Dear All
One of the things you will have noticed from time to time,
is that I have blogged on the fact that the Scottish National Party in
Government don’t do Law well.
Kenny MacAskill was arguably the worst Justice Secretary in
the history of the Scottish Parliament, he was Alex Salmond’s pal, this is the
criteria it seems for holding Ministerial office.
Some time ago, during the Scottish referendum campaign, the
SNP came up with what they thought was a ‘whizz bang’ idea to try and capture
the women’s vote.
Plans to abolish corroboration in criminal trials, so in
effect, this was akin to a return to the days of ‘witch craft’ trials. The
Nationalists used as their justification emotive cases such as rape.
Rape is a truly awful crime; the victims of such abuse need
our help, our sympathy and a justice system that is fit for purpose. The SNP
highlighted as their reason the woeful conviction rates as they sought to lower
the bar for evidence. No justice system can function properly were there is not
a level playing field, we expect and demand that one of the cornerstones of a
democratic society is justice.
I blogged that Scottish Government plans to abolish corroboration
were utterly wrong some time ago, if you google my name and corroboration, you
can read previous articles or click on my article of October 2012.
This post also appears at:
And you can’t have failed to notice that on all the major
issues that Alex Salmond and Nicola Sturgeon got wrong, George Laird got it
absolutely right.
Now, the Scottish Government has been forced to do another U-turn.
Apparently, they have managed to get George Laird, yet
again, after several years; you see it takes the SNP years to get to the
correct decision which takes me a few minutes.
Anyone who has an interest in human rights can plainly see
how wrong it was for the SNP to embark on this course of action.
However, I am not welcoming the decision by Kenny
MacAskill’s replacement Michael Matheson because I think this U turn is a
temporary measure, to get them over this election and the subsequent one in
2016.
Corroboration is a basic safeguard of Scots Law should be
retained, although the SNP farmed out the idea to Lord Bonomy, a High Court
judge who did a study, he has came back with a series of proposed checks and balances
to support people accused of crime.
I want you to think of now of the ‘Cadder Case’, in this
case, the Scottish Government had to be forced by the UK Supreme Court to
reinstate an accused person’s human rights to a fair trial after an accuse was
denied access to legal representation.
Human rights cannot be replaced by ‘gifts’ from the Crown
Office dressed up as safeguards. Not unsurprisingly that case was found against
the Scottish Government, it seems that ‘who pays the piper calls the tune’ as
famously said by Kenny MacAskill holds no sway in justice.
Lord Bonomy has interestingly said the corroboration rule
should be preserved for cases where the accused as confessed or where evidence
is hearsay.
The way that human rights work regarding a fair trial is
that accused people have access to the same rights. If people have more rights
than others, then plainly that is wrong, it would not be a surprise if this
measure was adopted that a person found guilty could appeal that a miscarriage
of justice occurred because they were afforded the same rights as others.
I have served on a jury, I did my duty, the person on trial
was guilty, and he got sentenced for stabbing someone in the face with a
weapon. At the end of the trial, a fellow jury member said to me, ‘you were
right’. I told him, ‘we all were right’; I was just the one who prepared to
stand up’. Although the jury members all felt he was guilty, they were
reluctant to vote that way in case the person was sent to prison. I told them,
we are not here to send people to prison, we are here to ensure justice is
done, the judge will determine what sentence is required. At the end of the
trial, it transpired that the person had a history of violence that stretched
into several pages.
Many justice insiders believe it is not the rule of
corroboration that prevents convictions for rape and other crimes committed in
private, but the reluctance of juries to convict, my story bears this belief
out. Sending people to prison isn’t a nice thing to do but society has to be
protected from dangerous people.
Matheson told Holyrood:
"The issues Lord Bonomy raises are of crucial
importance, and we should take the time to consider them fully. The Scottish
Government will look at Lord Bonomy's detailed recommendations as a package,
alongside the corroboration requirement itself, and form a view on the best way
forward."
Alistair Morris, president of the Law Society of Scotland,
said:
"Lord Bonomy is recommending measures which could
improve the criminal justice system whether or not the corroboration
requirement is abolished. The Law Society strongly believed that abolishing the
requirement for corroboration in isolation without a full review of its role in
our criminal justice system would lead to an increased risk of miscarriages of
justice."
This also tallies with what a serving Sheriff said to me
some time ago when discussing this issue, they also said that women would see
though this gimmick by the SNP to garner votes for independence.
The abolition of corroboration will now be removed from the
Criminal Justice Act passed last year.
However, despite this, I believe that this issue will return
if the SNP get majority government in 2016.
And when it does, the fight will simply start back over
again.
Yours sincerely
George Laird
The Campaign for Human Rights at Glasgow University
Wrong, wrong, and wrong again Mr Laird!
ReplyDeleteCompletely agree with you George. Corroboration has to remain. It's fair to everyone involved and HAS to be fair.
ReplyDeleteRecently retired Police Officer with 30 years service.
Dear Duncan
ReplyDeleteYou said:
"Wrong, wrong, and wrong again Mr Laird!"
Perhaps rather than just making that statement you would care to do a breakdown of how I am wrong, wrong and wrong again".
Anytime you have a spare minute will be fine.
Incidentally, I see by clicking on your name that it links to East Kilbride SNP.
George
YOu're obviously rattling the right cages George :)
ReplyDelete'unpopular Nicola Sturgeon'
ReplyDeletePuhLEEEEEZZZZEEEEE..............
If the SNP finally remove corroboration, any case will likely end up in the EU Court anyway.
ReplyDeleteWhen it is one person's word against another, then the presumption has - must - be innocence. Otherwise courts will end up being theatre, with the best participant winning.
I agree that if someone disagrees with you, they should at least put up an argument. But typical reaction from a nationalist who can't see the SNP do no wrong.
Anonymous.
ReplyDeleteAnonymous Anonymous said...
'unpopular Nicola Sturgeon'
PuhLEEEEEZZZZEEEEE..............
# You forget the majority of 2.1 million and counting, are not in the Evita Sturgeon fan club...
I see the Natz sheep are out in force. Sturgeon was a failure at the NHS, she backed a serial wife beating thug Bill Walker to stand for election as an MSP in Dunfermline, she is all mouth but all the "u turns" lately show what a disaster is heading Scotlands way, but hey, this "tartan toff Sturgeon" is alright Jack.
ReplyDeleteMr Laird, your bigoted scribes are a tissue of lies and innuendo.
ReplyDeleteDear Anon
ReplyDelete“Mr Laird, your bigoted scribes are a tissue of lies and innuendo”.
Thank you for your feedback.
The lady doth protest too much methinks.
Finally, are you anyone worth taking notice of?
George
Don Idiote,, she WAS a failure running the NHS, she DID back serial wife beating thug Bill Walker for the Dunfermline seat. Sturgeon"s husband DID know about Walker's violent past. He was informed about that in 2008. Sturgeon said she NEVER KNEW about her "close friend" Walker's past history, because her husband Murrell never told her, lol lol lol,,, whatever Nicola!!
ReplyDeleteDuncan/Don
ReplyDeleteThe lack of any cogent argument in your posts would irritate me if it wasn't for the fact that they implicitly support the premise of George's Blog.
Cheers
Terry