Segnosaur
Penultimate Amazing
Just guessing, but I think that with certain crimes (e.g. murder) the defendant is held in custody until trial, unless they can prove they are not a risk to public safety. (This differs from more minor crimes, such as theft, where the default is to release the prisoner on bail, unless the prosecution can prove there IS a risk.)Please forgive my naivety regarding legal processes, but I've always thought that that's exactly what is supposed to happen when people have their convictions overturned.He wasn't supposed to be released upon the overturning of his conviction,
How is that not the case here? I had thought that when a conviction is overturned, the state can have another go at defendant... but they just can't leave him in prison while they spend umpteen years not bothering to put a case together to go to trial. Surely that's on the state to get their act together to go to trial again?
With this particular individual, being a murder case, the default is to hold them in custody. (Its just taking longer to bring the case to trial.)
Remember, the defendant was not found "innocent" or "not guilty" (however you want to state it)... his conviction was thrown out, which means he'd be held as any other defendant in an upcoming trial for murder.