I'm still not totally understanding the exhortations to ignore the possibility that this man may well not be a mass murderer at all.
We could have an abstract discussion about whether Scots law is right when it takes no account of severity of offence when considering compassionate release. To some extent we've been having that discussion. It hinges partly on the practical difficulties of maintaining someone requiring hospice care within the prison system, and partly on whether we as a society wish to pursue what may be seen as vengeful cruelty rather than just pubishment.
My own view is that such cases arise quite rarely, as most criminals have served their sentences before they reach old age, and progressive, fatal disease is relatively unusual in middle age. Accordingly, there seems no justification to invest the sums of money that would be necessary to establish prison hospices, and every reason to argue that by the time a convict has reached the later stages of terminal illness, there is little to be gained by keeping him in prison.
However, this thread wasn't started as an abstract discussion, it was started in response to the specific case of Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed al-Megrahi. One main thrust of the thread has been that he, specifically, should have been denied compassionate release because of the specific circumstances of his case. As this is the scope of the discussion, then other specific circumstances of the case inevitably also become relevant.
Most of the posters originally calling for denial of compassionate release were probably quite unaware that the man might be innocent. And not "might be innocent" in some abstract, we-can't-be-certain-of-anything sense, or in the sense that a few kooks and weirdos are promoting an improbable CT about the issue, but "might be innocent" because
the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission said so, after spending three years investigating the case, including interviewing many witnesses, and producing an 800-page report with 13 volumes of appendices.
SCCRC said:
The Commission is of the view, based upon our lengthy investigations, the new evidence we have found and other evidence which was not before the trial court that the applicant may have suffered a miscarriage of justice.
In other words, he might be innocent. Really, realistically, in the light of the evidence and in the view of a bunch of official legal people.
Knowing this, on what grounds would you say, "I don't care, I want him to die in jail 5000 miles from his home and family anyway"?
Rolfe.