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Colston Four Cleared



pure_white

Well-known member
Dec 8, 2021
1,216
Im deeply offended by garden noames. Do these 4 have any as me and 3 mates would like to re-site them in the nearest river.
 




Thunder Bolt

Silly old bat
I haven'' lost ' anything what a strange accusation and yes I do expect this case to come under the spotlight of reform, we can't have people taking things into their own hands because THEY believe it to be right :facepalm:

Regards
DF

800 years of trial by jury, but pretty poor fool thinks it's wrong.

The jury gave the verdicts (all four of them) because they believe the prosecution didn't prove their case.
 


Is it PotG?

Thrifty non-licker
Feb 20, 2017
24,142
Sussex by the Sea
The jury gave the verdicts (all four of them) because they believe the prosecution didn't prove their case.

Shirley there is a world of difference between someone being technically 'guilty' of any offence and the case not being proven?

Morally at the very least.
 


Thunder Bolt

Silly old bat
Shirley there is a world of difference between someone being technically 'guilty' of any offence and the case not being proven?

Morally at the very least.

Not proven is a Scottish verdict, but doesn't apply in English law courts.

The onus is on the prosecution to prove beyond all reasonable doubt, that criminal damage was caused. Nobody doubted that damage was caused, but it wasn't criminal.
 










GT49er

Well-known member
Feb 1, 2009
47,337
Gloucester
800 years of trial by jury, but pretty poor fool thinks it's wrong.

The jury gave the verdicts (all four of them) because they believe the prosecution didn't prove their case.
It wasn't a case of the prosecution not proving their case. The statue was public property, it was pulled down and damaged, it was rolled in to the harbour and the defendants didn't dispute the fact that they did it. They claimed it was justified, and the jury decided to make what was essentially a political decision to acquit, in spite of the overwhelming evidence.

That, of course, was their absolute right - there is a long history of 'perverse' verdicts being delivered by juries. 200 years ago, for instance, children (I'm not sure how young the youngest were exactly, but certainly far too young) could be (and were) hanged for stealing goods worth more than 5 shillings. Horrible? Yes absilutely, and Joe Public (aka the jurors) also thought so at the time. Faced with a cases where a child faced the gallows, they simply returned a not guilty verdict fully in the face of incontrovertible evidence. Good for them, and the law was rightly changed.

This is what happened in this trial - although the defendants did in fact damage the statue and roll it in the harbour. The jury opted to return a not guilty verdict.
 












D

Deleted member 2719

Guest
You think the jury was selected from one demographic? You do know that prosecution lawyers can object to jurors being selected, as well as defence?
One juror voted guilty, but the judge accepted a majority vote.

Yes, I read it somewhere, am I wrong?
Slightly off topic, do you think freemason should be allowed to be judges or on the jury?
 


Thunder Bolt

Silly old bat
It wasn't a case of the prosecution not proving their case. The statue was public property, it was pulled down and damaged, it was rolled in to the harbour and the defendants didn't dispute the fact that they did it. They claimed it was justified, and the jury decided to make what was essentially a political decision to acquit, in spite of the overwhelming evidence.

That, of course, was their absolute right - there is a long history of 'perverse' verdicts being delivered by juries. 200 years ago, for instance, children (I'm not sure how young the youngest were exactly, but certainly far too young) could be (and were) hanged for stealing goods worth more than 5 shillings. Horrible? Yes absilutely, and Joe Public (aka the jurors) also thought so at the time. Faced with a cases where a child faced the gallows, they simply returned a not guilty verdict fully in the face of incontrovertible evidence. Good for them, and the law was rightly changed.

This is what happened in this trial - although the defendants did in fact damage the statue and roll it in the harbour. The jury opted to return a not guilty verdict.

This is a very good blog by a barrister explaining the law in this case.
https://thesecretbarrister.com/2022...th-our-jury-system-10-things-you-should-know/

As you rightly said, the statue was public property and the 'public' removed it, after long campaigns to get it moved.
 








Thunder Bolt

Silly old bat
Yes, I read it somewhere, am I wrong?
Slightly off topic, do you think freemason should be allowed to be judges or on the jury?

Ah, Freemasonry. A law unto themselves.
Before you reply, my cousin was lodge master of the Brighton lodge.
 












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