cartoon

















IMPORTANT NOTE:
You do NOT have to register to read, post, listen or contribute. If you simply wish to remain fully anonymous, you can still contribute.





Lost Password?
No account yet? Register
King of Hits
Home arrow Forums
Messageboards
Welcome, Guest
Please Login or Register.    Lost Password?
Your Views Messageboard
Post a new message in "Your Views Messageboard"
Name:
Subject:
Boardcode:
B I U S Sub Sup Size Color Spoiler Hide ul ol li left center right Quote Code Img URL  
Message:
(+) / (-)

Emoticons
B) :( :) :laugh:
:cheer: ;) :P :angry:
:unsure: :ohmy: :huh: :dry:
:lol: :silly: :blink: :blush:
:kiss: :woohoo: :side: :S
More Smilies
 Enter code here   

Topic History of: Justice? They Can't Even Spell The Word!
Max. showing the last 5 posts - (Last post first)
Author Message
We Know Best 7-Days Left To Listen:
www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b039cbhz

10m18s - 21m42s, double Miscarriage of Justice victims Wite and Wyatt.

21m42s - 27m12s, False Historic-Sex Allegation victim James Boyle.

Appeal Hearing of Miscarriage Of Justice Victim, James Boyle.
www.miscarriagesofjustice.org/case-files...eal-judgments/1044-2

Miscarriages Of Justice Organisation/MOJO.
www.miscarriagesofjustice.org/

True journo Duncan Campbell, on the gutless BBC & Channel 4 cancellations of two great British TV programmes, 'Rough Justice' & 'Trial & Error', exposing multiple UK Miscarriages Of Justice:

"In all, 18 innocent people were freed as a result of Rough Justice programmes. Their very first programme in 1982, the Case of the Handful of Hair, led to Mervyn Russell being cleared of murder after spending six years behind bars. Anthony Steel, the subject of another programme, had spent nearly 20 years in jail for the 1979 murder of Carole Wilkinson before he had his conviction quashed. The programme Trial and Error was dumped by Channel 4 in 1999 on the day that Mary Druhan, wrongly convicted of a double murder in a squat, had her conviction quashed as a result of their work. "The point about Channel 4 is that you move forward," said the network's spokesperson helpfully on the day they ditched it. The BBC finally took Rough Justice off the air in 2007, having allowed it gradually to slip from view, a victim of savage budgetary cuts. How poignant that the verdict in the Manning case should come on the very day that it was revealed by the National Audit Office that the BBC overpaid its top earners nearly £2m in their severance deals. Think how many innocent people might have been freed if the money had been better spent."

www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/s...ng-rough-justice-bbc