Category Archives: Australia/New Zealand

Wednesday’s Quick Clicks…

Friday’s Quick Clicks…

Wednesday’s Quick Clicks…

DNA evidence: Protecting the ‘Gold Standard’?

A couple of stories from around the world this week have highlighted again, concerns that DNA evidence may be being abused, corrupted or misinterpreted, resulting in injustices. DNA evidence is often heavily relied upon by investigators, lawyers and judges and juries alike. In many cases, this may be justified, but certainly not in ALL cases. In India, there is confusion over DNA reports concerning the case of the French Diplomat Pascal Mazurier, accused of raping his daughter. The test report from the laboratory in Bangalore is said to be‘confusing’ and‘inconclusive’. Read more here…. and here….

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Meanwhile, in Cook County, Illinois, a disturbing report of a rape case being prosecuted with DNA, reportedly taken from the victim’s lips, with a match given of ‘1 in 4 African American Males’. If this is the case, then this is truly shocking. Indeed, reports claim that the DNA analyst admitted that on one reading of the DNA profile, the defendant could be excluded. That such a weak ‘result’ could be the basis of a prosecution, or even simply adduced as evidence, is very worrying indeed. Read more here…. and here….

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Of course, DNA evidence still remains powerful, used in the right cases, with appropriate safeguards and caveats etc. It does not however, demand the slavish adherence to a belief in it’s infallibility, a faith demonstrated earlier this week by one (anonymous) Australia DNA expert (read here….with incredulity), who argues that Australia doesn’t have miscarriages of justice because of its use of DNA from highly regulated laboratories. If only that were true….

Wednesday’s Quick Clicks…

  • Australian exoneree John Button wants more compensation after his payment only covered medical bills
  • The Pennsylvania Innocence Project tries to free Tyrone Jones (more here)
  • Like many exonerees, Lamonte Armstrong’s first 3 days for freedom are not easy
  • Mississippi Innocence Project wins new trial for two women it believes were wrongfully convicted of assault

Australian Man Freed, Murder Conviction Overturned, After Faulty Science Revealed…

From news source:

THE acquittal of Jeffrey Gilham is the latest in a string of decisions that reveals the serious systemic failures in the use of scientific evidence in NSW, one of the country’s top forensic law authorities says.

As further revelations emerged about the failure of prosecutors in the Gilham case to call a key expert witness, Gary Edmond from the University of NSW said the case highlighted the need for radical changes to the way expert evidence was both formulated and presented at trial.

”[Jeffrey] Gilham, [Gordon] Wood … they all reveal serious and systemic problems in the ability of our criminal justice system to credibly engage with Continue reading

Monday’s Quick Clicks…

  • Review of book The Dreyfus Affair, about a famous wrongful conviction in France
  • Jail “damaged” wrongfully convicted mother Lindy Chamberlain, says her former husband
  • Mid-Atlantic Innocence Project’s Young Professionals group to hold a Cocktails and Conversations event on July 10th with the legal team that freed the West Memphis 3 and exonerees Marvin Anderson and Thomas Haynesworth
  • Supporters of Illinois Innocence Project client Pamela Jacobazzi gathered in front of capital building yesterday to ask Illinois governor to grant her clemency on grounds that the “shaken baby syndrome” science used to convict her has proven to be unfounded

Friday’s Quick Clicks…

Tuesday’s Quick Clicks…

  • The Innocence Network UK has long used the Simon Hall cases as an example of a wrongful conviction that the CCRC has done nothing about.  Read an open letter to the CCRC from Simon’s supporters
  • Weeks before an expected shutdown for lack of funding, the Illinois Torture Inquiry and Relief Commission issued three decisions last Wednesday supporting inmates’ claims that Chicago Police detectives coerced their murder confessions
  • Lessons from the Chamberlain case in Australia:  the human cost of wrongful conviction

Sunday’s Quick Clicks…

Saturday’s Quick Clicks…

  • New Zealand exoneree Lindy Chamberlain thanks her Kiwi supporters, and outlines how she wants those who wrongfully convicted her to pay their debt to society
  • Exoneree David Jonathan Quindt is still haunted by his wrongful conviction
  • Group fights for pardon for Britain’s last “witch,” Helen Duncan, convicted more than 70 years ago
  • A dog in Scotland sentenced to death for attacking a cat, sought exoneration from the CCRC but was turned down
  • Recent exoneree Brian Banks’ NFL future unclear

In Australia, Dingo Caused Death that Led to Wrongful Conviction…

From theage.com:

A dingo was responsible for the death of Azaria Chamberlain in 1980, a Northern Territory coroner has found.

Coroner Elizabeth Morris told a packed courtroom on Tuesday that a dingo was to blame for the attack at Uluru, which originally saw Azaria’s mother Lindy Chamberlain-Creighton jailed for murder and her husband Michael given a suspended sentence for being an accessory after the fact.

Both were later exonerated after a royal commission in 1987.

In the final moments of handing down her finding, an emotional Ms Morris apologised to the Chamberlain family.

Ms Morris said she was satisfied the evidence was ‘‘adequate, clear, cogent and exact and excluded all other reasons possible’’.

She told the court: ‘‘(Azaria) died at Uluru on 17th August 1980 as a result of being attacked and taken by a dingo.’’

She said an amended death certificate was available immediately to them.

Outside the court, an emotional Mrs Chamberlain-Creighton thanked lawyer Continue reading

How Nations Handle Extra-Territorial Breaches of their Nationals’ Right to Innocence and Miscarriages of Justice

That the world is shrinking by the day, is much more than a metaphor. It’s a reality. Nationals of nations are scattered all around the globe, seeking different realities, challenges and opportunities. In the process, they are confronted with different norms, cultures and laws which they are compelled to abide by, or face sanctions for breaches of the laws of their host countries. In effect, nationals outside their own territories, must not only comply with the laws of their host countries, but there is a continuing responsibility of their own governments to ensure that they are treated fairly,  justly and in line with internationally acceptable legal standards.

What happens when a government fails to take up that challenge on behalf of their own citizens abroad? It’s sometimes a catch twenty-two situation, given the intersection between politics and law. One thing is certain though, most international Instruments lay down certain minimum standards for the dispensation of justice and, indeed, of the trial process. Recent cases of US and Nigerian citizens with criminal processes/procedures abroad, have demonstrated that, whilst one nation takes seriously it’s continuing international obligations to its nationals; the other have simply shirked her responsibilities to it’s nationals abroad, leaving them at the mercy and vagaries of the ‘laws’ of the host countries, without regard to the fairness, justice or indeed, whether the laws of the host countries guarantees the minimum rights under international law.

With respect to the US, the recent case of Jason Puracal (An American citizen) in Nicaragua was handled ‘fairly’ well, if for nothing, the drawing of the attention of the US Congress (43 House of Representatives members) to his plight, and the calling of the attention of the United Nations, declaring the Nicaraguan judicial system as flawed and a violation of international law. Read archived post on this case here.

That Nigerian nationals face legal hurdles and challenges abroad is well documented. What is not well appreciated is the response of the Nigerian government, and it’s attitude to her nationals undergoing criminal processes abroad. In Indonesia for instance, there are a sizeable number of Nigerians who have alleged that, their right to justice, and sometimes, outright miscarriages of justice have occurred; which has left them wrongfully imprisoned, some on death row, and others, actually have been executed without due process. Read here and here

There is the on-going trial of a Nigerian pastor in Austria – Pastor Joshua Esosa -for ‘drug related offenses’, which he vigorously denies. He was made to undergo criminal processes in Austria which resulted in his ‘conviction and sentence’, whereupon he appealed the decision. An appellate court in Austria, it seems, have ordered the remittal of his case for re-trial de novo. That re-trial commenced, or rather, took place on the 6th of June, 2012. The point here is that, Pastor Joshua Esosa practically shouted himself hoarse, before he was given the right of re-trial, despite the unfairness of the initial trial process; and the Nigerian Embassy appearing to have utterly failed him. Read his story here

In conclusion, the anecdotal facts above, clearly demonstrate that governments owe it’s own nationals obligations to ensure that they are given a fair trial abroad. That obligation is a continuing one. It must be exercised responsibly in line with internationally acceptable legal standards. Where those domestic standards falls short of universally acceptable norms, by virtue of its continuing obligations, it behooves governments to engage on her nationals’ behalf to ensure justice is done. The Nigerian government must now begin to learn to shift grounds, and explore not only legal measures, but political means to protect her nationals abroad.

Sunday’s Quick Clicks…

  • Police in New Zealand spent more than $500,000 retrying David Bain (trial ended in acquittal) who many believe is innocent
  • Support mounts for Las Vegas woman convicted of murder; Innocence Project among those who have signed petition asking prosecutors to drop the case
  • Law firm assisting Idaho Innocence Project seeks to be paid by court in its attempt to get a new trial for Sarah Marie Johnson, who was convicted of killing her parents in 2003 when she was 16
  • Problems with junk science slowly but surely starting to sink in with courts in Texas
  • More on Texas DA John Bradley getting the boot from office by voters for resisting DNA testing in the Michael Morton exoneration case

Blawg Review #323 – Memorial Day, the Rule of Law, & Human Rights.



While those of us in the US or UK may be taking a chance to relax or spend time with friends and family (28th May 2012 being Memorial Day, or Spring Bank Holiday in the UK), it is trite to point out (and for many of us, guilt-inducing) that many more will be continuing their struggles to improve the lot of humankind, or will be imprisoned, or lost to their loved ones. Today also marks the anniversary of the publication of the letter ‘The Forgotten Prisoners’ in The Observer newspaper in 1961, authored by Peter Benenson. Benenson’s call to arms to write letters of support for those whose human rights are breached is credited with starting the organization Amnesty International. The fight to uphold human rights is continued by millions around the world today and there are a plethora of blogs reflecting an interest in such human rights campaigns. (see list of some here)

Some of the more essential blogs for those interested in human rights, in the US, see this. Australian human rights lawyers are meanwhile well served by the great blog at the Castan Centre. UK lawyers should not go past The Human Rights Blog or the blog out of 1 Crown Office Row.

My interest in ‘injustice’ focuses on the criminal justice system and failings therein. Justice is about distributions – according persons their fair shares and treatment. The primacy of individual autonomy and rights is central to the ‘due process model’ of criminal justice, recognising that human fallibility and systemic failures can yield grave injustice. Embracing an ‘encompassing’ model of miscarriages of justice can stir debate over the proper focus of researchers and campaigners alike, with some claiming that an exclusive focus on the ‘innocence’ is vital. They prefer the term ‘wrongful conviction’ (although this too can have wider meaning, to include the factually and legally innocent as well as those convicted through unjust procedures), to distinguish those convicted but innocent, from those unjustly convicted.

The debate over taxonomy continues but does not detract from the work of many globally, trying to address the injustices caused by the criminal justice system. In the UK, many legal professionals and investigative journalists, have worked tirelessly alongside campaigners, to bring miscarriages of justice to light. Pressure groups such as Justice and Liberty have now pretty much abandoned this area, leaving it to smaller, largely unfunded organisations such as MOJO (Miscarriages of Justice Organisation) and Innocent (who maintain a wonderful resource rich website covering almost all the miscarriages of justice in the UK since 1993). An international source of information and links, originated in Australia, is ‘Networked Knowledge’, by Robert N. Moles. Single campaigns of course continue, with some great examples of webpages highlighting their cases, such as: Simon Hall and Sam Hallam (exonerated last week). University based Innocence Projects are also working tirelessly in the UK on alleged miscarriages of justice, (see Universities of Cardiff and Leeds for just two examples. This model is replicated from those Innocence Projects so successful in the US, and now expanding internationally.

The original Innocence Project in New York continues to be a source of inspiration and information. The work of the Innocence Project and the Innocence Network now has its own global dimension with The Center for the Global Study of Wrongful Conviction at the University of Cincinnati College of Law. Their blog is new but rapidly growing in prominence. Whilst covering breaking news, in terms of exonerations and legislative or political manouvres, it also features some great contributions on the causes of wrongful convictions. Many other individual Innocence Projects maintain great websites and blogs that are worth following, such as Northwestern Law Center on Wrongful Convictions. The University of Texas at Austin has an ‘Actual Innocence Awareness Database’ while Northwestern University and Michigan University have also launched a National Registry of Wrongful Convictions, a vital research tool for anyone interested in wrongful convictions in the US or elsewhere.

Of course, the ‘Innocence’ movement would not be what it is today without the advent of forensic DNA profiling, leading to the exoneration of many, and proving without doubt their innocence. Yet, while forensic science is acclaimed in the media, it has a blemished history in reality. Many infamous miscarriages of justice have had at their core, scientific evidence that was not disclosed, flawed, or misrepresented in court. This is not to assert that ‘scientific’ methods of identifying criminal perpetrators in particular, have not advanced dramatically. Lessening reliance upon inherently flawed eyewitness or other evidence has undoubtedly saved many innocent individuals from investigation or possibly, wrongful conviction. It is simply to concede that such ‘scientific’ methods of identification are not infallible. This is a focal point of my research, the contribution of ‘science’ to (in)justice. As such, there are a wealth of ‘forensic’ blogs to keep up with if one is to keep anywhere near ‘on top’ of developments in forensics.

Many, if not most, are maintained by forensic departments in universities, such as the Florida University Forensic Science Blog or by keen individuals (the

‘father’ of forensic blogging is ‘Zeno’. Forensic Suite 101 has a wealth of reading materials and great videos for those with strong stomachs. Some more recent newcomers include the Forensics Guy and one aimed at criminal defense lawyers, The Truth About Forensic Science. Covering forensic science and news about injustices and wrongful convictions, the blog by Peter Tillers also does a great job on discussing issues relating to evidence, while David Kaye, author of ‘The Double Helix and the Law of Evidence’ blogs at Double Helix Law on all things ‘DNA’ and law and also blogs on Forensic Science, Statistics & the Law. ‘The Charles Smith Blog’ blog was named after the infamous pathologist, responsible for much injustice in Canada. Maintained by a retired journalist, the blog now covers fascinating news on all things ‘criminal injustice’ related and is a must read.

The scale of injustice perpetrated by the criminal justice system itself may never be agreed upon. “How Bad Is The U.S. Wrongful Conviction Problem?” asks Brian Evans on the Human Rights Now Blog of Amnesty USA. However, it is easy to see that the issue coming to the fore globally now, more than ever. The work of the Innocence Network is unrivaled in this respect, but so too is the most often thankless (and costly) work done by individuals and campaigners, including criminal lawyers, working on cases and trying to bring about reform. Without the development of forensic DNA profiling, who knows whether this explosion of interest would have happened, or could have been maintained. While they may be sometimes at fault, it is good to see some great examples of forensic scientists also working hard to remedy injustices, and work to ensure the prevention of many more. Long may these individuals and organisations, which look out for our human rights, have our support.

We begin this week’s Blawg Review #323 at the Innocence Blog, where the Innocence Project honors the wrongfully  convicted who had served in the military. Perhaps more to be honored on Veterans Day, former Army Sergeant Dennis Maher served almost six years on active duty before he was wrongfully convicted in 1984. Exonerated through DNA testing in 2003, Maher says “Because of my wrongful conviction, I missed the opportunity to serve my country because I was going to be a career soldier. I think about that on Memorial Day.”

Returning to the anniversary of Amnesty International,  #AmnestyReport2012 – an overview of state of human rights worldwide – is now available in full online here. Apparently, the US Department of State submitted the report to Congress, except the part about the USA noting, “The focus of the Human Rights Reports is on the human rights performance of other governments. We note that the United States does examine its own human rights record against its international commitments and obligations in many other fora. For example, in December, the United States submitted a lengthy report to the U.N. Human Rights Council on U.S. implementation of the International Convention on Civil and Political Rights. The United States also engages in the U.N. Universal Periodic Review process, through which the human rights records of the U.N.’s 193 Member States are reviewed and assessed once every four years. These reports are available on HumanRights.gov.”

“The military trial of the WikiLeaks suspect Bradley Manning is being conducted amid far more secrecy than even the prosecution of the alleged 9/11 plotters in Guantanamo, a coalition of lawyers and media outlets protest,” writes Ed Pilkington for the guardian in New York.

Kenneth Roth, Executive Director, Human Rights Watch, on Twitter points us to an editorial of the New York Times alleging a court covers up that concludes, “The judges should have given the government’s overwrought claims of national security and secrecy special scrutiny, not extreme deference.”

Daphne Eviatar reports on HuffPost that “perhaps the most closely watched Guantanamo-related case since the Supreme Court confirmed detainees’ right to judicial review in Boumediene v. Bush in 2008, Latif v. Obama raises a critical issue that goes to the heart of whether U.S. prisoners have a meaningful opportunity to challenge their detention. Must a court presume the accuracy of a government document introduced against a Guantanamo detainee, even if it’s not clear how that document was produced?”

Focussing upon a particularly pernicious abuse of human rights, The Renditon Project website was officially launched. UK legal action charity, Reprieve, issued a press release, in which Clare Algar, Executive Director of Reprieve said, ‘The Rendition Project will be an important tool in bringing the tangled web of the CIA’s illegal rendition programme to light. It is essential that we get to the bottom of what was one of the worst human rights abuses of the ‘War on Terror’ – including the involvement of the UK, a number of other European states, and major corporations.

A Pakistani doctor was sentenced to 33 years in prison Wednesday for helping the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) locate Osama Bin Laden  reported JURIST news. “After a trial lasting two months during which Shakeel Afridi was not afforded the opportunity to defend himself, a tribal court convicted him of treason and spying.” Glenn Greenwald, in a provocative op-ed post on Salon.com says that “American rage at Pakistan over the punishment of a CIA-cooperating Pakistani doctor is quite revealing of The Imperial Mind.”

One of the most common human rights concerns in the USA, wrongful convictions, is reported by The Wrongful Convictions Blog and the ABA Journal as well as other media this week. The first-ever published report (PDF) of the National Registry of Exonerations, assembled by the University of Michigan Law School and the Center on Wrongful Convictions at Northwestern University School of Law, “highlights grave questions about the legitimacy of the legal justice system.”

On the Huffington Post Chicago, the president of the Chicago Innocence Project, David Protess, introduces the exonerated.

More than 200 men and women have been wrongfully convicted of serious crimes in California, six of whom were sentenced to death.  Here on Death Penalty Focus are some of their stories.

Brian Banks, former football star and USC Trojan recruit, was exonerated this week, as reported here on The Wrongful Conviction Blog. The “victim” recanted and admitted she lied at trial (the sex was actually consensual). She did not come forward earlier because she didn’t want to “give the money back”–meaning the settlement that she obtained from the school where the rape allegedly occurred.

The Innocence Blog points to a story on Salon.com that describes The Long Road From Exoneration to Compensation for the wrongfully convicted.

Meanwhile, on the other side of the Atlantic, there was an important victory for prisoners (and the public) in the European Court of Human Rights, with the Court RE-affirming earlier decisions, that there should not be a blanket rule disenfranchising prisoners. On the UK Human Rights Blog, Reuven Ziegler writes about the case for letting prisoners voteCharon QC notes the latest prisoner votes case from Europe on his blog, “The case is important.  For my part, I have no problem whatsoever with prisoners voting.  I rather hope that prisoners will return to society improved for paying their debt to society and be part of society.  Pie in the sky for recidivists… but an ideal to which we should aspire? I am, I suspect, in a sizeable minority.”

However, as the honest among us would readily admit, on the whole, our prison system does little to rehabilitate, in fact, as Alisa Roth on the ACLU Blog of Rights argues prisoners subjected to solitary confinement in particular are ““more broken than when they went in”. Meanwhile, Gideon, a public defender, looks at some reactions to the death penalty repeal  in CT and tells the tale in a post titled, Idiocracy.

A topic comes up time and again on the Wrongful Convictions blog, Conrad Black points to cases of prosecutor misconduct and asks, “How Many Wrongful Convictions Will the Public Stand for?

“Facing the truth is hard to do, especially the truth about ourselves,” says Bill Moyers. “Not surprising, Americans have been sorely pressed to come to terms with the fact that after 9/11 our government began to torture people and did so in defiance of domestic and international law. It’s no secret such cruelty occurred. It’s just the truth we’d rather not think about. But Memorial Day is a good time to make the effort because, if we really want to honor the Americans in uniform who died fighting for their country, we’ll redouble our efforts to make sure we’re worthy of their sacrifice. We’ll renew our commitment to the rule of law. For the rule of law is essential to any civilization worth dying for.”

Blawg Review has information about next week’s host, and instructions how to get your blawg posts reviewed in upcoming issues.

New Zealand Detective Supports Innocence of Man He Helped Convict…

From the New Zealand Herald:

An innocent man has spent almost 20 years in jail for one of New Zealand’s most notorious cases of rape and murder, says a detective with expert knowledge of the crime.

Susan Burdett was brutally raped and murdered in her Papatoetoe home in 1992 after an evening out 10-pin bowling.

The 39-year-old accounts clerk, who lived alone, was bashed repeatedly on the head with a softball bat that she kept in her bedroom for protection.

A colleague found her naked body on her bed after she failed to turn up for work the next day.

The case horrified the public and baffled police, who had no firm leads for almost a year.

Eventually, a 17-year-old gang associate, Teina Pora, was arrested and convicted of the crime in 1994 after making inconsistent confessions.

But in 1996, DNA testing showed the semen inside Mrs Burdett belonged to serial rapist Malcolm Rewa, who was unknown at the time of Pora’s trial but was convicted in 1998 of sexually assaulting 24 women.

Now the detective whose expert testimony convicted Rewa says he is convinced police got the wrong man for Mrs Burdett’s murder.

“It’s one that has stuck in the craw,” Dave Henwood told the Weekend Herald this week. “There’s no doubts in my mind.”

Mr Henwood, a multi-award-winning criminal profiler who also helped catch Continue reading

Wrongful Conviction Reminiscences of an Australian High Court Judge

I blogged recently about the awesome role Judges play in the dispensation of justice. Retired Australian High Court Judge Michael Kirby has just reiterated and properly contextualised it, with respect to wrongful convictions.  Drawing on his experiences in the bench, particularly with the wrongful conviction of Andrew Mallard. He addressed these issues along with others germane to the fair dispensation of justice. The occasion was about his experiences at the bench between 1996 to 2009 at Melbourne RMIT university. Read 9news reportage of his lecture here

He touched on the quality of legal training; the public perception of the apolitical nature of judges; the divide between conservative and liberal judges. And of course,  hinted of his ‘regrets’ on the Andrew Mallard case. He said ‘Maybe if I’d paid a little more attention, may be if I’d seen some of these arguments (sooner)…. he wouldn’t have had to spend a decade in prison; its something that troubles the mind’.  However hard we deny it, pretend it doesn’t exist or the system can not possibly have leakages, there still remain the real possibility of it happening, no matter the jurisdiction. We must continue to work at it with an open mind. We must come to terms with it. I commend Justice Michael Kirby’s ‘statement of regret’ a fortiori to prosecutors, police officers and lawyers generally.

‘Truth, Justice, Fair Trial’ – booklet available on Arthur Greer’s case in Australia

The West Australian Attorney General is currently considering a dossier collated by the Criminal Justice Review Project at Edith Cowan University, Perth, Australia, requesting that Mr Arthur Greer get a full re-consideration of his conviction. Greer was convicted in 1992 after the discovery of the body of missing schoolgirl Sharon Mason, missing since 1983. He has maintained his innocence, and while eligible for parole since 2001, he has not been released due to his refusal to accept guilt for the murder. Mr Greer’s daughter has now produced a booklet summarising his plea for justice, being sent to prominent Australians, as well as accompanying the artworks that Mr Greer is selling from prison. You can read more about the case here…  and here… and the booklet is available here…

Truth, Justice, Fair Trial… The Case of Arthur Greer.

Friday’s Quick Clicks…

  • Robert Dewey’s DNA exoneration early this week would never have happened if not for lucky preservation of the evidence; more on Dewey exoneration here
  • More on the Ohio Innocence Project’s attempts to exonerate Dewey Jones via DNA and other new evidence
  • Protests in Toledo, Ohio interrupt Prosecutor’s lunch; protestors want prosecutor to agree to release DNA for testing in Danny Brown’s case so that Danny, already exonerated, can confirm his innocence to a sufficient level for state compensation
  • Prosecutor in suburban Cincinnati faces criminal charges for intentionally altering an indictment in a case (adding gun specs)
  • Maryland Supreme Court’s decision that collecting DNA profiles from arrestees is unconstitutional may get appealed to SCOTUS
  • Canadian exoneree Romeo Phillion files $14 million lawsuit for wrongful conviction
  • New book focuses on risks of bringing back death penalty in UK
  • Update on the efforts by the Innocence Project to free Booker Diggins in New Orleans

Cuts to Legal Aid in NZ a Threat to Forensic Science and Justice?

An interesting short comment has appeared on The Forensic Group site (New Zealand based), questioning whether the cuts to legal aid in that country are having a detrimental impact on the commissioning of forensic tests. It also warns that some of the ‘best’ defence lawyers in New Zealand are moving out of criminal law because of the funding shortages. As they explain:

“The problem with losing good criminal defence lawyers is that access to justice will be compromised, there will be more appeals and, potentially, miscarriages of justice.”

Some very worthwhile questions asked…. read the full post here…

Legal Aid costs and forensic science: the cost of justice?