But the fundamentally-important point is that any retrial of Fhimah would be based on essentially the same evidence as was presented in the original trial. But let's deal with a hypothetical: imagine if new advances in DNA typing were able to show that Fhimah's (or al-Megrahi's) DNA was on the bomb or the suitcase containing the bomb, and that there was very little chance that this DNA could have arrived there via contamination. In my opinion, this would certainly warrant a retrial of Fhimah, owing to significant new evidence.
Under current legislation (I am assuming here that Scottish law is not dissimilar to England/Wales law in this respect), there's simply no way that a new trial of Fhimah would be allowed as things stand right now. It doesn't matter how vindictive or blinkered the Scottish police, the FBI, or any prosecuting authorities might be towards Libyan involvement in the bombing: the very limited scope of modification of the double jeopardy rule would ensure that Fhimah would never be brought again before a criminal court in relation to this crime until and unless very significant evidence were to emerge.
I hope and believe you're right. Of course if DNA from either suspect was found on any of the items in the bomb suitcase, it would be a slam-dunk. But that's not what they're talking about. They have had these items in storage for 23 years, and have been able to test them for DNA at any time. So far as I know, that has not been done.
Nor are they undertaking any open-minded review of the case. (We all know where that would lead.) On the contrary, as Prof. Black says, the attitude is that if it doesn't appear to implicate Libya it isn't evidence.
What they are talking about now is scouring the post-revolution remains of Libya to try to find some documentary evidence they can use to bring Fhimah to trial for the second time. Maybe the investigators wouldn't forge anything. However, the Libyan rebels seem quite well aware that one way to get into the good graces of the West now is to provide some documentation that will support the assertion that Gaddafi was responsible for Lockerbie. (The idea that Gaddafi might have been responsible for Lockerbie but neither Megrahi nor Fhimah had any part in that doesn't seem to be on the radar either.)
We know fabricated stories purporting to implicate Megrahi and Fhimah were fed to the US investigation in 1991, after it was made plain who the investigators wanted to be implicated. (Announcing a $4 million reward for evidence against two named people is a good way to procure this.) I wouldn't be at all surprised if the same thing happened again.
It's back to the suspect-centred investigation. If the investigation in the Lawrence case wasn't suspect-centred, and it just so happened it threw up newer and better evidence against the original suspects, fair enough. But the rhetoric coming from Mulholland scares the pants off me. The new legislation is an absolute engraved invitation to suspect-centred analysis of the evidence, and we all know where that leads. It's not only the Italian forensic labs that have been
caught with their fingers in the cookie jar.
I also hope you're right that the Scottish judiciary would throw out the idea of a new case against Fhimah if there wasn't compelling evidence. I don't think that's the case though. Go off and read the Zeist judgements and see what you think. I don't trust these bastards either.
It's also a question of the effect all this has on the suspect. Fhimah is currently reported to be in terror of being re-arrested by the Scottish police, after having been in jail for two years already on remand, 1999-2001. He's cosying up to the Libyan provisional government, hoping that if he's good they won't extradite him.
I don't like people like Mulholland having this power.
Rolfe.