Rolfe
Adult human female
There seems to come a point where it's normal simply to accept the "official version", and even to make up fanciful scenarios where it just might have happened. So, rather than look critically at the evidence, people start dreaming up ways in which the accused could theoretically have done it, and supporting the accusation that way.
Sion Jenkins is a case in point. It was always absolutely ridiculous to suggest he murdered Billie-Jo, and strong evidence should have been required to begin to suspect him. There never was any such evidence. The police couldn't get hold of another suspect, so they went after him. In the end this mad crime of unpremeditated rage was accomplished in a couple of minutes (allegedly), whereupon he walked back to join his other daughters without a hair out of place or a drop of blood visible on his clothes.
Then the public vilification started, and everything down to and including the fact that he had sexed up his CV in a job application six or seven years previously was held to be proof that he was the sort of person who would batter a child to death because she had the radio up too loud (or maybe it was because she had got paint on the glass when she was painting a window). It got to the "there must be something in it or they wouldn't be charging him" awfully quickly. Soon, the popular view was that if he couldn't 100% prove an alibi, he must have done it. (The estimate was something like he had a time window of between -5 minutes and +3 minutes to have done it, and the existence of the outside +3 minutes possibility was latched on to to prove he was the murderer.)
Even after he was acquitted at something like the fifth appeal (that presumption of guilt is a bummer) he was denied compensation for the years spent in jail because he wasn't "clearly innocent". He still lives under a cloud, as far as I can see.
There are people in this forum who have stated they still believe Barry George murdered Jill Dando, though on what grounds I have no freaking clue.
This mindset seems to be behind the poor chances of success in many appeals. Look at the number of innocent people who have needed a second or third appeal to get the truth accepted. Because the general public doesn't like to believe the cops would target an innocent and basically frame up a case against them. But they do. With distressing frequency.
I've even heard people say, in effect, well it doesn't matter that [X] might not actually have done it, because he was a bad lot anyway. That is perhaps even more shocking than anything.
A bit more critical thinking when considering the results of police investigations and the findings of the courts, would benefit us all.
Rolfe.
Sion Jenkins is a case in point. It was always absolutely ridiculous to suggest he murdered Billie-Jo, and strong evidence should have been required to begin to suspect him. There never was any such evidence. The police couldn't get hold of another suspect, so they went after him. In the end this mad crime of unpremeditated rage was accomplished in a couple of minutes (allegedly), whereupon he walked back to join his other daughters without a hair out of place or a drop of blood visible on his clothes.
Then the public vilification started, and everything down to and including the fact that he had sexed up his CV in a job application six or seven years previously was held to be proof that he was the sort of person who would batter a child to death because she had the radio up too loud (or maybe it was because she had got paint on the glass when she was painting a window). It got to the "there must be something in it or they wouldn't be charging him" awfully quickly. Soon, the popular view was that if he couldn't 100% prove an alibi, he must have done it. (The estimate was something like he had a time window of between -5 minutes and +3 minutes to have done it, and the existence of the outside +3 minutes possibility was latched on to to prove he was the murderer.)
Even after he was acquitted at something like the fifth appeal (that presumption of guilt is a bummer) he was denied compensation for the years spent in jail because he wasn't "clearly innocent". He still lives under a cloud, as far as I can see.
There are people in this forum who have stated they still believe Barry George murdered Jill Dando, though on what grounds I have no freaking clue.
This mindset seems to be behind the poor chances of success in many appeals. Look at the number of innocent people who have needed a second or third appeal to get the truth accepted. Because the general public doesn't like to believe the cops would target an innocent and basically frame up a case against them. But they do. With distressing frequency.
I've even heard people say, in effect, well it doesn't matter that [X] might not actually have done it, because he was a bad lot anyway. That is perhaps even more shocking than anything.
A bit more critical thinking when considering the results of police investigations and the findings of the courts, would benefit us all.
Rolfe.