You've asked some pertinent questions there. I suspect he's either been bought off or is in fear for his life or lives of his family members. Whether he's actually in prison or attended his own trial are up for debate. As is where Jo Cox ended up. Yes a thread may be an idea.
Come on.
Why would they buy him or threaten him in particular? Is he John Connor? What's so special about him? If they wanted to kill Jo Cox so badly, why not just kill her? Why complicate it by involving him?
And what was so important about Jo Cox anyway? She was just an ordinary MP.
Had she stumbled on evidence that Theresa May actually ran through three fields of wheat instead of two? Is that it? Is that the scandal?
He's in a high security prison, but he is in the general population and he is not
in communicado and he is not mute.
As a general prisoner, he has daily or frequent contact with, or guaranteed access to, the following:
Other prisoners, including at least one prisoner on his wing appointed as a confidential 'listener'.
A trained prison officer who is also his personal officer.
Other prison officers.
Tutors in education and training.
Work supervisors.
A wing governor.
A deputy governor.
A governing governor.
A chaplain.
A prison psychologist.
He can also appoint a lawyer.
He can also contact prisoner friends organisations, the Quakers, prison visitors, and miscarriage of justice organisations, none of whom will judge him for his alleged "far Right" political leanings.
He can ring them if he wants. Or he can write to him. It's his choice. They'd probably agree to let him send the message by pigeon, if he asks nicely.
True, his letters and phone calls will be censored, but they are censored by ordinary prison officers. And he first has to write the letter in his cell. And he has access to phones. Do you see where this leads, logically?
He has a right to issue visiting orders and receive cleared and vetted visitors, who can be ordinary/regular people, even people with criminal records.
You could visit him, if he agrees.
He can write letters, send postcards, issue e-mails and serve legal papers. He could send Jeremy a birthday card if he wants, and add a postscript saying: 'Jeremy, I know what it's like to be innocent, believe me.'
He could fill out his canteen sheet and hand it to the governor and demand extra curly-wurlies this week, and then say: 'By the way, I'm innocent'.
The governor would reply: "I'm sorry, you can't order Innocent drinks from the canteen'.
If, at any point, he were to indicate to anybody - anybody at all, even the prison cat - that he is in fact innocent, I can practically guarantee that it would be headline news by 9 a.m. tomorrow morning, regardless of what various organs of the state think or say. If the government tried to block the information from public media, journalists would just go to foreign media. In any event, it would leak and it would be a sensation.