no, he (and in reality it was David Blunkett, the Home Secretary who is more usually linked with this) suggested doing away with jury trials for criminal trials linked to complex frauds and where there was a likelyhood of jury intimidation.
a separate proposal suggested that the option for a jury trial be removed from some offences, removing them from the "each-way" bracket to the "summary only" bracket; meaning that the Court appointed to deal with those offences will be that of a Magistrate, rather than the Crown Court.
rrader,
You've managed to miss the point. That article from the
Guardian is the only one I have ever read that contained even a portion of the prosecution case, and even then it didnt contain the bulk of it. The press were overwhelmingly on the side of Martin, to the extent that the facts of the case were misrepresented so that the decision of the jury - which, unfortunately for Martin was based on the actual facts and not the newspaper coverage, appears ludicrous.
As pointed out before, this has lead to the press accepting the disproven defence case as fact with confusion for those poor souls who read and believe it. Your statement below contains much of this nonsense:
A basic principle of common law, now sadly absent from the low and retrograde legal system of the UK, is that a criminal takes his victims as he finds them.
this remains in Common Law, but is more correctly applied to the sphere of an assault - ie: where a man punches another man, who because of an inherited weak skull collapses and dies, he is liable for the death of that man (which, of course, does not mean necessarily that he is liable for murder because of a possible lack of malice aforethought). This does not mean that the criminal loses his rights as a human being because of his actions - a legal principle that has existed since the Roman Republic, if not before.
The bastards were shot while robbing another persons home in the middle of the night.
they were shot while
running away from
burgling another persons home. Robbery involves the application, or threat of, force to steal property. There was no robbery involved -Fearon was convicted of burglary.
Only a committed anti could construe Martin's laying in wait as an unfair "ambush." A basic principle of home defense is to first ascertain who it is you're going to shoot. Would the Crowns Prosecutor rather Martin have shot wildly into the darkness?
If Martin lies in wait for them inside his house, makes no attempt to scare them off, and shoots them in the back as they flee having come across him, then he is guilty of murder. Those were the facts of the case, and those were the reasons why he was rightfully convicted of murder by a jury of his peers.
Only someone deeply ignorant of the basic concepts of freedom and the basic human right to self-defense could possibly offer up these weak justifications for Martin's incarceration.
it isnt self defence, any more than the chap in Texas has found. oh yes, and Martin is a political prisoner, held in by the evil Queen and her pinko minions blah blah blah great empire fallen by socialism blah
