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El. knyga: The First Miscarriage of Justice

  • Formatas: 256 pages
  • Iðleidimo metai: 20-Oct-2014
  • Leidëjas: Waterside Press
  • ISBN-13: 9781908162809
Kitos knygos pagal ðià temà:
  • Formatas: 256 pages
  • Iðleidimo metai: 20-Oct-2014
  • Leidëjas: Waterside Press
  • ISBN-13: 9781908162809
Kitos knygos pagal ðià temà:

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'I would have been the first  -  Then there [ were] the Birmingham Six, the Bridgewater Four and the Cardiff Three. Each  -  another nail in my coffin': Tony Stock, 2008. The story of Tony Stock is astonishing: deeply disturbing it sent out ripples of disquiet when he was sentenced to ten years for robbery at Leeds Assizes in 1970. Over the next 40 years the case went to the Court of Appeal four times and has the distinction of being the first to have been referred to that court twice by the Criminal Cases Review Commission. Tony Stock died in 2012 still fighting to clear his name: spending from his meagre savings to hire private investigators and hoping beyond hope to see justice. Jon Robins takes up where Stock left off undertaking new research with the support of Glyn Maddocks, Stock's lawyer, and Ralph Barrington, formerly the CCRC's investigations adviser. Previously head of Essex CID, Barrington was so shocked at how the Court of Appeal treated Stock that he pursued it after he retired. 'If anyone seriously believes the Court of Appeal has reformed itself since the dark days of the Birmingham Six and Guildford Four, they should study the unreported and amazing case of Tony Stock': Private Eye. 'One of the most outrageous miscarriages of justice of modern times': Barry Sheerman, Labour MP for Huddersfield. 'I would have thought that the injustice done to Tony [ Stock] was fairly self-evident and yet his conviction still stands. I find this very difficult to accept': Ralph Barrington, investigations adviser at the Criminal Cases Review Commission. 'The fight for justice that will not die': Yorkshire Post.

Recenzijos

'The story is compelling & Jon Robins tells it well. Students would do well to read it as a guide to its times...the book demonstrates that the enduring villain of the Tony Stock case was the recalcitrance of the high judiciary in the Court of Appeal. That may well not have changed as much as has policing. Read this book and be convinced that it should'-- New Law Journal; 'The story of Tony Stock should be mandatory reading for everyone, not merely those involved with the laws. It concerns the quality of our criminal justice system and its serious reluctance and unwillingness to root out injustice': Michael Mansfield QC. 'One of the most outrageous miscarriages of justice of modern times': Barry Sheerman, Labour MP for Huddersfield. 'This fascinating, atmospheric and important book highlights a shameful truth, that even now, 25 years after the release of the Guildford Four, the English legal system has great difficulty admitting that it is capable of getting things wrong': barristerblogger.com.

Arrest photo of Tony Stock vi
Acknowledgements vii
About the Author viii
About the Author of the Foreword viii
Foreword ix
Michael Mansfield
The Identikit image of Tony Stock xiv
Introduction xv
1 'Just another robbery by a bunch of third-rate criminals'
21(14)
The Merrion Centre
21(1)
78 Birkdale Road, Stockton-on-Tees
22(1)
Saturday, January 24: the first 24 hours
23(1)
Why Tony Stock?
24(3)
Who was Tony Stock?
27(8)
2 How Do You Prove a Negative?
35(36)
1 The investigation
36(5)
2 Regina V Anthony Stock
41(23)
3 Proving a negative
64(4)
4 The verdict
68(3)
3 'His word against mine'
71(18)
The world pre-PACE
74(6)
A splendid type of officer
80(1)
Mr Verbal
81(2)
Force with a record
83(5)
'A Knock on the Door---and Mr Stock gets 10 years'
88(1)
4 Prisoner Number 650603
89(22)
A battle for Justice
92(7)
'So easy for people to be genuinely mistaken'
99(1)
'Primed to explode'
100(2)
Going to Strasbourg
102(1)
Not another morsel
103(2)
'A nasty taste'
105(6)
5 Chainsaws and Supergrasses
111(2)
Operation Ohio
112(2)
Fresh start
114(1)
Going down
115(1)
The rise and fall of the supergrass
116(3)
Making war on society
119(1)
Another piece of work
119(3)
'Squealer clears Identikit victim'
122(1)
6 Degrees of Innocence
123(1)
It could happen to anyone
124(5)
Re-enactment and reconstruction
129(3)
Just a formality
132(3)
7 Don't Quit
135(14)
Another fresh start
136(1)
A double miscarriage of justice
137(3)
Supergrass speaks
140(2)
Don't quit
142(1)
I take all the casualties
143(6)
8 A Fantastic Hypothesis
149(28)
Appalling vista
149(1)
'If only I was Black or Irish...'
149(8)
Supergrass surfaces
157(2)
Wasting the court's time
159(1)
Making things fit?
160(4)
'Time heals all wounds---but not for my Dad'
164(2)
Home and dry
166(1)
'I want to be here like I want a hole in my head'
166(4)
'A series of assumptions which makes scant sense'
170(1)
'A series of assumptions
171(2)
A glimmer of hope
173(1)
Thinking positive again
174(3)
9 The Unattainable Truth
177(30)
The nationalisation of zeal
179(2)
Back of the queue
181(2)
Return of the Thursday Gang
183(2)
Trip down memory lane
185(1)
The truth remains hidden
186(1)
'A matter of conjecture'
187(2)
The second Ford Cortina
189(4)
Tony Stock and the Thursday Gang
193(3)
Questions asked and not asked
196(1)
The five photographs
197(4)
A last minute change of heart
201(1)
Second guessing the courts
202(5)
10 Judges in the Spotlight
207
"Watchdog or gatekeeper?
208(1)
Hanging on a thread
209(2)
'A ticking-off'
211(2)
'The first miscarriage'
213(2)
'Regulated from a spirit of underlying hostility'
215(2)
Playing it safe
217(2)
Going nowhere
219(3)
One more time
222(5)
Judges under scrutiny
227(3)
'Defying gravity'
230(5)
11 Unfinished Business
235(10)
Index 245
Jon Robins also uses Stock's epic campaign as a way of exploring the treatment of miscarriages of justice over the last four decades. He has been writing about law and justice for the national and specialist press for many years, including about the Stock case for The Times, Guardian and others. He is a visiting senior fellow in access to justice at the University of Lincoln, a patron of Hackney Community Law Centre and founder of www.thejusticegap.com (an online magazine about law and justice).