Donald Findlay may have been a "top notch" lawyer, but when a lawyer, any lawyer, takes a tactical decision not to be "too hard" on members of the victim's family, for fear of putting the jury "offside" (curious, given the months of negative publicity) then how robust can that defence really be?
I'd heard many years ago that this decision had been made, but never had anything solid to back it up - things the solicitor had said certainly seemed to point that way. I have now seen documentation which confirms that such a decision was, indeed, taken.
Much of the immediate family's testiony was unsubstantiated and allowed to be taken at face value. Take, for example, Judith's claim that she returned to the Mitchell home a second time to ask Luke why he hadn't called back that night when Jodi didn't show.
From the statements, this was claimed to be after the first raid on Friday 4th July (specifically, the evening of Saturday 5th.) By the police's own admission, Luke was a suspect from July 3rd (it has now been proven it was earlier than that) - why did they allow Judith to enter the home of their prime suspect? In any other case, that would be considered an attempt at entrapment (as was the deployment of the liaison officer.) But Judith's claim - that she asked Luke why he hadn't called back- is completely unsubstantiated. Joseph was with her that evening - why wasn't he called to the stand and asked to corroborate Judith's claim? Why was what was, in law, simple hearsay, allowed to stand as evidence? They had the means to corroborate it - why didn't they use it? So many rules broken in this one piece of "evidence" alone.