Home & Garden6 mins ago
What Happened Next?
Last week the DM ran a story about a man walking through a tube station, being accused of sexually assaulting a woman also walking through. From CCTV, it was obvious no such thing happened, yet the man was charged by police. What happened next?
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No best answer has yet been selected by lynbrown. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Togo...I would love to say that I do trust the CPS, because if we lose trust in an organization that is so central to the well-being of our country, than all is lost. But cases like this bring it into serious disrepute, and will have the knock-on effect of the boy that cried wolf.
If there lurks in the back of Jurors mind that, that the CPS shouldn't have brought a case to Court, then how can we rely on them to give credence to other cases ? We already have doubt lingering when a Police Officer appears in Court, with his shiny buttons, that he may not be speaking the truth.
Is sad and I can't see a solution at present.
If there lurks in the back of Jurors mind that, that the CPS shouldn't have brought a case to Court, then how can we rely on them to give credence to other cases ? We already have doubt lingering when a Police Officer appears in Court, with his shiny buttons, that he may not be speaking the truth.
Is sad and I can't see a solution at present.
vulvan
I think the CPS operate on the basis
if we bring the case does it have a reasonable chance of success ( success is proving beyond reasonable doubt )
and is it in the public interest ?
and so there is always an element of doubt in the choices made
In sex cases there has recently been more - 'let the jury decide'
altho I can see obvious drawbacks in this instant case
If you have the same set of cases and you decide to prosecute a greater proportion - then the success rate will inevitably go down
the DPP has been remarkably resistant to this obvious truth
I think the CPS operate on the basis
if we bring the case does it have a reasonable chance of success ( success is proving beyond reasonable doubt )
and is it in the public interest ?
and so there is always an element of doubt in the choices made
In sex cases there has recently been more - 'let the jury decide'
altho I can see obvious drawbacks in this instant case
If you have the same set of cases and you decide to prosecute a greater proportion - then the success rate will inevitably go down
the DPP has been remarkably resistant to this obvious truth