Good quotes but I am sticking to my guns.
Quotes are quotes. They are neither good nor bad. Simply a matter of record.
I picked those out because they were the most relevant to the conversation at hand; namely the question of whether the judge's remarks were biased toward a participant on gender grounds and whether those remarks had any effect upon length of sentence.
I wonder whether the jury would agree with the judge's version of their thinking.
That is neither here nor there. The jury's duty was to find for or against the defendant based upon evidence presented in court. The judge is independent and does not consult the jury for tips on sentencing remarks.
They should not have been considering her controlling, manipulative or devious behaviour etc but only whether her will was overborne by Hughes in 2003.
They did. Why are you remarking upon what they should or shouldn't have done when that has no bearing on the judges remarks, which is ultimately what you are complaining about?
I've not mentioned the jury in any argument - their decision is not part of the argument regarding the judge's remarks.
Whether it was or not (they found not) no part of her conduct was controlling etc. They were entitled to find she was not under his control by reason of her manifest intelligence, maturity, independence of mind and education and nothing whatever do to with these value-laden pejorative and irrelevant remarks, all of which, if applicable at all, could equally have been said about Huhne but none of which were.
That again is neither here nor there. Huhne was not under trial with the same jury.
The judge was not (or should not have been) sentencing her for trying to get the story into the press.
I never said that and the judge didn't. It is explicitly stated. I've quoted the relevant part regarding sentencing, which quite categorically states that her defence had no bearing on the length nor type (custodial/uncustodial) of sentence. Read his remarks in full. I have provided them. I don't understand why you continue with this misnomer regarding the judge basing her sentence with regard to any story in the press. He didn't.
His remarks were gratuitous...
in your opinion.
...and,this is the point of the letter we are discussing,
It is, but you seem to continually introduce factors that do not apply, such as the jury's opinion, as well as ignore or disregard the judges remarks against Huhne which are just as pointed. (I'm in no way defending Huhne in this regard.)
The remarks are on record for all to read. If you or any one else regard the judges remarks to be gratuitous then there are appropriate channels with which to make a formal complaint.
Carping in the Guardian newspaper to a feminist agenda is simply a par for the course, but not applicable.
discriminatory since he did not so characterise Huhne even though his behaviour, both with respect to the offence itself and subsequently propeArly merited the adjectives in question.
In your opinoin which doesn't matter. He did have a go at Huhne. Read the statement in full. Just because he didn't characterise Huhne in exactly the same fashion, doesn't mean to say that he didn't condone him to the same extent.
I don't think that the judges remarks, given the full context that I have provided, are preferential toward one guilty party or the other.
I think you are seeing an injustice were there is none. I'm not going to engage you further on this matter, because I don't think that there is any benefit to anyone. I'll leave it as a matter of record.