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?
Do you thinkJulie Mugford was convincing comfortin Jeremy at the funerals?
Either way, from what I have read and from what has since happened re civil court cases over inheritance etc post the tragedy I have to say I would not, even now, like to have been a member of the jury.
The jury has to make a decision on what it hears at the time.
.......... and if I am being honest I would say Jeremy's inconsistency with regard to the times and sequence of telephone calls in the early hours of the morning of 7th August when compared to the rigidity of Julie sticking to her testimony does not do Jeremy any favours.
Most particulary as it was, in effect, Jeremy whose telephone call to the Police meant it was either Sheila or Jeremy who pulled the trigger.
Julie's testimony also appears to be all about what Jeremy told her in conversation.
Jeremy just appears to be central to everything.
I believe the apparent contrast between Jeremy's inconsistency and JM's consistency is a false one which is more apparent than real.
Both JM and JB made errors. JM made a number of significant errors such as claiming Sheila was shot on the bed with the Bible on her chest.
JM had 32 coaching sessions in a benign environment. The police seemed intent on helping her. Interrogation of JB was hostile, intensely pressured and perhaps guaranteed to confuse anyone. Much of JM's confusion may have been resolved pretrial, whereas Jeremy's was perhaps exacerbated.
JM was guaranteed immunity from prosecution for all of her crimes: credit card fraud/ break in/ theft and all crimes related to the murders.
Whereas JB faced a life sentence if found guilty, JM faced zero sentence
and £25,000 reward.
The jury appear to have been unaware of JM's immunity and of the arrangement for her to sell her story - press payments to witnesses have stopped trials in recent times.
If Shaw's claim that JM could have benefited from insider knowledge of EP's case, both in respect of the methodology of the murders and of details of the scene of crime, is true, this would have created a false illusion of consistency. The jury would have been unaware of this.