Tooting Gull
Well-known member
- Jul 5, 2003
- 11,033
This documentary tonight is clearly going to blow the whole thing apart again over the murder of Stephen Lawrence.
What I don't understand is this. We all know there is this basic principle that you can't be tried for the same thing again if found not guilty. But that law just seems wrong, and needs changing.
If you were found guilty and then new evidence comes to light, you can go the Court of Appeal and it can be overturned.
If you are found not guilty and then it emerges that from the very start of the investigation a police officer was sabotaging it and tainting it, and suppressing vital evidence over alibis and a load of other stuff while being in the pay of one of the suspect's fathers, why doesn't the same principle apply?
The original verdict was not based on the true facts, and it seems outrageous that possible murderers could escape justice in these circumstances.
What I don't understand is this. We all know there is this basic principle that you can't be tried for the same thing again if found not guilty. But that law just seems wrong, and needs changing.
If you were found guilty and then new evidence comes to light, you can go the Court of Appeal and it can be overturned.
If you are found not guilty and then it emerges that from the very start of the investigation a police officer was sabotaging it and tainting it, and suppressing vital evidence over alibis and a load of other stuff while being in the pay of one of the suspect's fathers, why doesn't the same principle apply?
The original verdict was not based on the true facts, and it seems outrageous that possible murderers could escape justice in these circumstances.