It's not about abstract arguing Rolfe, it is arguing about his release and the legislation as it was applied in this case.
We know from the statement from the Minister that there was no consideration at all to ongoing appeals or any concerns about the safety of the conviction, his release was simply on the grounds of compassionate release.
That is correct. As the law stands, the severity of the crime is not a consideration. So, this was not taken into consideration. Accordingly, there was
no need to consider the other point, that the case was officially recognised as being a possible miscarriage of justice.
To argue that the severity of the crime
should have been taken into consideration, even though it wasn't, but then to continue to maintain that the possibility of miscarriage of justice should
not then be taken into consideration, simply because it wasn't, is just special pleading.
What people who are against his release are arguing for is that the legislation should take into account the severity of the crime and I don't think anyone could argue that the crime he was convicted of (and the conviction for which he was granted compassionate release) was a terrible crime that killed hundreds of people.
Now it appears that the legislation does not allow the minister take into consideration the severity of the crime, which I think is weakness of the system, I don't think there should be an automatic release on compassionate grounds just because someone is dying and I also don't want politicians to make the decisions without having to apply some objective standards.
You're now going back to the abstract consideration of whether the current rules are correct. I've already given my abstract reasons for believing that they are, on balance.
I then point out, yet again, that
if the rules allow for compassionate release to be denied on the grounds that the offence was particularly serious, then it also becomes relevant to consider other factors. That the prisoner is 5000 miles from his home and family in an alien culture, and that his case has been officially recognised as a possible miscarriage of justice.
If indeed the decision had been made in the way you're advancing, that is to deny release because of the severity of the crime, I would
definitely be advancing these other mitigating factors.
While I can appreciate the utility of having the abstract discussion about whether or not the current procedure is correct, why do you believe that the acknowledged possibility of this particular prisoner being actually innocent isn't something that needs to be considered? This seems a remarkably blinkered outlook.
As for the repeated bringing of Ronnie Biggs into this. Ronnie Biggs was originally convicted for his part in a robbery, he then escaped and spent many years "on the run" (and ended a job I really loved but I don't think that should be held against him) before ending up again as a prisoner. So what is the useful comparison between the compassionate release of a convicted robber and a convicted murder of hundreds of people?
Ronnie Biggs has a different set of special circumstances. He didn't kill 270 people, but he was convicted for participation in a brutal robbery which was itself a
cause celebre for many years.
He escaped from prison in 1965 after serving only 15 months, initially fled to France, then Australia, and finally holed up in Brazil from where he could not be extradited. He lived free for 35 years, untouchable. He returned voluntarily when he was in his 70s, suffering from pneumonia. He has not had a diagnosis of terminal cancer, and he has been alive longer than Megrahi, post-release.
The three-months-to-live rule-of-thumb seems to have failed equally in this case. Again, prognoses of time-left-to-live are unreliable, in many cases. The law accepts that.
Hey, this guy had the best 30 years of his life living in luxury in Rio, when he should have been in jail. Why should we let him out just because he's in his 70s and a bit frail?
Also, as I understand it, Biggs was completely unrepentant. He didn't deny his guilt, he just didn't care. He was proud of the great heist.
So there you go. Two completely different cases, with completely different reasons why they should be treated with greater or lesser leniency. Under the present rules,
none of these reasons matters. However, once you open the discussion to changing the rules, there's no reason to consider just one isolated aspect of each case.
Rolfe.