portlock seagull
Well-known member
- Jul 28, 2003
- 17,781
I'm not defending his actions, but by doing what you suggest he would simply have incriminated himself. Obviously that would have been a preferable and less painful outcome for the bereaved families, but his defence team would hardly have advised him down that route.
The jury sat through the entire case, heard all the evidence, and in the end after 29 hours of deliberation some of them decided that they could not find him guilty beyond reasonable doubt. We can express disbelief at that from what we know, but having not been there in court, or in the jury room, we're literally in no position to judge. Whether another jury in a retrial manages to reach a verdict remains to be seen, but I think for the families sakes it should certainly go to a retrial again, as this current outcome wouldn't come anywhere near providing closure for them.
Can retrials go on until a conviction is made to give the families what they want? Shades of Brexit here. Whether he’s innocent or not, it does appear that only a guilty verdict will suffice and until then it’ll never end. Which doesn’t feel very fair, emotions a side.