Re: Re: Re: British Justice
Erm....of course the burden of proof is on the prosecution. A basic requirement in this case was to show the accused was employed in the care home at the time of the alleged offences. If the police make this claim and the accused accepts that he was indeed at the home at the time no further evidence is needed re that point.
From the report you mentioned it does seem that the police screwed up.
What really worries me is initiating a prosecution for a decades old alleged offence without any evidence other than an accusation or group of accusations, especially where "compensation" for the accusers might be in prospect.
Jaggy Bunnet said:
They've updated their story, so it reads slightly differently. However following this link:
http://www.appealpanel.org/press.html
Remember it is not up to the defendant to prove he didn't commit the crime, it is up to the prosecution to prove he did. Therefore whether or not he can remember if he was there is irrelevant. If the prosecution couldn't even prove he was there when the crime was meant to have been committed, why did his legal team not destroy the case on this basis alone?
Or, if his defence team did raise it at the trial, what on earth possessed the jury to convict?
Its like convicting someone of murder when you there is no proof he was present when the person was killed.
Erm....of course the burden of proof is on the prosecution. A basic requirement in this case was to show the accused was employed in the care home at the time of the alleged offences. If the police make this claim and the accused accepts that he was indeed at the home at the time no further evidence is needed re that point.
From the report you mentioned it does seem that the police screwed up.
What really worries me is initiating a prosecution for a decades old alleged offence without any evidence other than an accusation or group of accusations, especially where "compensation" for the accusers might be in prospect.
Sez you. My experience with people who question the verdict differs.