Below (end of this post) is a link to a podcast discussion between Dr. Sandra Lean and Yvonne Hartley. They talk about the Luke Mitchell case, so I am posting it up here. (Please do not use this thread to start a discussion on the Bamber case. There is already a board on here for that).
What interests me in particular is a comment by Dr. Lean at 26:55. The context of what follows is that Yvonne Hartley mentioned how the Campaign Team for Jeremy Bamber are always happy to refer people to documents in their possession that prove their arguments right. (Whether that is actually true is beside the point for the purpose of this thread).
At this point, Dr. Lean jumps in and states this:
"...slight difference between Scotland and England & Wales is that I can't put that material online. I'd love to put the whole lot online. In Scotland, I can't. I can quote from...excerpts from different documents, and I have gone as far as I could with that to get as much of it out there as I can, but in terms of creating a website and just chucking everything up there for everybody to go through, I don't want to go to jail...I'm not allowed to do that."
Is this true? Is there some peculiarity of Scots law that prevents the release of case papers to third parties, even when the individual who is protesting innocence has no objection?
If Dr. Lean is reading this, may I ask that she posts a fuller explanation to this thread, explaining and citing the relevant provisions or principles of Scots law that preclude lawful disclosure on this Forum or some similar platform or format.
The question is, I believe, important. This case has been discussed on here at length, but at no point have we seen any documentation. That means we are reliant on one monopolistic source: Dr. Lean. I am not at all suggesting that Dr. Lean would present us with a false or misleading picture, but she is a campaigner for Luke Mitchell, so inevitably Dr. Lean will be interpreting and quoting from documents through the lens of Mr Mitchell's cause and interests, whereas we, being commenters and researchers, have a more objective standpoint (or, certainly I do). I am more interested in the truth. I am not interested in overturning the conviction of a brutal murderer - if he is guilty, and if the conviction is legally safe, which are very much 'ifs'.
Here's the link to the discussion I quote from:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sybRd-ud0h4Feel free to use this thread to critique other aspects of the discussion as they pertain to the case, but my interest is in the specific question of disclosure.