Slugger O'Toole supports the Northern Ireland Councillor Website project,

Find your local councillor on this postcode search:


Councillors of the week:

Colin McGrath
Roberta Dunlop
Clive McFarland
Domhnall Ó Cobhthaigh

Next or Previous

Next entry: Protection from Harassment Act being used to suppress dissent?

Previous entry: Power of arrest used against Belfast blogger...

Slugger Awards logo

18 Doughty
Street

Syndicate

RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0 Atom

Friday, June 27, 2008

New witness intimidation law may fail to impress the judges, warns top lawyer

Jack Straw’s new law to protect witnesses from intimidation being rushed through Parliament from next week will fail to make any impact on the judges, warns leading QC and legal commentator David Pannick. Pannick’s pronouncements almost amount to law in themselves and he speaks with authority.  He writes with utter certainty about this. Some local readers may smile at his reference to the Northern Ireland courts’ reluctance to admit anonymous evidence, despite paramilitary intimidation. If Pannick is correct, scores of cases in the pipeline may still have to be dropped and a very awkward confrontation between the government and the courts may well ensue. The new Act will apply to Northern Ireland. I wonder what the Assembly would have done in response to the Lords’ ruling if justice powers had already been devolved? And what if any, would have been the effect on the status of Edward Gillen’s evidence in the McCartney murder trial, and on any future similar evidence?

Update

The Times reports that the lynching of the two army cooks at the Death on the Rock funerals in 1988, was the first in the line of cases involving anonymous evidence that gave rise to the Lords’ ruling and the emergency legislation

Brian Walker @ 12:31 PM

Advertise on Slugger O'Toole
    Page 1 of 1 pages
  1. And what if any, would have been the effect on the status of Edward Gillen’s evidence in the McCartney murder trial, and on any future similar evidence?

    Was it not Ed Gowdy, who was the witness and told how he was visited by IRA members and Mr Justice Gillen the judge?

    When? it becomes law could it be subject to a judicial review?

    Posted by A Tangled Web on Jun 27, 2008 @ 08:10 PM
  2. What message does it send to a jury when witnesses have to give evidence anonymously?
    Do I trust the state?
    Perhaps we should ask some of the victims of tainted state evidence.

    Posted by  on Jun 27, 2008 @ 08:53 PM
  3. frog speed this red look all black dog stay elephant vacant

    Posted by girlgermanug on Jun 30, 2008 @ 03:10 PM
  4. Page 1 of 1 pages
Commenting is not available in this weblog entry.

Slugger O'Toole records news, commentary and diverse opinion on Northern Ireland, the Republic and Britain.

Produced by Mick Fealty
Designed by River Path
Re-designed by Heraghty Web Design

News, tips or crits here: (change "-at-" to "@")

Commenting Policy