Friday, 1 August 2008

George not guilty of Dando murder



The LA is vindicated. (http://www.libertarian.co.uk/lapubs/legan/legan046.pdf)!

George not guilty of Dando murder.

BBC News (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/7536815.stm)Barry George has been found not guilty of murdering BBC television presenter Jill Dando outside her London home. Mr George, 48, of Fulham, west London, denied shooting 37-year-old Miss Dando on her doorstep on 26 April 1999. He was retried at the Old Bailey, having first been convicted in 2001. Forensic evidence of gunshot residue had been ruled inadmissible.In a statement issued through his solicitor Jeremy Moore, Mr George said he was "overwhelmed" by the verdict.Mr Moore added: "This is not a time to celebrate. Barry George, an innocent man, has spent eight years in prison for a crime he did not commit." Those eight years could have been better served by the police in searching for the real killer." Mr Moore said he would not be surprised if Mr George sought compensation for the time wrongly spent in jail. The jury of eight women and four men was sent out to deliberate on Wednesday after an eight-week trial. Extracts from Barry George police interviews. Mr George has consistently insisted he did not murder Ms Dando. He showed no reaction as the verdict was read out but nodded as psychiatrist Dr Susan Young, who sat with him in the dock during trial, whispered to him.Outside court, Dr Young said: "Throughout the trial, he did not dare to get his hopes up and he continually said to me in the dock he believed he would be convicted."

His eyes filled with tears and he took a very deep breath."During the trial, his defence argued he was not capable of carrying out what could be seen as the "perfect crime" that required "meticulous" planning. He was arrested on 15 May 2000, a year after the shooting in Gowan Avenue.Forensic evidence about a tiny speck of gun residue in Barry George's coat helped secure his original conviction. The prosecution said this proved that he had fired the fatal shot and he was convicted by a majority of 10 to one.But the evidence was not permitted at the latest trial. The Court of Appeal ruled new scientific doubts over gunshot discharge residue evidence meant the conviction had to be quashed and ordered a retrial. His sister Michelle Diskin, who has led the fight for his release, was instrumental in getting the Criminal Cases Review Commission to refer the case to the Court of Appeal. "We are really delighted to finally have justice," she said. "A huge thank you to the jury. They obviously worked very hard to ensure they correctly interpreted the circumstantial evidence in this case... "We've been fighting for many years. Now we need time to get back together as a family. We also hope that the police will now look again into the murder of Jill Dando." The Crown Prosecution Service defended its original decision to charge Mr George. In a statement it said: "Mr George now has the right to be regarded as an innocent man. But that does not mean it was wrong to bring the case. "Our test is always whether there is sufficient evidence for a realistic prospect of conviction; it would be wholly wrong only to bring cases where we were guaranteed a conviction." The Met Police said it would reflect on George's acquittal and "consider how best to proceed".

Commander Simon Foy, head of Scotland Yard's homicide and serious crime command, said: "We are disappointed by today's verdict but especially disappointed for Jill's family and friends. However, we respect the decision of the court."Mr George was arrested after detectives reviewed the evidence and his name came up. The prosecution used a change in the law to introduce so-called bad character evidence at the retrial. They painted an image of Mr George stalking a series of women on the streets of Fulham. The prosecution told the jury Mr George was a celebrity and gun-obsessed stalker with a grudge against the BBC, where he had worked as a messenger for a short time in the past. He was said to have stalked and photographed hundreds of women and was described as a fantasist who told people he was the cousin of the late Queen singer Freddie Mercury.

Prosecutors also maintained that witness identification was the most important part of their case.But only one witness could be 100% sure that they had seen Mr George in Gowan Avenue.When police searched his home in Crookham Road, officers found 2,248 photographs he had taken of women. However, defence counsel William Clegg QC maintained the prosecution case was circumstantial and said there was no direct evidence that George was the killer.The court has heard that Mr George has an IQ of 75, in the lowest 5% of the population. The jury at the retrial was also told that the defendant had a history of complex medical problems and told police that he had a "personality disorder".Mr Clegg told jurors: "The only reason that the prosecution say that this is the work of the local loner, the local nutter, the man with these serious psychological problems, is because that is the man they arrested."But if you look at the facts of the case they will give you a very different story.

"Story from BBC NEWS:http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/uk/7536815.stmPublished: 2008/08/01 14:54:52 GMT© BBC MMVIII