calm demeanour. In between times though we are told he panicked, shot a policeman and dashed into a cinema.
The A6 Case prosecution seems to have the same anomalies. Hanratty panicked when Gregsten passed back the bag, yet he pulled the trigger twice in what seems like a cold blooded execution. The shooting of Valerie Storie was even more cold blooded- I think the gunman had to reload his weapon- so not much panic visible there. Far from panicking, the murderer did not leave the scene immediately after his killing but stayed around to sexually assault Miss Storie. He was also cool enough to dispose of the car and slip into anonymity for some time.
I think the idea of panic is required to cover the gaping hole at the centre of the A6 Case. There was no purpose to this crime so it has to be made the act of an irrational person. It’s not good enough. Even a drunk man has an idea of his route home, however badly he might execute it. Even a political lunatic like Hitler works within the parameters of his own perverted logic. And even the most pathetic, weak minded criminal has some sort of tawdry, misguided purpose to his actions. At the centre of the A6 Case we have nothing that stands examination.
This same stark contrast is visible in the JFK prosecution case against Lee Oswald, a man cool enough to shoot dead the President of the USA before nipping down for a bottle of coke and brushing off a policeman who had raced into the building. He then sauntered out of the building, directing a reporter to a payphone in doing so and when questioned by police after arrest impressed them with his calm demeanour. In between times though we are told he panicked, shot a policeman and dashed into a cinema.
The A6 Case prosecution seems to have the same anomalies. Hanratty panicked when Gregsten passed back the bag, yet he pulled the trigger twice in what seems like a cold blooded execution. The shooting of Valerie Storie was even more cold blooded- I think the gunman had to reload his weapon- so not much panic visible there. Far from panicking, the murderer did not leave the scene immediately after his killing but stayed around to sexually assault Miss Storie. He was also cool enough to dispose of the car and slip into anonymity for some time.
I think the idea of panic is required to cover the gaping hole at the centre of the A6 Case. There was no purpose to this crime so it has to be made the act of an irrational person. It’s not good enough. Even a drunk man has an idea of his route home, however badly he might execute it. Even a political lunatic like Hitler works within the parameters of his own perverted logic. And even the most pathetic, weak minded criminal has some sort of tawdry, misguided purpose to his actions. At the centre of the A6 Case we have nothing that stands examination.
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