ChatterBank3 mins ago
Pedestrian Has Cyclist Death Conviction Overturned
See https:/
Some may recall the discussion a year ago, here:
https:/
Answers
I'm very pleased by this decision, I felt the verdict and sentencing were wrong.
There is another strange case in court at the moment https:/
this is what I wrote at the time:
//Madness, she didn't touch him and he should not have been on the pavement anyway. This now gives carte blanche to cyclists to ride illegally. Should have been given medal is you ask me. I always shout "get on the kin road" at them can I now be done for manslaughter if one of the morons rides in front of a bus? makes my blood boil. // - I haven't changed that view.
At the Court of Appeal on Wednesday, three judges overturned her conviction ... Dame Victoria Sharp, sitting with Mrs Justice Yip and Mrs Justice Farbey, said: "In our judgment, the prosecution case was insufficient even to be left to the jury.
"In all the circumstances, we have no hesitation in concluding that the appellant's conviction for manslaughter is unsafe."
You do wonder, sometimes ...
"You do wonder, sometimes ..."
You don't if you read a bit more:
For a manslaughter charge to succeed it requires an unlawful action (the "base offence") to have to taken place. It is part of the prosecution's job to identify that offence and prove it took place:
"Dame Victoria and her fellow appeal judges agreed, ruling that the jury were not asked to decide "the fundamental question of whether a base offence was established".
The senior judge continued: "Had Mrs Ward not died we regard it as inconceivable that the appellant would have been charged with assault."
During her original trial, Ms Grey's actions had been described as "hostile gesticulation" towards Mrs Ward.
However, Adrian Darbishire KC, for Ms Grey, said in the appeal: "Hostile gesticulation is not a crime, otherwise we would have 50,000 football fans each weekend being apprehended."
The Crown Prosecution Service had responded to the appeal, with its barrister Simon Spence KC telling the court it was accepted that "common assault as the base offence was not identified by name"."
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