Does anybody know how many cases have been retried since the double jeopardy law was changed? In England I know of Gary Dobson (One of Stephen Lawrence's killers); William Dunlop - who was acquitted of Julie Hogg's murder but later confessed and was retried, pleading guilty; and Mark Weston - retried after compelling new evidence was found (the victim's blood on his boots) and found gulity. In Scotland I only know of the possibility of retrying Angus Sinclair for the Worlds End murders:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World's_End_Murders
I've been looking but there's no specific case listing that I can find. On the subject purely of acquittals being quashed I've found eight applications of which five were granted. They are:
R v Dunlop [2007] 1 WLR 1657 (new confession evidence, acquittal quashed, retrial ordered)
R v Miell [2008] 1 WLR 627 (new confession unreliable, application dismissed)
R v A [2008] EWCA Crim 2908 (new evidence from other victims, acquittal quashed, retrial ordered)
R v G(G) & B(S) [2009] EWCA Crim 1077 (new evidence from accomplice, unreliable, application dismissed)
Maxwell & Mansell v R [2009] EWCA Crim 2552 (new evidence, acquittal quashed, retrial ordered)
R v B(J) [2009] EWCA Crim 1036 (new evidence from accomplice, unreliable, application dismissed)
R v Weston [2010] EWCA Crim 1576 (new forensic evidence, acquittal quashed, retrial ordered)
R v Dobson [2011] EWCA 1256 (new scientific evidence, acquittal quashed, retrial ordered)
Do you know why they didn't find the blood on the boots first time round?
Improvements in forensic techniques.
Hmmm. That's what I was afraid of. Microscopes have been around a long time. I bet halogen lamps too. Should a sloppy prosecution be rewarded with a second try? Another objection to second trials is that the prosecution now has the advantage of having seen the defence and can better prepare to overcome it.
The whole thing stinks IMO.
I disagree. There have been huge improvements in forensic science in the last decades that enable greater certainty. Would you refuse and appeal if a person's innocences was demonstrated by new forensic techniques?