Home & Garden0 min ago
Pc Harper
Some good news, but are the sentences too lenient?
https:/ /www.th esun.co .uk/new s/uknew s/12275 108/pc- andrew- harper- wife-co urt-tee n-kille rs-jail -mansla ughter- sentenc e/
https:/
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by dannyk13. 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.From the link that mushroom put on.
The jury were not sure that Henry Long knew that as he was driving from Admoor Lane to Ufton Lane the car he was driving was dragging a human body. That is what the prosecution had to prove before anyone could be convicted of murder and they did not succeed in doing.
so.
The jury were not sure that Henry Long knew that as he was driving from Admoor Lane to Ufton Lane the car he was driving was dragging a human body. That is what the prosecution had to prove before anyone could be convicted of murder and they did not succeed in doing.
so.
This thread - like the one before it, and the ones that sadly will follow it, will follow a similar track.
There will be a lot of seriously outraged people wanting dark revenge in prison for that they see as justice not served.
But at the risk of sounding like a cracked record - the law does not operate on what the public thinks about individual cases.
It is not moved, as we are, by the short length of the officer's marriage, the beauty of his widow, the perceived leniency of the sentences.
The judge has to make a decision based on the evidence he has heard, and it has become clear that he was not moved to believe that the defendants deliberately intended to murder the officer.
We may think differently many people do, but once again, that is not what is taken into account.
I am sure an appeal against the sentences can and will be lodged, and that will also be heard and argued without emotion and personal feeling, as it should be, and as it has to be.
Until then, we must let the process take its course, there is little if anything else we can do.
There will be a lot of seriously outraged people wanting dark revenge in prison for that they see as justice not served.
But at the risk of sounding like a cracked record - the law does not operate on what the public thinks about individual cases.
It is not moved, as we are, by the short length of the officer's marriage, the beauty of his widow, the perceived leniency of the sentences.
The judge has to make a decision based on the evidence he has heard, and it has become clear that he was not moved to believe that the defendants deliberately intended to murder the officer.
We may think differently many people do, but once again, that is not what is taken into account.
I am sure an appeal against the sentences can and will be lodged, and that will also be heard and argued without emotion and personal feeling, as it should be, and as it has to be.
Until then, we must let the process take its course, there is little if anything else we can do.
-- answer removed --
-- answer removed --
alba - // A police officer has died as a result of their actions. They should have had the maximum sentence. //
The fact that the officer died at their hands is not disputed.
What was argued in court was the prosecution's assertion that the defendants acted deliberately to cause the officer's death.
Had the prosecution produced evidence sufficient to convince the jury that this was the case, then the defendants would have been found guilty of murder and sentenced accordingly.
The prosecution failed so to do, and a manslaughter verdict was handed down and the judge sentenced as he believed appropriate.
We can argue that, and I am quite sure the prosecution will do exactly that, but for now, that is the situation as it stands, and anyone and everyone thinking it is wrong is not going to change that.
The fact that the officer died at their hands is not disputed.
What was argued in court was the prosecution's assertion that the defendants acted deliberately to cause the officer's death.
Had the prosecution produced evidence sufficient to convince the jury that this was the case, then the defendants would have been found guilty of murder and sentenced accordingly.
The prosecution failed so to do, and a manslaughter verdict was handed down and the judge sentenced as he believed appropriate.
We can argue that, and I am quite sure the prosecution will do exactly that, but for now, that is the situation as it stands, and anyone and everyone thinking it is wrong is not going to change that.