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Page 20 of White Noise Keywords: "minicab," "headed," "added," "seemed"
From: Robert Henderson <Philip@anywhere.demon.co.uk>
Subject: The Barry George farce
Date: 30 Jul 2002
Newsgroups: uk.politics.misc
In view of the verdict in Barry George's appeal, I think another
chance fro people to ead the piece below might be useful. It was
published as pamphlet by the Libertarian Alliance in 2001. RH
Barry George and the celebrity effect
Robert Henderson
On 2 July 2001 Barry George, 41, was convicted at the Old
Bailey of the murder of the broadcaster Jill Dando, best
known as the presenter of the BBC programme Crimewatch. Few,
if any recent convictions, have been greeted with such
disquiet by the media. Leader comment (3 July) from the Daily
Mail and Daily Telegraph give the gist of press feeling:
"Despite his loathsome character and criminal record, the
evidence against George was hardly compelling" (Daily Mail).
"...there can be few convictions that need the imprimatur of
the higher courts [ie the agreement of the Court of Appeal
that the conviction is sound] more than this." (Daily
Telegraph). The comment is all the more noteworthy for coming
from the two British national newspapers most unfriendly to
the criminal and most supportive of the courts and the
police.
From the moment that prosecuting counsel Orlando Pownall
said in his opening speech that the Crown's case against
Barry George was in effect (because the forensic evidence
was utterly inconclusive) entirely dependent on
circumstantial evidence, the alarm bells started ringing.
They rang even louder when Pownall said that the evidence
was "compelling", for a strong case needs no such
gratuitous promotion but speaks for itself. As the
prosecution unfolded it became all too clear that even by
the standards of lawyerly hyperbole, "compelling" was going
it a bit.
The prosecution were unable to show that (1) George had a
motive, (2) that he was particularly interested in, let alone
fixated with, Dando, (3) that he was in the immediate area of
Dando's house at the time of the killing and (4) that he had
access to a gun since 1982. They produced no direct
witnesses of the killing, no weapon and no unambiguous
forensic evidence. Moreover, they failed to do all this
despite devoting immense amounts of money and manpower to the
investigation - 40-50 detectives worked on the case full time
for more than a year. In addition, George at no time
admitted to the police that he had committed the murder or
had any knowledge of the crime, ie he did not make a
confession (or any compromising statement) and then retract
it. Throughout he strongly maintained his innocence.
Occasionally, as in the case of the murderess Rosemary West 1,
circumstantial evidence is of a nature where a conviction is
safe even if it is the only evidence. To find her not guilty,
the jury would have had to believe that she was able to live
in the same house with her husband over a period of many
years during which time he buried umpteen bodies of young
women and girls he had befriended without Rosemary having an
inkling of what was going on. There was also evidence given
by girls befriended by the Wests who escaped being
murdered, that Rosemary had accompanied her husband when
he had gone out looking for girls to befriend and that she
had been present when they were later subjected to physical
abuse by Fred West. The evidence against Rosemary West
strained credulity past the breaking point because, although
it was entirely circumstantial, it was also powerfully linked
to the crimes being tried. In the Dando trial there is
nothing to strain credulity past the point of no return nor
was it linked powerfully to the crime. Indeed, the very
opposite, for the weakness of the evidence presented
against George was quite startling. So weak in fact, that
even if there had been a really "killer" piece of evidence
linking George directly to the murder, for example, if the
murder gun had been found in his flat, it is difficult to see
how the evidence presented at his trial would have added to
the case against him because it relied so heavily on
fanciful supposition mounted on the most contentious
premises. The best that could be said for the prosecution
case was that the evidence they presented was extremely
voluminous.
The facts of the shooting
Jill Dando was shot at about 11.30 on Monday, 26 April 1999
on the doorstep of her house at 29 Gowan Avenue, Fulham,
West London. Shortly before her killing she was captured
on CCTV in several places. There was no evidence from the
videotapes of anyone following her.
Miss Dando was found lying with her head against her front
door. Her car keys were in her hand and her handbag open with
the strap over her arm. She was almost certainly about to
open her front door when attacked.
Damage to the lower part of the door suggested that Miss
Dando was crouching when shot. There was a small bruise on
her right forearm which was probably made by the killer
grasping her arm. The killer probably forced her to the
ground and held her in position for the killing.
Miss Dando was killed by a single shot to the head made at
very close range. The fatal bullet went into her head just
behind the top of the left ear and exited above the right
ear.
Prosecuting counsel described the result of this shot thus:
"An impression of the muzzle and foresight of the weapon used
was discernible in the area surrounding the entry wound which
suggested it had been pressed firmly against the left side of
her head upon discharge," (Daily Telegraph 5/5/01)
The police found a yellow bullet and shell case at the crime
scene. The shell case was of 9mm short self-loading pistol
calibre. The weapons expert called by the prosecution claimed
that "Such ammunition had never been widely distributed."
(Daily Telegraph 5/5/01) There were six markings along the
top of the cartridge suggesting a pin punch or similar
instrument was used to secure the bullet.
From the bullet and shell case it was deduced that the gun
used to kill Miss Dando had a smooth-bore barrel which had
either been converted from a blank pistol or was a
reactivated weapon. It was not fitted with a silencer, but
because it was fired so closely to the head, the noise of it
firing would have been substantially reduced. The markings at
the top of the cartridge suggested that it had been adapted
and may have carried a reduced charge, which would have
created a quieter report when the gun was fired.
A single fibre (not from Miss Dando's clothing) was found at
the scene of the crime.
Two witnesses (neighbours of Miss Dando) who probably heard
but did not see the killing said Miss Dando screamed and
then came the sound of a shot. Presumably she must have seen
the gun. These neighbours reported seeing a man but neither
identified him as George. Indeed, the photofit produced from
their description did not greatly resemble George if at all.
The facts of the shooting suggest a most efficient killer. He
has moved swiftly to her, rapidly placed her in a position to
be killed, killed her quickly with a single shot to the head,
muffled the sound by placing the gun against her head and,
possibly, reduced the report further by using adapted
ammunition. This behaviour was utterly at variance with
George's chaotic character.
The prosecution tried to argue that the single shot
(professional killers always use two according to the
prosecution - such wondrous certainty over the palpably
uncertain was displayed by Mr Pownall throughout the trial)
and the use of a re-commissioned gun or modified blanks
pistol, suggested that the killer was an amateur. The fact
that one shot was used is, of course, no evidence of a lack
of professionalism. Miss Dando was shot in a public place
and the killer may well have decided on one shot to avoid
drawing attention to the killing. The fact that the gun was a
re-commissioned one or a converted blanks pistol also means
nothing. Such guns are commonly used by London's underworld,
much more commonly by all accounts since the tightening of
the gun laws by the Blair government.
George's character
The prosecution were, to put it politely, intellectually
confused in their arguments relating to George's character.
On the one hand they wished us to believe that George was
capable of having coldly planned and executed a most
efficient killing without leaving any forensic or other
direct evidence to convict him. On the other hand, when it
suited them, they portrayed George as a reckless near
simpleton.
George's character as depicted at the trial suggested a
seriously inept and disorganised man. As a boy he was a
problematic enough a personality to have been sent to a
special boarding school. He has never been able to hold down
a job and has spent almost all of the time since he left
school unemployed. He suffers from epilepsy to the extent
that he was allowed an attendant in the dock at the Dando
trial to assist him in the event of a fit. He was said to be
of low intelligence. He lived in a terrible physical mess -
his flat was covered with a deep "soil" of paper and other
oddments such as a large number of rolls of undeveloped
films.
Of particular importance to the trial was the fact that
George is a serial fantasist of Walter Mitty proportions.
This had two effects. First, evidence that he had lied to
the police became essentially worthless without other
corroborating evidence, because lying was second nature to
George and, indeed, it is the type of behaviour which would
have been reasonably expected from him in the circumstances
of being arrested and questioned by the police. Second, much
of the other evidence, such as his habit of following women,
could be plausibly explained by his tendency to act out his
fantasies.
George's fantasy world was one in which he sought
satisfaction, and doubtless attention, by pretending to be
someone glamorous or connected to someone glamorous or to
have been in glamorous or sensational circumstances. At
various times during the twenty years prior to the murder he
has claimed to be Steve Majors (a name derived from Lee
Majors and the character, Steve Austin, he played in the TV
series The Bionic Man), an SAS soldier by the name of
Thomas Palmer (an SAS soldier involved in the Iranian Embassy
siege), Paul Gadd (the pop star Gary Glitter's real name)
and Freddie Mercury's cousin (for which he used the name
Barry Bulsara) to mention just a few. He has at various
times also claimed to be in possession of a rocket propelled
grenade launcher and to be able to roller skate over four
double decker buses.
George did not merely have fantasies he acted them out. When
he was pretending to be Freddie Mercury's cousin, Barry
Bulsara, he went to Mercury's home after the singer's death
in a hired white limousine and left flowers outside the
house. He then proceeded to sign autographs for a while,
having persuaded mourning fans that he was related to
Mercury.
In 1983 he was arrested by police in Kensington Gardens near
to the Princess of Wales' home, crouched in the bushes,
dressed in pseudo military gear and equipped with a knife
and rope. The police arrested him but did not press charges,
although they searched his flat. The Royal Protection Group
(RPG) did however, list him as a potential threat to the
Royal Family. An RPG member also suggested him to the team
investigating the Rachel Nickell murder in 1992 as a possible
suspect.
In 1985 George was living in a bed and breakfast hotel in
Gloucester Road, West London. There he came to know a family
by the name of Dobbins. After they moved to a flat in Fulham
George called on them unexpectedly dressed in combat gear and
a balaclava. Once in the hallway of the flat he produced a
handgun and fired a blank shot. He showed the Dobbins' son,
David, the blank rounds in his pocket and then left.
A further example of his exhibitionistic and obsessive
mentality comes from his medical history. George attended no
less than 18 different surgeries in West London at various
times and was known as a "heart sink" patient because he was
constantly coming in with imagined ailments.
Doctors who examined George after his arrest diagnosed an
impressive array of psychiatric disorders: psychopathic
personality, narcissistic personality, histrionic
personality, paranoid personality and Asperger's Syndrome (a
disorder linked to autism). As a boy he was diagnosed as
suffering from attention hyperactivity disorder. George was
also diagnosed as having somatisation disorder and concurrent
factitious disorder.
Whether psychiatric diagnoses mean anything is debatable.
However, the police and courts credit them and therefore
should have taken them into account before a prosecution was
mounted. The interesting thing about these diagnoses is that
they relate to personality traits which could innocently
explain every part of George's supposedly suspicious
behaviour both before and after the Dando murder. A
psychopathic personality is prone to lying and using aliases.
A narcissistic personality is one who urgently seeks
attention and admiration and has a heightened sense of
self-importance. A histrionic personality will imagine they
have a well developed relationship with someone they do not
know at all in a personal sense. A paranoid personality has
obvious ramifications for George's suspicion of the police.
Asperger's sufferers have major problems with personal
relationships and a tendency to become obsessive. Finally,
somatisation disorder and concurrent factitious disorder
explained his imagined illnesses.
Guns and the military
George was undoubtedly fascinated by guns and the military.
The police found in his flat camouflage trousers and a
jacket, notes about stunts to raise money for the SAS, books
such as Uniforms of Elite Forces, SBS, the invisible raiders
and various other survival and gun related magazines.
However, George appears to have been as unsuccessful in his
efforts to achieve a life which regularly included guns and
the military as he was with virtually everything else he
attempted. He joined the Territorial Army 10th Bn Parachute
Regiment in December 1981. He served until the following
November but did not complete his basic training, although he
attended 29 voluntary training days which included basic
weapons training. In August 1982 he joined the Kensington
and Chelsea Pistol Club as a probationary member. In
September his full membership application was refused. He
attended the club on eight occasions and concerned himself
primarily with pistol shooting. In 1991 he applied
unsuccessfully to become a member of the Royal Green jackets
and the Field Ambulance Volunteers. That was the extent of
his military involvement and weapons training.
When the police searched George's flat for the second time,
they found a list of firearms which they showed to George.
This promoted him to say "That's from when I was with the
TA. I have only handled weapons under supervision." This, if
true, meant that George had not handled working firearms
since 1982. Try as they might, the police could not prove he
had. The best they came up with was the firing of blanks at
the Dobbins' home and a recent picture of George taken
showing him holding a replica pistol capable of firing only
blanks.
The police conduct of the investigation
The police did not take George seriously as a suspect until
nearly a year after the murder, despite some reports from
the public early in the investigation which suggested that
he might be worth investigating. The police explanation for
the delay was the sheer volume of leads they had to follow
up - these ran to several thousands. This could conceivably
be the reason, but more probably by the time the police
turned their attentions to George they were getting
desperate because of their failure to charge anyone and
feeling utterly thwarted by the sheer lack of hard evidence
to follow up. This view is leant weight by the words of
Assistant Commissioner Brian Moore who said at the conclusion
of the trial: "It was a strange attack. It was not seen by
anybody, the killer was not seen by anyone at the time and
very little forensic evidence left behind. There could be no
more difficult environment to investigate a case." (Daily
Telegraph 3/7/01).
The police gain the vast majority of their convictions
through one of three means: catching the perpetrators in the
act, intelligence from underworld informants and the sheer
incompetence and lack of self control of many criminals -
more criminals are probably caught because they boast about a
crime to other criminals who then inform on them than by any
other means. Where none of these events occurs, the police
inevitably struggle. It is not that they are dim or
incompetent. Rather, it is in the nature of things that if a
crime is committed by someone who leaves no material
evidence, is not connected to the victim, tells no one and
is not subject to the attentions of an informant, then the
case is next to insoluble. In particular, the police have a
pretty poor record when it comes to solving stranger
murders, no matter how much effort they put into an
investigation. The failure of the Metropolitan Police (the
London police force) to even charge someone for the murder
of PC Dunn (a few years ago he was shot down - probably by
drug dealers - while answering what appeared to be a routine
call) or to gain a conviction which would stand the test of
an appeal in the case of the especially brutal killing of PC
Blakelock during the Broadwater Farm riots in 1981, shows how
difficult such cases are to solve. In both cases the police
force investigating the crimes had the greatest possible
incentive to solve the crime, it was the best resourced and
largest police force in Britain and had by far the greatest
experience in murder investigations, because of the
disproportionately large number of British murders which
take place in London.
In most investigations the police just put it down to
experience if they cannot solve the crime, even if it is a
murder. Files may be kept open for a long time, but active
investigation either stops altogether or is severely reduced.
But where the crime is sensational, especially if it is a
murder, there is no question that the police devote more time
and effort to a case than they would normally do. Had Jill
Dando been an Old Age Pensioner killed in her home by a
burglar, her case would have been quietly investigated for a
few months and then effectively dropped if no obvious leads
remained unexplored. But because she was Jill Dando, media
celebrity, the police could not face doing that. Instead they
employed a disproportionate number of detectives (40-50) for
a disproportionate amount of time ( more than a year) at a
disproportionate cost (around ?4 million). That amount of
effort in turn creates an ever increasing need in the police
mind for a person to be charged and brought to trial.
In fact, any murder trial in which someone is not charged
until many months after the event is likely to be suspect.
Where the murder victim is a well known and liked celebrity,
it is a near certainty that no real evidence exists if the
accused is not charged until a year after the killing. The
detective in charge of the Dando investigation, Detective
Superintendent Hamish Campbell said after the trial that he
had no doubt about the rightness of the verdict and then
continued tellingly: "The ones [murders] that worry me are
unsolved murders: cases that leave people without an answer
for losses." (Sunday Telegraph London 8/7/01). There is a
strong element of the classic policeman's mentality in that
statement, both "he wouldn't have been convicted if he was
innocent" and "a job well done because a culprit has been
found and punished".
Why did the police pick on George when the evidence against
him was so weak? His sister, Michelle Diskin put forward a
plausible reason after the trial: "My feeling is that Barry
looked disposable. They thought he could disappear and no one
would notice. They thought it was just him and his elderly
mum. They didn't realise he had a large family network."
(Daily Telegraph 3/7/01).
The Crown Prosecution Service
The prosecution was sanctioned by Alison Saunders, then the
Assistant Chief Crown Prosecutor for central London with the
Crown Prosecution Service. She was interviewed by the Sunday
Telegraph after the trial (8/7/01).
Ms Saunders insisted that the case passed the "realistic
prospect of conviction test" - that a conviction is more
likely to succeed than fail.
She admitted however, that "...it was a difficult decision
to take because there was no eye witness to the murder and no
smoking gun, and we had to consider it very carefully."
Ms Saunders was of course aware of George's criminal record -
see below. She claimed that she was not influenced by that,
but one wonders whether at some level she did not take it,
wittingly or unwittingly, into account. There was, of
course, also the pressure she must have felt to bring someone
to trial both because of the victim's celebrity and the
immense effort devoted to the investigation.
The evidence presented against George
Ms Saunders said that she was persuaded to recommend charges
by the forensic evidence, statements by witnesses placing
him near the murder scene, his efforts to obtain an alibi
and George's lies over not knowing where Dando lived or who
she was. Let us examine the evidence under those four heads.
Forensic
The only forensic evidence which supposedly linked George
directly to the killing was a minute chemical residue, too
small to be seen readily with the human eye, and a single
strand of fibre.
The chemical residue was found in the inside pocket of
George's coat. The coat itself may have been contaminated by
the police because it was not kept properly protected on its
journey from George's flat to the forensic laboratory. In
between, a policeman took the coat to a police forensics
laboratory to photograph it. There it was, quite naturally,
taken out of its protective bag to photograph it. The
photographic studio had in the months before been used to
photograph a gun which was seized at Heathrow and then
test-fired in a laboratory before it was brought to the
studio. The head of the Dando investigation, Det Supt Hamish
Campbell, admitted George's coat should not have gone to the
studio before the laboratory.
Bearing in mind the minute size of the particle, is it
probable that such a tiny amount would have been transferred
to the pocket if George was the killer and had inadvertently
placed it there soon after firing the gun? Surely if the
residue had come from the careless transfer of residue by
George, he would have left more than a single microscopic
particle in the pocket? On the other hand, a small amount of
residue from the previously photographed gun might well have
been picked up in the studio and inadvertently transferred to
George's coat.
Most feebly of all, the prosecution could not even prove
that the residue came from a gun . All they could say was
that its chemical profile suggested this. But under
questioning, the Crown's firearms expert witness, Robin
Keeley, had to admit that the residue could have come from a
firework (no laughter please).
Even if it is allowed that the particle was from a gun, a
very big if, the prosecution has another large obstacle to
overcome, namely if it came from a gun it could have come
from any number of guns. Moreover, bearing in mind George's
propensity for using blank firing pistols, why not from that
source? The prosecution tried to show that the chemical
composition of the residue was inconsistent with a blank
round and consistent with that found at the scene of the
crime, but as they could not definitely rule out the
possibility of a firework as the source of the residue, there
has to be a reasonable doubt about such claims.
As for the blue-grey fibre which was found at the crime
scene, the dangers of drawing conclusions from such evidence
are substantial. First, the fibres may be too small to be
able to be matched forensically. Second, most fibres are mass
produced so that their use as an identification tool is next
to worthless. The fibre in the trial was mass produced. The
prosecution said the fibre was "Not inconsistent with" a
fibre taken from George's clothes. Again, embarrassingly
feeble.
The identification evidence
It must be remembered that the witnesses were not asked to
identify George until approximately a year had passed. That
fact alone should cast a severe doubt over any
identification.
The two neighbours, Richard Hughes and Geoffrey Upfill-Brown,
who saw a man moving away from her house failed to identify
George. The man had no apparent disguise or getaway vehicle.
Neither identified George as that man.
Three other witnesses gave identification evidence of a sort.
Susan Mayes saw a man of "Mediterranean appearance" standing
by a car at 7 am - Dando was shot at 11.30 am. She later
identified him as George.
Teresa Normanton also saw a man of "Mediterranean appearance"
at about 9.50 am. She also identified George but tentatively,
saying she was not sure because of the moustache George wore
at the identity parade.
Charlotte de Rosnay saw a man from her bedroom window. When
shown the video identification parade she recognised George
but could not be sure that the man she had seen from the
window was George. This evidence is significant because
George was not merely a resident in the area but was a
familiar figure on the streets where he regularly loitered
for hours. de Rosnay's evidence suggests that she knew
George by sight because of this habit of his. The other two
witnesses may well have known George by sight, not perhaps in
a conscious fashion, but simply as an involuntary effect of
seeing him frequently as they went about the area.
I might well have headed this section "identification"
evidence. As evidence it is laughably inadequate. The two
neighbours did not identify George - indeed the identifit
picture created from their description did not greatly
resemble George. The three people who saw a man earlier are
uncertain that it was George. But suppose it was George, what
relevance does it have that he was in the street hours
earlier? Minutes earlier would be relevant. But hundreds,
perhaps thousands, of people must have been in that street
in, say, the six hours before the killing. Why pick on one
and say that his presence hours before the event is relevant?
Not only that but as George made a habit of hanging about in
the streets in the area, seeing him would have been
unexceptional.
Note also that two of the witnesses describe the person they
saw in the hours leading up to the as of "Mediterranean
appearance". Two points arise. First, can George be so
described? I would say not. He is dark haired but not
swarthy, which is what one would normally associate with such
a description. Second, why should two witnesses use the same
precise description? A bit of a coincidence. Could it be that
they met at the police station, either before and after
the video ID parade and discussed it among themselves? If
so, that would be a breach of the rules governing
identification parades.
There is also the compromising fact that one of the witnesses
had "a liaison" with a member of the detective squad working
on the case. (Daily Telegraph 3/7/01). The jury did not know
this, but the fact was brought out in legal argument with the
jury absent. Michael Mansfield said: "They continued a
relationship when he [the police officer] had been warned not
to. It is most unfortunate that a witness of this kind, given
her testimony, should have any liaison."
The alibi attempts
In the days following the murder, George attempted to
establish as alibi for the time of the murder. The alibis
involved a day care centre for the disabled and a minicab
firm nearby to the centre which he visited on the day of the
murder. He visited them two days after the murder and asked
people at both venues to identify when he visited them on
the day of the killing and what clothes he was wearing. One
of the people at the disability centre testified that George
had been there at 11.am, half an hour before the murder took
place, directly contradicting the prosecution's case that
George had lied about the time he visited the centre.
Why did George do this? Well, again the behaviour is
consistent with his obsessive need to fantasise. Moreover,
George had been interviewed by the police during the Rachel
Nickell murder enquiry. It is possible that he was worried,
not irrationally in this instance, about being targeted by
the police for the Dando murder.
The lies George told the police
When interviewed by the police in 2000, George denied knowing
who Miss Dando was or where she lived. These were probably
lies.
Before the shooting George told a woman he knew that
someone famous in lived in Gowan Avenue, a person whom he
described as a "very special lady." That is very suggestive
of knowing that Miss Dando lived there.
The police accused George of lying about the time of his
appearance at the day centre and the minicab office and his
movements on the morning of the murder. They were not able to
show conclusively that George was lying in either instance.
In fact, one of the people at the day centre substantiated
George's story about arriving at 11.am, half an hour before
the killing took place. (Alasdair Palmer Sunday Telegraph
8/7/01).
The police also found two notes in George's handwriting in
his flat. These read: "Although I did not know Jill Dando
personally, my cousin Freddy Mercury was interviewed by her
back in 1986.
"I was present with him, so for this reason I feel it's
poignant to express together the situation of Jill's death
and my coming to Christ." (Daily Telegraph 5/5/01).
None of this proves anything. In fact, any evidence about
George's lying has little relevance when one remembers his
propensity to fantasise. Moreover, the notes were written
after the murder, not before. After the murder George had
joined in the mourning for Miss Dando with gusto, as indeed
he had done after Princess Diana had died, signing a book of
condolences and leaving flowers at the spot where she died. I
would suggest that George had simply created a new fantasy
and woven it together with an existing one about being Freddy
Mercury's cousin.
Other evidence
The prosecution presented a mountain of other evidence. What
follows is a sample to give the flavour of the generally
weak reasoning employed by Pownall, and the ease with which
apparently compromising behaviour by George can be explained
by his general eccentricity. The prosecution thought these
facts of significance:
George had a fascination with guns and the military. Big
deal.
George lived at 4 Crookham Road, 500 yards from Jill Dando's
home. So what? In fact, if anything that could be an argument
against his involvement because it would greatly raise the
risk of discovery and only a very reckless personality would
have undertaken such a public killing in the area in which he
lived.
A woman. Sally Mason, who knew George, gave evidence that
George had told her he had been at the killing although he
did not admit to being the killer. "I was there you know".
(Daily Telegraph 5 May). When Mason asked him directly
whether he had been the murderer George refused to answer.
Once again, such behaviour is consistent with George's
propensity to fantasise.
The prosecution claimed George had a fascination with the
BBC, where he once worked as a messenger, and would collect
copies of the Radio Times and the company's internal
magazine. So what?
Approximately 100 rolls of undeveloped films was found in
George's flat developed. These contained some 2500
photographs. These were of 419 women whom the police assumed
George had mainly photographed as he followed them about.
Interestingly, only two of the photos included Miss Dando
and these were taken from the TV. The fact that they were
left undeveloped suggests that George's fantasy ended with
the taking of the picture. The fact that he had only ever
taken photographs of Jill Dando from the Television (and only
two of those) suggests that he had no great interest in her
and had not followed her.
A List of models was found in his flat. Again one must ask so
what?
What the prosecution case amounted to
Precious little, the honest answer has to be. The prosecution
showed that George was a rather pathetic, exhibitionistic
personality who was obsessed with guns and celebrities
(although not with Dando). That places him in the same
category as tens of thousands of others. The fact that he
lived near to Miss Dando made his involvement less not more
likely in view of the public circumstances of the killing.
His propensity over a very long time to follow and engage in
(since his time in prison) only low grade harassment of
women is suggestive not of murderous tendencies but of the
reverse, ie his fantasies were played out at a level well
below that of serious violence.
The limpness of the prosecution's case is most palpable in
the frequently absurd reasoning Oliver Pownall put forward. I
will give one of the most potent examples of this habit.
Referring to the evidence given by the witnesses about the
man seen on Gowan Avenue the morning of the killing Mr
Pownall came out with this gem:
"It is inconceivable that there were two men in Gowan
Avenue that morning, both of the same age height and
general appearance, both of whom had an interest in Jill
Dando and experience in handguns." (Daily Telegraph
5/5/01).
I dare say Mr Pownall is a highly intelligent man, but he
should be ashamed of himself for presenting such an
obviously ridiculous argument before a court.
George's criminal record
After the trial, much was made of George's criminal past and
instances of indecent assault and harassment which did not
come to court.
George's criminal record was if not petty, undramatic and
even more importantly, very short and far in the past by the
time that Miss Dando was killed. It consisted of
convictions for indecent assault in 1982 and an attempted
rape in 1983 for which he was sentenced to 30 months
imprisonment. He has never been charged with attacking a
woman (or a man for that matter) with a weapon or causing
serious physical injury.
In 1980 George seriously molested two women, a civil servant
and June Zeller, an actress. The latter was attacked by
George in 1980 in a lift but he was acquitted of indecent
assault on her in May 1981 at Middlesex Crown Court - at
the same hearing which convicted him of indecent assault on
the civil servant. George was caught after the civil servant
noticed him hanging about near her office some weeks after
the attack. (Daily Telegraph 3/7/01). This reckless behaviour
is consistent with George's tendency to play out his
fantasies.
The fact that George never did anything after 1983 which
bought him before a court strongly suggests he was not
dangerous to the extent of killing someone deliberately. His
one brush with prison probably frightened him enough to keep
his fantasies within safe limits afterwards. It should be
mentioned that when George attempted the rape for which he
was convicted, he ended the attempt by apologising to the
woman before running off. Not the action of a completely
amoral personality.
It has to be said that George is not someone who would be
welcomed as a neighbour. Apart from his criminal
convictions, he has a long record of what one might describe
as low grade harassment of strange women. He talks to them,
he follows them, he stares at them. However, none of this
behaviour was sufficient in the years between 1984 and 2000
to bring him before a court. Not only that, but Jill Dando
had not reported any problem with a stalker to the police.
Nor it seems, because it was not mentioned at the trial, had
she mentioned any such problem to her friends, family or
fiancee.
The jury were of course, unaware of his criminal record. As a
general rule the keeping of a man's criminal record from a
jury is a to be applauded. Ironically in this case it could
conceivably have been to George's advantage if the jury had
known because of the length of time which had elapsed since
he was last in court.
Why did the jury convict?
The answer lies I suspect in the frequently displayed
behaviour of juries when faced with a case involving a
celebrity. It is remarkably difficult to gain a conviction in
front of a jury where a celebrity is on trial, often almost
regardless of the evidence offered. The jury is reluctant to
believe that someone they feel they know and often admire
could be guilty or, perhaps even more fundamentally,
deserving of punishment even if they are guilty. The same
effect in reverse applies to cases where the celebrity is
the victim. There the jury feels a desire to convict. The
immense media coverage associated with the Dando murder and
her widespread popularity with the public doubtless enhanced
this natural tendency.
George's counsel, Michael Mansfield QC, recognised the
difficulty his client faced when he made his final speech to
the jury: "We ask you to be careful about the strength of
feelings there may be. It will do no justice to Jill Dando's
memory or this case were you to allow those feelings to mould
together what otherwise might be a non-existent case because
there is in some unconscious way or another a desire to see
someone pay."
It is true that the jury deliberated for thirty-two hours
spread over five days before coming to a verdict and it
could be argued that this means that the jury were not swayed
by Miss Dando's celebrity. In fact, the time involved means
little because it was a 10-1 majority verdict - one of the
twelve jurors had been excused from jury service during the
trial. The most probable explanation for the time taken to
come to the verdict is that a small group, perhaps as few as
two, did not want to bring in a guilty verdict and it took
time to persuade enough of this group to vote for conviction
by a majority verdict. It is also a fact that long, high
profile trials with a mass of evidence rarely bring rapid
verdicts, probably because the jurors feel that they should
spend a decent time considering the verdict simply because
the effort in bringing the prosecution is vast.
Are the jury to be blamed? No, because juries are human. Nor
should it be safely assumed that a judge or panel of judges
would necessarily be immune to the pull of celebrity or
without prejudice. One only has to remember the summing up in
the Archer/Daily Star libel trial in which the judge drooled
over the "fragrant" Mary Archer to be cured of that belief.
The real culprits are the police for devoting such an
inordinate amount of time and money to the investigation and
the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) for agreeing to the
prosecution and encouraging the police in their
investigation. One of the tests the CPS use for determining
whether a prosecution should go ahead is that there is a good
chance of a conviction. That judgement should be made on the
evidence not on the likely response of the jury to celebrity
involvement.
Who else might have killed Jill Dando
Various rumours circulated after the killing. Could it have
been an underworld figure whom Crimewatch had damaged or
angered? Was it a revenge attack by Serbs following Miss
Dando's appearance on a programme dealing with the Nato
attack on a Serb television station during the Kosovan war?
Either was more plausible than the idea that the shambling,
fantasising disorganised personality that is Barry George
could have acted so out of character as accomplish what was
in effect the perfect murder - single shot to the head, no
witnesses, no weapon, no conclusive forensic evidence.
Because no claim of responsibility was made by a political
group, I suspect it was an underworld killing not a
political one. The fact that a re-commissioned gun or
modified blanks pistol was used would also support this idea
because such guns are widely used by criminals in Britain.
In his closing speech, George's counsel, Michael Mansfield
QC pressed the Serb line hard. This was probably a mistake
because it was taking the jury into James Bond territory. In
fact Mansfield would have done better not to suggest other
assailants and simply rest his case on the inadequacy of the
prosecution case.
The lessons to be learned
What can be done to stop such cases being brought to court?
We need a new approach to the value of evidence. Despite
cases such Rosemary West, it might be best to outlaw
prosecutions based purely on circumstantial evidence or, if
that is thought too extreme, only allow them where the
circumstantial evidence is of a nature as to directly link
the defendant to the crime, as was the case in Rosemary West.
The feeble suppositions and the subsequent chains of
reasoning based on the suppositions which appeared in
George's trial should not be admitted as evidence.
British courts need to realise that identification evidence
of strangers is next to worthless (every academic study on
stranger identification has shown this) and that forensic
evidence is far from being cast iron. The latter may be
scientifically dubious. In that case the jury may well be
misled. It may be scientifically debatable - which means
juries are asked to choose between conflicting experts
without any rational means of doing so. It may be beyond
the ability of a non-expert to evaluate (which includes
judges and counsel as well as juries).
There is a good case for banning forensic evidence which is
too complicated for the non-specialist to understand. The
jury also needs to be made aware of the limitations of even
the most familiar forensic evidence. Even fingerprinting is
by no means the cast iron certainty it is normally credited
with being. An American historian of science, Simon Cole,
has just published Suspect Identities: a history of
fingerprinting and criminal identification (Harvard
University Press) which demolishes their infallibility and
attacks the science which underlies fingerprint evidence.
There is also the question of both unwitting contamination
and the deliberate planting of evidence. For example, suppose
I wish to implicate someone innocent in a crime. I drop
something, say one of the person's hairs, at the crime
scene. The DNA identifies the hair as that person. Perhaps
it is unlikely that by itself the hair might lead to a
conviction. But what if the innocent person cannot provide an
alibi? Suppose it is a crime of violence, what if the
innocent person has been heard to say they would kill the
person? It is just too easy for a circumstantial frame to be
built up where a piece of supposedly hard forensic evidence
exists.
Because of this we should insist that such forensic evidence
is corroborated or substantiated by at least one other piece
of evidence. That would require a change in English law
which allows that single piece of evidence - including a
confession - is enough to gain a conviction.
The other worrying aspect of the case is the incontinent use
of police resources in this case. This mirrors that in
other recent investigations such as the murder of Stephen
Lawrence and the investigation into the death of Ricky Reel,
or, to take an earlier crime, the murder of Rachel Nickell.
As the police have strictly limited resources, there should
come a point in any investigation where a decision is made
that enough is enough, that sufficient time, money and
manpower have been devoted to the case to make any chance of
gaining a conviction thought further effort extremely
unlikely.
Does George have grounds for appeal?
George has a better chance of an appeal now than he would
have had even a few years ago. The new appeals regime is
more open to examining the actual evidence presented to the
jury than old appeals regime was. Nonetheless, unless he can
introduce new evidence, to mount a successful appeal he
must be able to show that there was a mistake in law or that
the prosecution evidence introduced was flawed. What the
Appeal Court cannot do, unless they create a precedent in a
criminal trial, is overturn the verdict of the jury simply
because they think the verdict was perverse. I say create a
precedent in a criminal trial, because last year the Appeal
Court overturned a jury verdict in a libel case, that
involving the footballer Bruce Grobbelar and the News of the
World, because they judged it to be perverse, However,
Grobbelar is now taking that case to the Lords so the right
of the Appeal Court to make such a decision is undecided.
The summing up was not obviously at fault. The judge heavily
emphasised the circumstantial nature of the evidence and the
possible dangers that could arise from a prosecution case
based purely on circumstantial evidence. The judge was also
sympathetic to George's decision not to give evidence,
commenting that he thought it was reasonable because
George was manifestly not competent, mentally and
physically, to withstand the rigours of cross-examination.
Thus, George's failure to give evidence should not have
been a black mark against him when the jury came to consider
the verdict.
Where the judge may have been at fault is in allowing
evidence from those who had not absolutely identified George
at identity parades to be admitted and in keeping from the
jury the liaison between a witness and a police officer
working on the case.
There is also the question of whether evidence such as the
forensic results of tests on the residue in George's pocket
should have been admitted when the residue could not be
certainly identified as from a gun and because it could not
be definitely shown to be compatible in composition to the
residue on Miss Dando.
I hope George's appeal succeeds, but I would not bet the farm
on it.
Conclusion
The depressing truth is that George has been found guilty
without a single piece of direct evidence being offered
against him, while the circumstantial evidence on which he
was convicted was weak in the extreme. No one can feel
safe if this conviction is allowed to stand.
Personally I doubt whether he was the killer, not least
because it is improbable that such a disorganised personality
could have successfully planned the act, carried out the act
and covered up the material evidence afterwards.
This trial and conviction is the latest nail in the coffin of
English justice. Apart from the various miscarriages
involving Irish bombings, we have had cases such as that
of Stephen Cisko (who was convicted of murder on a confession
obtained under dubious circumstances and who spent nearly 20
years in prison before DNA evidence proved his innocence -
tragically he died shortly after his release from prison)
and lately that of Michael Stone who was convicted of the
murder of Lin and Megan Russell solely on the testimony of
two cell-mates that he had confessed to them. One of the
witnesses against Stone has since admitted that he lied under
oath to obtain favourable treatment by the prison authorities
and parole board. It is noteworthy that Stone like George was
a disturbed, disorganised individual with a criminal
record, who seemed to be someone who would not be able to
muster much support if he was convicted on inadequate
evidence.
If the public are not to lose all faith in English justice
something must be done soon to prevent such inadequate
prosecutions being mounted.
The most depressing thing of all is that English justice for
all its faults is probably as fair a system of justice as
any in the world and arguably the fairest. It has an ancient
unbroken tradition, formal equality before the law,
habeous corpus, sub judice, well established principles of
due process, widespread use of the jury, substantial
provision for legal aid and above all the presumption of
innocence. The whole is underpinned by the potent concept of
natural justice.
These legal goods stand on the platform of an immensely
strong strain of personal freedom in English history which
has produced a general principle utterly at odds with
continental systems of law, namely the idea that an
Englishman may do anything legally which is not forbidden by
law.
But, alas, structure is no safeguard against human bias and
error. God help anyone who comes before a court anywhere in
the world is the honest and depressing truth.
1 Fred and Rosemay West murdered nmany young women the befriended
?
--
Robert Henderson
philip@anywhere.demon.co.uk
Blair Scandal web site at http://www.geocities.com/blairscandal/
Personal web site at http://www.anywhere.demon.co.uk
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