What If ....
Hi folks,
I would be grateful if you would permit me to raise a ''what if'' scenario for consideration.
Under the Criminal Justice Act 2003, previously acquitted muder suspects can be retried for the same crime if there is ''new'' and ''compelling'' evidence. The retrial has to be approved by the Director of Public Prosections and the original acquittal quashed by the Court of Appeal. Although this Act did not come into force until 2005, it covers all applicable crimes regardless of when they were committed.
Now, just suppose [I can hear some of you bristling already!] Hanratty had been acquitted at his original trial. I don't think that's a ludicrous proposition. After all, the jury took a considerable time to reach their conclusion and their verdict was apparently surprising to some commentators. Continuing my theme, suppose a cold case review took place many years later and the same DNA evidence came to light as considered for real by the Court of Appeal in 2002.
In this scenario, would the DPP have approved Hanratty's retrial and would the Court of Appeal have quashed his original acquittal? I'm not so sure they would have done. Consider just some of the following questions:
* Do we know precisely how Hanratty's and Miss Storie's items were tested in the early 1960s?
* Did the testing procedures then meet the standards now in place relating to the safety of DNA evidence?
* Although we know where these items were subsequently located in the 1990s, do we know where they were during the intervening thirty years (post trial) and who handled them during that time?
* Can we be satisfied what glass fragments, which might have come from a vial or tube, were doing with certain of the items and what impact any of its possible content might have had?
* Did these storage procedures meet the standards now in place relating to the safety of DNA evidence?
I believe any reasonable person would be hard pressed to answer ''yes'' to any of the above questions. I reiterate that this doesn't mean Hanratty was innocent but do suspect the Court of Appeal would not have been nearly so keen to rely on the DNA evidence and find it ''compelling'' if the original verdict had been different.
All to aid debate and, of course, a hypothetical scenario but it does make me wonder ....
Hi folks,
I would be grateful if you would permit me to raise a ''what if'' scenario for consideration.
Under the Criminal Justice Act 2003, previously acquitted muder suspects can be retried for the same crime if there is ''new'' and ''compelling'' evidence. The retrial has to be approved by the Director of Public Prosections and the original acquittal quashed by the Court of Appeal. Although this Act did not come into force until 2005, it covers all applicable crimes regardless of when they were committed.
Now, just suppose [I can hear some of you bristling already!] Hanratty had been acquitted at his original trial. I don't think that's a ludicrous proposition. After all, the jury took a considerable time to reach their conclusion and their verdict was apparently surprising to some commentators. Continuing my theme, suppose a cold case review took place many years later and the same DNA evidence came to light as considered for real by the Court of Appeal in 2002.
In this scenario, would the DPP have approved Hanratty's retrial and would the Court of Appeal have quashed his original acquittal? I'm not so sure they would have done. Consider just some of the following questions:
* Do we know precisely how Hanratty's and Miss Storie's items were tested in the early 1960s?
* Did the testing procedures then meet the standards now in place relating to the safety of DNA evidence?
* Although we know where these items were subsequently located in the 1990s, do we know where they were during the intervening thirty years (post trial) and who handled them during that time?
* Can we be satisfied what glass fragments, which might have come from a vial or tube, were doing with certain of the items and what impact any of its possible content might have had?
* Did these storage procedures meet the standards now in place relating to the safety of DNA evidence?
I believe any reasonable person would be hard pressed to answer ''yes'' to any of the above questions. I reiterate that this doesn't mean Hanratty was innocent but do suspect the Court of Appeal would not have been nearly so keen to rely on the DNA evidence and find it ''compelling'' if the original verdict had been different.
All to aid debate and, of course, a hypothetical scenario but it does make me wonder ....
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