Paulg would you say Jeremys actions in the witness box were those of someone fighting for his life if he was guilty
I honestly can not say, i wasn't there. Transcript wouldn't do it for me, being there puts things into context.
I'll turn the question round though Jackie, people say that JM was very convincing, do you think she was convincing?
Shaw suggests that EP, the judge and jury were so impressed with JM's testimony because it was so detailed and revealed some facts which had not even been released to the press. He suggests, however, that JM's knowledge in these areas could have been gleaned from someone with insider knowledge. As Stan Jones, EP, the judge and jury would have been completely unaware of this insider knowledge or that JM had access to it, they mistook her detailed accounts for JM simply recalling what Jeremy had told her. Shaw is very compelling on this, I recomen his account.
JM did nevertheless got some points wildly wrong. She was wrong about the hitman, wrong about how many bullets killed Nevill, wrong about the position of some of the bodies - all basic details which a killer's confessional would be expected to get right.
One very interesting error JM made was in stating that Sheila's body was found on the bed with the Bible on her chest, which was clearly not the case.
Oddly enough, AE made exactly the same error.
Would JM not get some details from identifying the bodies?
But i thought it was a confession from someone that hired a killer, not the murderer, so JB would not know the details?
Those are rather moot points. Jeremy was convicted of killing the family, not of hiring a hitman, so aren't you wanting it all ways there - exactly the accusation you make of us Jb is innocenters? If you rely on Jeremy's conviction for having committed the murders as a fair indication of his guilt, can you really fall back on the discredited hitman claim to explain the contradictions in the JB dun it case? I don't believe so.
I don't believe JM's identification of the bodies told her anywhere near enough. It would have helped her though, so that's a good point. What she could not have got from seeing the bodies is the scene of crime stuff - and it's often there where her claims contradicted the facts.
How wrong JM was in respect of Sheila's body is a particularly telling error, especially since AE made exactly the same error. Shaw says that JM and AE also made identical errors about the position of the Bible. As far as I am aware, no one else made those particular errors.
Does that tell us something?