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It may? If there were proof that Hammersley's statements are complete fiction and Bird, Davison and (I think) Cook had lied in theirs surely that would be a definite.
I was simply being accurate. It is not my decision what is included in the next submissions so I am unable to be definite.
Ok, I'll put it another way, as a lawyer, can you think of any reason why you would not use strong evidence that a police officer giving evidence on what was an important part of the case against your client, had completely fabricated it with the support of other officers including his superiors?
Hi ngbcan you please (with the particularity with which the crown will be met at trial) set out the evidence in support of the contention that hammersley was not present at whf?jim
I am not saying he was never at WHF but he was not there at a time when he claimed he had been. He admitted it to COLP.
Maybe this is where my confusion has arisen, are you saying that he was at WHF on the 7th of August, but not necessarily for all of the time he claimed to be?
I am saying that he may have been at WHF at some stage on 7th August (although I am not entirely sure about that) but he was certainly not there for all the time he claimed to be and he did not take all of the actions he claimed to have taken in his witness statement.
Did he bag Sheila's hands?
I do not know.
Fair enough. What does he say he did that he didn't do then?
Perhaps you should just wait and see.
This is a difficult question to answer. You have to remember that the evidence given about what was found at the scene was not challenged by the defence at trial. The fact that a police officer was involved in an overtime fiddle and lied in connection with that is potentially very serious for the police officer concerned, but it does not go directly to any key issue in the case. It damages the credibilty of the police officer concerned and any others involved, but since their evidence was not challenged their credibility was not in fact an issue at trial. This is something I would try to include in grounds of appeal if I could find a way to do it as it is generally indicative of a lack of honesty on the part of some prosecution witnesses, but I doubt whether the Court of Appeal would regard it as a genuine ground of appeal in itself.