Category Archives: United Kingdom

How Much Justice Can We Afford: Postscript

In a  recent post: How much justice can we afford during the UK’s financial crisis?  I discussed the many budget cuts in the UK, to the police, courts, legal aid, and forensic science, that are threatening the quality of justice in this country. I could barely have believed that today we read that a senior police officer has called for ‘volunteers’ to help police take fingerprints. He calls this ‘very low grade’ forensics, and something that ordinary members of the public could do with little training. This is in an attempt to save £20m from the police budget. One can only imagine where these cuts will lead us next.

Police chief wants volunteers to collect fingerprints

Police Corruption: a Global Issue.

When people talk about police corruption, it is easy to look to other nations, such as China, or countries on the African continent. Aren’t reporters always telling us that these places are awash with corruption? Yesterday, the UK heard that following a disaster at a sporting event 23 years ago in which 96 people died (not counting those that subsequently died of injuries or took their own lives in extreme distress), the police not only did not act appropriately at the time, they subsequently altered hundreds of police statements and conducted a major cover-up. They illegally accessed police files to try and smear the victims and put pressure on other emergency services to change their statements to absolve the police of any blame. It has taken 23 years to finally uncover this scandal, and may take many more, before we see any police officers prosecuted or disciplined for their actions. One wonders how many years it would have taken before any police officer would have blown the whistle…  Read more here…  Hillsborough disaster 

Today, we hear of reports that a police officer has admitted to 13 charges of misconduct in a public office, after he failed to investigate offences, and falsified reports, while working in a ‘gold standard’ sexual offences unit within the Metropolitan Police. The officer faked police reports, claimed to have interviewed suspects and witnesses, and failed to pass on forensic evidence over at least 4 years. This is just one of four investigations being undertaken into this one police unit. Read more here…  Former Met police officer admits failing to investigate rape cases

Of course, one does not have to look too far to confirm stereotypes that corruption within policing is rife in other countries… The Sowetan Daily reports on major corruption and criminal activity in their police forensic laboratories: ‘Corruption at forensic lab sabotages convictions’ but we should never forget to look at what is under our noses too. A similar story has recently emerged from a lab in Jamaica Plains, where a toxicologist is under investigation. 9 years of testing is being investigated, with the potential for numerous cases of drugs being mishandled and manipulated to ensure positive test results:

Black mark on the state drug lab

If the police and forensic scientists cannot be relied upon to tell the truth, the the whole criminal process is jeopardised.

Big Victory in Scottish CCRC for Innocence Network UK…

From press release:

A pro bono legal clinic staffed by Bristol law students has secured an appeal for a man who has spent more than 30 years trying to clear his name for a conviction he was imprisoned for.

The University of Bristol Innocence Project (UoBIP), a centre which teaches law through working on real cases of alleged wrongful convictions, has this week made a breakthrough in the case of William ‘Wullie’ Beck. Wullie Beck Bristol Innocence Project

  1. From left to right: Law student Ryan Jendoubi, Louise Beck, Dr Michael Naughton, Wullie Beck, executive director of the Innocence Network UK Gabe Tan, and student Mark Allum

At the age of 20 Mr Beck was arrested for an armed robbery of a post van in Livingston, Scotland on December 16, 1981. He served six years of imprisonment for his conviction, which was based exclusively on eyewitness identification.

Although Mr Beck claims he was in Glasgow the entire day at the time of the robbery, some 40 miles away from where the crime occurred, he was convicted on the positive identification of two eyewitnesses despite other witnesses not identifying Mr Beck in an identity parade.

For more than three decades Mr Beck has protested his innocence, claiming he is a victim of eyewitness misidentification.

He has made two previous unsuccessful applications to the Scottish Criminal Continue reading

How much justice can we afford during the UK’s financial crisis?

Justice is yet again coming under threat in the UK. With a government hell bent on cutting expenditure, the justice system is proving an easy targets for cuts. These cuts, whilst widely criticised, are only now starting to result in the inevitable: injustice. The most obvious cuts have been to legal aid budgets: this is not new of course, governments have been cutting the legal aid budget for years – but it has now reached crisis point, with criminal lawyers leaving the profession and ineffective defence lawyering becoming widespread. These cuts are proposed to be 40% – see here…

Legal aid cuts: if lawyers don’t defend justice for all, who will?

These cuts in addition of course to the privatisation of the court interpreting service, which I have blogged about previously.

Recently, we had the closure of the UK’s Forensic Science Service in March 2012 – while lone voices raised serious concerns about this (and I have blogged about this previously) and the risks of miscarriages of justice, the public may finally be starting to sit up. The BBC recently aired a Radio 4 documentary highlighting the risks of flawed forensic science (news item contains link to radio programme):

DNA test jailed innocent man for murder

We are now being warned that budget cuts to the Criminal Cases Review Commission – the body specifically tasked with investigating possible wrongful convictions – is leaving the organisation so cash-strapped it is taking short-cuts and delays are lengthening. The case of Kevin Lane and his fight to get the CCRC to refer his case back the Court of Appeal is just one example:

Prisoner’s 16-year fight to prise open the secrets of Operation Cactus

All of this comes on top of 20% across the board cuts to the police, with some forces cutting their forensic budgets by up to 40% to ‘protect’ frontline policing. Michael Mansfield now warns the government that treating the justice system as a business  risks the entire system with creeping deregulation. The cost of wrongly imprisoning someone (and leaving someone else free to commit more crimes) is difficult to calculate in simple economic terms – the government needs to realise that all these cuts will end up with far greater costs – to public confidence in justice, and the ability of the police and courts to arrest and prosecute the right people. This is too high a cost to bear:

Justice can’t be treated as a business enterprise.

Call for the re-prosecution of the police officers responsible for wrongful convictions in Wales…

From news source:

Ex-police officers who were acquitted on charges of fitting-up three innocent men on murder charges in Wales’ most notorious miscarriage of justice case should face a fresh trial, an author has argued in a new book.

Last December the trial of eight former South Wales policemen accused of conspiracy to pervert the course of justice while investigating the murder of Cardiff prostitute Lynette White in 1988 collapsed after Swansea Crown Court was told that documents which should have been handed to the defence had been destroyed. The accused former officers persistently maintained their innocence and continue to do so.

Weeks after the trial collapsed it emerged that the material had not been shredded, but had been found in South Wales police headquarters.

Five men were charged with Lynette’s murder, three of whom were found guilty. Later their convictions were quashed, with the Court of Appeal strongly criticising the “oppressive” questioning of one of the defendants.

Following advances in DNA technology the real killer, Jeffrey Gafoor, was Continue reading

Thursday’s Quick Clicks…

Saturday’s Quick Clicks…

  • More on New Jersey’s new eyewitness identification instructions for jurors
  • Retired detective in New York still trying to solve murder case that sent innocent man Steven Barnes to prison
  • Ken Bates, the Australian senior prosecutor in the wrongful conviction of Andrew Mallard for murder, has conceded he failed to comply with his duty to disclose that the victim’s injuries did not match a wrench alleged to have been used in the crime.  Bates has been fined $10,000 in the State Administrative Tribunal following an allegation brought by the Legal Profession Complaints Committee that he engaged in unsatisfactory professional conduct as a prosecutor on behalf of the crown during the 1995 trial of Mr Mallard.
  • New book on the Amanda Knox case
  • In Ireland, prosecutors have lost a bid to stop Mr Justice Adrian Hardiman from being part of an appeal court that will decide whether a man’s conviction 40 years ago for the manslaughter of a young woman was a miscarriage of justice.  The three-judge Court of Criminal Appeal dismissed the “special and unusual” application by the DPP for Mr Justice Hardiman to recuse himself from further hearing the case of Martin Conmey. His conviction for the manslaughter of Una Lynskey (19) was overturned two years ago and he wants a declaration of a miscarriage of justice.
  • Vermont may be close to first DNA exoneration

Failing to punish or discipline those who cause wrongful convictions.

One of the many frustrations of those involved in wrongful convictions, is the fact that it is almost unheard of to get those professionals who were responsible for the injustice disciplined or punished. Most in fact continue to practice, police, prosecute, or judge. Even those paltry efforts that are made to discipline or punish these individuals are often met with obfuscation and are rarely successful (for the recent attempts to prosecute the police officers responsible for the wrongful conviction of the UK’s Cardiff Three case see earlier post here…). Now in Scotland, a former police inspector has been jailed for five years for witholding and fabricating evidence when investigating a murder in Scotland 17 years ago, the resulted in the wrongful conviction of two men.  In sentencing him, the judge said: “You were in a position of trust. The criminal justice system depends upon police officers acting with honesty and integrity.”  Read more here…  This is welcome news, but sadly, very unusual.

Meanwhile in Australia, the prosecutor in a notorious miscarriage of justice which saw Andrew Mallard convicted of murder and spend 12 years in prison, has been fined AU$10,000 for his involvement in the wrongful conviction. Whilst one may  be tempted to think that this is again some good news, along with the finding that his practice fell below the standard expected of legal practitioners, Ken Bates was allowed to step down from the prosecution service in 2009 with a payout of AU$270,000 and without facing disciplinary action. The fine makes hardly a dent in his large payout. Read more here…  It is regrettable that criminal charges were not brought, and this was the maximum fine available to the Administrative Tribunal that heard the case.

I firmly believe that we should not accept that in many cases of wrongful convictions, there is not someone, or many people, who acted negligently, their work fell below acceptable standards, or they were simply corrupt and acted criminally. To be taking wrongful convictions seriously, we need to see more of these individuals disciplined and punished. 

Cop Jailed in Scotland for Manufacturing and Withholding Evidence…

From news source:

A policeman convicted of hiding key evidence from prosecutors during a murder case has been jailed for five years.

Richard Munro, 53, withheld vital information from officials investigating the suspicious death of Andrew Forsyth 17 years ago.

Mr Forsyth’s body was discovered on November 9, 1995 and Munro decided that he had been murdered on November 3.

The bungling cop then changed statements given by witnesses who claimed to have seen Mr Forsyth alive after that date.

And he failed to inform prosecutors about the information being made available to staff and officers involved in the case.

Two men, Steven Johnston and Billy Allison, spent ten years behind bars after they were convicted of murder at their trial the following year.

They were only released when appeal court judges quashed their convictions because of the dodgy police investigation.

Munro, of Dunfermline, was found guilty of intent to defeat the ends of justice following a trial in Edinburgh in June.

He was jailed for five years at the High Court in Aberdeen on Wednesday.

Prosecutors revealed they had ordered a review of evidence gathered in connection with the murder case.

A Crown Office spokesman said: “Now that the Munro trial has concluded the Crown has instructed a review of the evidence relating to the death in the light of the appeal, the Carnegie Inquiry and the trial of Richard Munro.”

Detective inspector Munro led the investigation into the death of Mr Forsyth after his body was discovered in the living room of his home in November 1995.

The Fife Constabulary officer had just been promoted and had been put in charge of his first murder investigation.

But having made up his own mind about the case, he rejected information from witnesses that went against his own belief.

Officers were instructed not to make further enquiries of witnesses claiming to have seen the murder victim alive in the days after November 3.

The detective’s campaign of deception began to unfold when defence lawyers requested missing witness statements from the Crown Office.

Senior police questioned Munro about the missing evidence and he claimed that not all of the information from door-to-door enquiries had been retained. He also discredited information given by the witnesses in question as unreliable.

Munro was found guilty of witholding information from prosecutors that could have helped the two men’s defence case on June 22.

Miscarriages of Justice Scotland said it was the first time in history that a corrupt policeman had been convicted of wrongdoing in connection with a miscarriage of justice case.

Another DNA exoneration for the UK?

The US leads the way internationally in exonerating innocent prisoners utilising DNA technology. In the UK, there has really only been one ‘DNA’ exoneration to date, that of Sean Hodgson in March 2009 (read here…) That case demonstrated shocking failings by the then major forensic science provider in the UK; the Forensic Science Service (now closed down). However, there is now a fresh appeal to be heard at the Court of Appeal, in the case of Victor Nealon.

Nealon, a postman, was convicted of attempted rape in 1997, and has been in prison protesting his innocence ever since. In TWO attempts to get his case back to the Court of Appeal via the Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC), Nealon’s lawyers were refused ‘speculative’ DNA testing. At trial, the prosecution had claimed that there no DNA evidence. In fact, the victims clothing had never even been tested. Now independent testing HAS revealed DNA on the victims clothing – and it belongs to a man other than Nealon. The CCRC have NOW finally decided to refer his case back the Court of Appeal.

Without even pre-empting what must surely be a foregone conclusion at the appeal courts, this case must surely raise questions about the CCRC and their refusal to undertake DNA testing. With all that is known about the power of forensic testing, and the fact that none had taken place previously in this case, what exactly was the Commission’s rationale for not permitting DNA testing? How often are they refusing such testing? Why has Nealon had to wait this long to get back to the Court of Appeal? These are surely just the first of many awkward questions that must be asked of the CCRC in this case. This is a miscarriage of justice heaped upon a wrongful conviction. Those who have faith in the ability of the CCRC to undertake reasonable investigations into alleged miscarriages of justice must now question that faith.

Read more here: Man jailed for 16 years could be freed through fresh DNA evidence

Thursday’s Quick Clicks…

  • New Orleans District Attorney Harry Connick sued again for allegedly causing wrongful conviction by withholding evidence
  • DNA tests confirm guilt of inmate in Michigan who claimed innocence for more than 25 years
  • UK exoneree Sion Jenkins finishes college degree with a thesis on wrongful convictions
  • Video of Florida exoneree William Dillon singing national anthem at last night’s Tampa Bay Rays game

Friday’s Quick Clicks…

James Taylor:A Life in Ruin!

One of the troubling after effect of a wrongful conviction, remain how victims come to terms with their present situation; how they go past it, put it aside and move ahead. Some never do. Others just resign themselves to fate and the vicissitudes of life. The system is so skewed and unfair to leave a man stranded for apparently no fault of his.

The vexed question of post wrongful conviction compensation, whether and when to pay, indeed, if there is a right to restitution remain a moot point – both with adversarial and inquisitorial jurisdictions. It sounds strange that the system would continue to stigmatise a man for an offense he did not commit or has not been found culpable by a court of competent jurisdiction.

Despite the ‘giant’ stride that has been made in the United Kingdom, and the long line of cases of miscarriages of justice – from the days of the Birmingham Six,  to the establishment of the Criminal Cases Review Commission – it seems cases still seep through the system undetected and uncompensated when they come to light.

James Taylor deserve to get his life back. He must explore all in his power and within the law to see to that, if the pronouncements of Judge Peter Clarke QC is to make any sense. Judge Peter Clarke QC is reported to have said that ‘We find the consequences to Mr. Taylor little less than horrifying’

You can read Taylor’s odyssey here and make up your own mind http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-kent-18787249

Compensation paid in Italian wrongful conviction of Albanian UK Resident

It sounds confusing, but the facts of this case are very important and may set an important precedent for cases using the European Arrest Warrant.  The EAWs permit the extradition of European residents to other EU Member States, usually with nothing but the barest statements of evidence against the individual. In this case, Edmond Arapi, 31, an Albanian who came legally to the United

Kingdom in 2000 was convicted in his absence of a murder in Genoa, Italy in 2006 and sentenced to 16 years. Arapi, was unaware of the case until he was arrested at Gatwick airport in 2009. He was then sent to a UK prison where he spent weeks fighting extradition. The Italians eventually admitted that Arapi had never been to Italy and overturned the conviction. The whole ordeal lasted over a year. The compensation recognises the distress and the impact of the ordeal. One

may hope that this sends a warning shot to judges and administrators who regularly acceded to EAW requests with little attention. Many more Europeans may be being sent to countries to face wrongful charges or conviction. Read the story here:

Edmond Arapi wins payout from Italian court for wrongful murder conviction

Panel in UK Asks How Focus on Wrongful Convictions Can Be Reignited…

From the Guardian:

When the investigative journalist David Jessell heard in 1999 that his Channel 4 programme ‘Trial and Error’ would be axed on the grounds that miscarriages of justice “are a bit 80s”, he wasn’t the only one to feel dismayed.

The programme’s demise, along with the axeing of Rough Justice, left a huge gap in the investigation and coverage of potentially wrongful convictions which has arguably never been filled.

On Wednesday Jessell joined an impressive panel of experts, lawyers and journalists at Manchester‘s BPP law school, to take part in a public debate aimed at reigniting an interest in the failings of our criminal justice system.

Hosted by online magazine The Justice Gap, the talk was titled: “who is responsible for miscarriages of justice?”

One of the main focuses of the night was to discuss whether the Criminal Cases Review Commission, the independent body set up in 1997 to refer potential miscarriages of justice to the Court of Appeal, is fit for purpose.

At the centre of the panel sat the current chair of the CCRC, Richard Foster, surrounded by seven speakers whose criticisms of his organisation ranged from moderate to vehement.

First to speak was the Guardian’s prison correspondent Eric Allison who set the tone for the evening by expressing his concerns that miscarriages of justice are on the rise, citing cuts in legal aid and prejudicial pre-trial publicity as crucial factors:

“I’m convinced there’s been a massive increase in the number of miscarriages of justice. I’m currently researching five cases as I’ve got no time to do anything else, but there are 100 more I could pick up tomorrow that need examination.”

David Jessell, who has worked as a commissioner for the CCRC, reiterated Allison’s concerns and spoke of a need to get miscarriages of justice back on the public radar:

“What is essential is to revive that sense of outrage and imagination that we had in the past, to have the imagination to think what it must be like to suffer a miscarriage of justice.”, he said,”It’s that concern that guarantees the integrity of the system.”

However, others, including Manchester University lecturer and former CCRC commissioner Dr Hannah Quirk, appeared to be more optimistic about the state of the criminal justice system.

Dr Quirk said: “It’s important to keep a perspective on this. Cases are being referred to the court of appeal, they are being investigated and far more people are having their convictions quashed than ever could have been in the 1980s.”

One of the highlights of the event came when Susan May, a woman convicted of murdering her elderly aunt 20 years ago, was invited to address the panel. Considered by many to be a miscarriage of justice victim, May has substantial experience in dealing with the CCRC which has referred her case to the court of appeal twice and is currently considering fresh evidence that could result in a rare third appeal.

May said: “I do believe the CCRC has changed the way it operates. When I first dealt with the CCRC in 1997, my caseworker came to see me in prison quite a few times and I think I’m right in saying that doesn’t happen now…After 15 years I really think we need a review of the CCRC.”

She further criticised the Commission for “second guessing” the Court of Appeal by only referring cases deemed to have a ‘real possibility’ of resulting in a quashed conviction.

Responding to May’s assessment, CCRC Chair Richard Foster cited cuts in funding as the primary reason for having less face to face sessions with applicants:

“Our budget has been frozen for the last six years so in real terms we have 33% less money than we did six years ago…and that’s why we can’t do as much face to face as we’d like to do.”

Referral rates

When asked to explain the Commission’s low rates of referral Foster told the audience that around half of the applications they received were inappropriate for consideration, citing civil cases as an example. With this taken into account the actual percentage of applications referred was closer to 7% than the often quoted 2%, he argued.

But defence lawyer Campbell Malone disagreed, insisting that the CCRC does not refer enough cases and cannot be held to account:

“The CCRC have never been bold enough…the truth of the matter is most people will accept that they are too cautious. The problem is there isn’t any real way that I’m aware of that those cases where they [the CCRC] have got it wrong can be audited and checked.”

Where the speakers reached a consensus was in agreeing that the CCRC should be reformed rather than abolished, a point which Dr Quirk summed up well:

“It’s important to acknowledge there are problems with the system, to try and improve it. Let’s make it better but let’s not become completely despairing about it.”

Monday’s Quick Clicks…

Monday’s Quick Clicks…

Summer Newsletter of Innocence Network UK Now Available…

The 40-page newsletter is available here.  The table of contents:

INSIDE THIS ISSUE:

THE TRUTH OF EDDIE GILFOYLE BY SUE CADDICK     page 1

PERSPECTIVE OF A FORMER COMMISSIONER ON THE REFORM OF THE CCRC BY DAVID JESSEL    page 5

WHO JUDGES THE CCRC? BY SUSAN MAY   page 12

CAUSES FOR CONCERN: THE INUK’S DOSSIER OF CASES BY GABE TAN   page 17

AN ACADEMIC PERSPECTIVE ON THE REFORM OF THE CCRC BY PROFESSOR RICHARD NOBLES   page 21

WHAT DO THE WRONGLY CONVICTED WANT FROM THE CCRC? BY DR ANDREW GREEN    page 28

NEWS   page 34

Wrongful Convictions ‘more frequent’ in Scotland if Crown Office succeed in removal of Scots Law requirement of Corroboration

From the Scottish Law Reporter:

PROSECUTORS at Scotland’s Crown Office & Procurator Fiscal Service (COPFS) have begun their campaign to lobby Scottish Ministers & the Scottish Parliament to remove one of the checks & balances against miscarriages of justice in Scots law, that ofCorroboration, which currently guarantees that the presentation of important evidence presented in a criminal prosecution is required to be supported by two independent sources.

However, critics point to the fact that Scotland’s prosecutors are generally regarded as very poor in court, with the prosecution service as a whole regarded by legal insiders as more disposed to gaining a conviction at any cost (including the use of ‘dodgy’ evidence) rather than serving the interests of justice.

Coincidentally, the reasons talked about by the Solicitor General, Lesley Thomson who is backing the removal of Corroboration in a media release issued Continue reading

Wednesday’s Quick Clicks…

  • Virginia exoneree Arthur Whitfield charged in domestic violence case
  • More on the new study out of Virginia showing a wrongful conviction rate in sexual assault cases of 15%
  • Scant hope for Pennsylvania’s wrongly convicted
  • Larry Sims of Texas, freed by DNA, deserves to have name cleared even in death
  • A review of the musical The Scottsboro Boys
  • In Ireland, Justice Minister David Ford must reconsider his decision to refuse compensation to a west Belfast man whose conviction for possessing explosives was overturned, the High Court has ruled.