In his long plea for clemency to Butler,the then Home Secretary, to exercise the Prerogative of Mercy Sherrard presented the issue of identity as the cornerstone of the case-viz:
'not only clearly on the face of the evidence, but also from the summing up of the learned judge,Mr Justice Gormon and from the judgement of the court of criminal appeal.All the other evidence in the case was, you may feel, subsidiary to the issue of identity and all of it was either inconclusive or equivocal.
Imagine if you will ,that no one had been able positively to identify Hanratty:there would have been no case against him and all the other factors relied upon would have been aimless corks on a storm-tossed sea."
Sherrard continues:
" There is no class of evidence more liable to fall victim to the frailties of human judgment than that relating to identity...................the witness, honest but mistaken,is a problem indeed and the judgement of juries is as problematical as the problem itself "
Gereth Peirce , the highly respected human rights lawyer, appears to agree wholeheartedly with Michael Sherrard's view on the frailties of human judgement in this regard ,clearly stating her view expressed on page 48 of 'Dispatches from the Dark Side-on torture and the death of justice' Verso publications 2009 :
"The first description is vital.If a witness makes a positive identification of one individual,no subsequent identification is permissible.Equivocation and uncertainty are not enough"
Not only did Valerie Storie 'hesitate' for almost 20 minutes before she 'identified Hanratty' but Valerie Storie had crucially made just such a 'positive identification' only a couple of weeks earlier of a totally innocent person ,Michael Clark, as the man who was her rapist and assailant and Michael Gregsten's killer.
In today's courts Valerie Storie's evidence would therefore be impermissible.
Although Michael Sherrard goes on to plead with the Home Secretary to consider a number of other aspects of the case,including the statements of several of the late Rhyl witnesses ,he ends his plea by requesting him to "weigh very carefully in the balance" the evidence of Mrs Dinwoodie "who was agreed by everyone to be honest and respectable."
Sherrard concludes his plea thus : ' I earnestly ask you to recommend that the sentence of death under which Hanratty lies be not carried out.'
'not only clearly on the face of the evidence, but also from the summing up of the learned judge,Mr Justice Gormon and from the judgement of the court of criminal appeal.All the other evidence in the case was, you may feel, subsidiary to the issue of identity and all of it was either inconclusive or equivocal.
Imagine if you will ,that no one had been able positively to identify Hanratty:there would have been no case against him and all the other factors relied upon would have been aimless corks on a storm-tossed sea."
Sherrard continues:
" There is no class of evidence more liable to fall victim to the frailties of human judgment than that relating to identity...................the witness, honest but mistaken,is a problem indeed and the judgement of juries is as problematical as the problem itself "
Gereth Peirce , the highly respected human rights lawyer, appears to agree wholeheartedly with Michael Sherrard's view on the frailties of human judgement in this regard ,clearly stating her view expressed on page 48 of 'Dispatches from the Dark Side-on torture and the death of justice' Verso publications 2009 :
"The first description is vital.If a witness makes a positive identification of one individual,no subsequent identification is permissible.Equivocation and uncertainty are not enough"
Not only did Valerie Storie 'hesitate' for almost 20 minutes before she 'identified Hanratty' but Valerie Storie had crucially made just such a 'positive identification' only a couple of weeks earlier of a totally innocent person ,Michael Clark, as the man who was her rapist and assailant and Michael Gregsten's killer.
In today's courts Valerie Storie's evidence would therefore be impermissible.
Although Michael Sherrard goes on to plead with the Home Secretary to consider a number of other aspects of the case,including the statements of several of the late Rhyl witnesses ,he ends his plea by requesting him to "weigh very carefully in the balance" the evidence of Mrs Dinwoodie "who was agreed by everyone to be honest and respectable."
Sherrard concludes his plea thus : ' I earnestly ask you to recommend that the sentence of death under which Hanratty lies be not carried out.'
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