Hi OR,
yes, I do take your points on board, but the i.d. parades did not, I assume, contravene any laid-down procedure or law which applied at the time. JH's solicitor, Emmanuel Kleinmann, rolled up an hour late for the parade, and announced that he was satisfied with the arrangements, but did say later that JH's 'dyed hair showed up badly'. Acott had I believe requested that surgical-type skull-caps be issued to everyone on the parade, but this never happened and Kleinmann allowed the parade to go ahead without skull-caps. Woffinden suggests that Kleinmann did not object to the absence of skull-caps as he, Kleinmann, perhaps felt that the wearing of such a cap to hide his highly-noticeable hair might accentuate his 'icy-blue staring eyes', as Valerie had described them. I can't disagree with Woffinden, who said that Kleinmann's performance at the parade was not, quote, 'a landmark of legal representation'. Sherrard, naturally, argued that the parade was unfair even if legal, but the jury were plainly not convinced.
I would suggest that had the judge felt that Valerie's picking-out of another man at the first parade to be worthy of further consideration, he would have commented upon it. Which, I think, he did not do.
Graham
yes, I do take your points on board, but the i.d. parades did not, I assume, contravene any laid-down procedure or law which applied at the time. JH's solicitor, Emmanuel Kleinmann, rolled up an hour late for the parade, and announced that he was satisfied with the arrangements, but did say later that JH's 'dyed hair showed up badly'. Acott had I believe requested that surgical-type skull-caps be issued to everyone on the parade, but this never happened and Kleinmann allowed the parade to go ahead without skull-caps. Woffinden suggests that Kleinmann did not object to the absence of skull-caps as he, Kleinmann, perhaps felt that the wearing of such a cap to hide his highly-noticeable hair might accentuate his 'icy-blue staring eyes', as Valerie had described them. I can't disagree with Woffinden, who said that Kleinmann's performance at the parade was not, quote, 'a landmark of legal representation'. Sherrard, naturally, argued that the parade was unfair even if legal, but the jury were plainly not convinced.
I would suggest that had the judge felt that Valerie's picking-out of another man at the first parade to be worthy of further consideration, he would have commented upon it. Which, I think, he did not do.
Graham
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