I recently approached a close colleague of the late Michael Sherrard QC,Hanratty's trial barrister , to find out if this lady had any knowledge at all about whether the words "the wrong man was not hanged"could be attributed to Michael Sherrard ,either in recent times or in the past .This esteemed friend and colleague , who is herself a barrister ,took the trouble of searching through every file on the case available to her and since she is both a friend of Shirley Sherrard, his widow , was even able to ask Shirley whether or not she knew anything at all about such a sentence ever having been uttered by her husband,the late Michael Sherrard QC.Neither women had any knowledge whatever of such a phrase being uttered by Michael Sherrard QC -not even a hint in all the extensive files available to her of any words to that effect ever having been uttered by Michael Sherrard QC.
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non-provenance of 'wrong man was not hanged'
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The provenance of this quote has been known for years and has been posted several times on this forum. It was a summary of talk given by Sherrard to the Law Society of the City of London School for Girls. This probably took place sometime in October 2002 (based on what appears on archives of the news section on the school's website) and I would guess that it was a teacher or possibly a student rather than a journalist who wrote the summary.
Here is the earliest example of it on archive.org:
http://www.clsg.org.uk/hanratty.htm
It seems pretty clear to me that the person who wrote the summary is quoting what Sherrard said during this talk (or at least their memory of what he said) and is not their own opinion.
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Originally posted by gallicrow View PostThe provenance of this quote has been known for years and has been posted several times on this forum. It was a summary of talk given by Sherrard to the Law Society of the City of London School for Girls. This probably took place sometime in October 2002 (based on what appears on archives of the news section on the school's website) and I would guess that it was a teacher or possibly a student rather than a journalist who wrote the summary.
Here is the earliest example of it on archive.org:
http://www.clsg.org.uk/hanratty.htm
It seems pretty clear to me that the person who wrote the summary is quoting what Sherrard said during this talk (or at least their memory of what he said) and is not their own opinion.
GrahamWe are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze
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Originally posted by Graham View PostI posted that short summary on here a few weeks ago, Gallicrow; maybe you missed it. Nats seems to believe that it was written by some journalist called Alexander Baron, but I've seen no proof of that claim. As I said previously, as it was a quote from a talk given to The Law Society, I would think that had Mr Sherrard been misquoted by whoever wrote that article, the Society or Mr Sherrard himself would have come down rather heavily on the writer, and the article removed from the internet at the very least.
Graham
OneRound
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Originally posted by Graham View PostI posted that short summary on here a few weeks ago, Gallicrow; maybe you missed it.
Graham
http://forum.casebook.org/showthread.php?t=218&page=15
Natalie Severn has posted a great deal on the Hanratty forums and the volume of her posts often drowns out everyone else, sometimes making the threads nigh on impossible to read. I wanted to ensure that this one, in which she seems to think that she has proven that Sherrard never made the "wrong man was not hanged" remark, contained the link that I think proves that he very probably did make it.Last edited by gallicrow; 11-25-2015, 03:38 PM.
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Originally posted by OneRound View PostCredit to Natalie for what she's found out so far but, rather in line with Graham's post, I do feel this investigation needs to end up at Mr Sherrard's talk to The Law Society.
OneRoundLast edited by Natalie Severn; 11-25-2015, 04:24 PM.
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Originally posted by gallicrow View PostNatalie Severn has posted a great deal on the Hanratty forums and the volume of her posts often drowns out everyone else, sometimes making the threads nigh on impossible to read. I wanted to ensure that this one, in which she seems to think that she has proven that Sherrard never made the "wrong man was not hanged" remark, contained the link that I think proves that he very probably did make it.
The vague alleged remark of Mr Sherrard's to some law society claims no authorship nor date of when this address took place which is very suspicious to say the least. There is no independent corroborative evidence or reference for this anywhere else.Last edited by Sherlock Houses; 11-25-2015, 04:23 PM.*************************************
"A body of men, HOLDING THEMSELVES ACCOUNTABLE TO NOBODY, ought not to be trusted by anybody." --Thomas Paine ["Rights of Man"]
"Justice is an ideal which transcends the expedience of the State, or the sensitivities of Government officials, or private individuals. IT HAS TO BE PURSUED WHATEVER THE COST IN PEACE OF MIND TO THOSE CONCERNED." --'Justice of the Peace' [July 12th 1975]
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Originally posted by Graham View PostI would think that had Mr Sherrard been misquoted by whoever wrote that article, the Society or Mr Sherrard himself would have come down rather heavily on the writer, and the article removed from the internet at the very least.
Graham
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Originally posted by gallicrow View PostNo, I didn't miss your post. However the link has been posted on at least three other occasions, the first time was back in 2007/2007:
http://forum.casebook.org/showthread.php?t=218&page=15Last edited by Natalie Severn; 11-25-2015, 04:42 PM.
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Originally posted by Natalie Severn View PostWhat 'Law Society??? ' .....? This is all utter nonsense.The so called "law Society" in question -as far as any provenance goes- is that of a private London Secondary School with no more claim having a "law society " than that of a local boy scouts for goodness sake.Its sheer piffle the whole thing.
To my mind, other comments attributed to Mr Sherrard - in particular, warning of the dangers of ''trial by police'' - sound just the sort of thing he might reasonably have said.
Regards,
OneRound
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Originally posted by OneRound View PostNatalie - the question doesn't concern the status and calibre of the particular society but whether Mr Sherrard spoke there and, if he did, what he said.
To my mind, other comments attributed to Mr Sherrard - in particular, warning of the dangers of ''trial by police'' - sound just the sort of thing he might reasonably have said.
Regards,
OneRound
I can't see this business being worthy of serious debate to be honest. All the same good work on your research Natalie.I myself would much sooner accept that Mrs Sherrard would have known had her husband used this controversial phrase, rather than than some comment made by a high school girl writing a review on a lecture.
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Originally posted by OneRound View PostNatalie - the question doesn't concern the status and calibre of the particular society but whether Mr Sherrard spoke there and, if he did, what he said.
To my mind, other comments attributed to Mr Sherrard - in particular, warning of the dangers of ''trial by police'' - sound just the sort of thing he might reasonably have said.
Regards,
OneRound
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