Saturday, November 17, 2012

Ewen MacDonald escapes police trap.

While part of the country continue to believe Ewen MacDonald escaped life imprisonment the evidence continues to stack up that he didn't, even to the point of questioning why he was charged. It has emerged that the scientist who examined the number of waves of the sole of size 9 dive boots knew that the boots MacDonald was claimed to have worn didn't match the number of waves found on the prints lifted from the scene, that the lifted prints were from a shoe 2 sizes larger. How the Crown couldn't know that when it's own scientist David Neale recorded it in his own notes is impossible to accept other than that the scientist and the police didn't want the truth, they already had revealed. Will Neale be sanctioned, prosecuted, with the Crown Prosecutor be brought to task?

It was no mistake but deliberate. Just as it was deliberate that the Crown never disclosed 100s of phone tapes recorded under warrant none which revealed anything other than than the fact there were no admissions of any sort implicating MacDonald. Imagine how important any admission would have been to the Crown case, or even a slip of talking about a shotgun, another crime, discarding clothing, puppies or anything connected with the murder. But when there was nothing the police deliberately chose to hide that despite the rules that required them to reveal such information which the defence would use to convincing effect on the Jury. So no admission the knew that the boot prints didn't belong to MacDonald, no admission that in 100s of conversations MacDonald said nothing that in anyway pointed to having been involved in the murder of his brother-in-law Scott Guy. Yet still they proceeded with the case, knowing that their single piece of 'critical' forensic evidence against MacDonald didn't incriminate him but in fact absolved him of blame.

Let's go a little further the Crown prosecutor, Ben Vanderkolk, in material that he did disclose, the equivalent of 200 east-light folders, 2000 interviews provided to the defence in a  PDF format they couldn't down load. He held out on making it available on a format that could be unloaded to the point where MacDonald's lead defence counsel, the late Greg King was unable to properly prepare. It took a year for Vanderkolk to relent and release, then only under pressure from the defence that they would seek a trial adjournment and obviously advise the Court of the reason. Vanderkolk released the material in an accessible format only one month before the trial. Accidental, or like the hidden confirmation that the boot print at the murder scene wasn't MacDonalds, and the hours of phone conversations recorded of an unsuspecting MacDonald none of which the Crown revealed in the normal order of discovery.

Fast forward to the trial. Now we know that members of the community were approached by Police not to sign defence papers supporting the  assertion that MacDonald was unlikely to get a fair trial in his own district. Why would the police wish to avoid the Courts being able to properly assess the fairness or unfairness of MacDonald being tried in his own district. Well Vanderkolk and the officer in charge Schwalger know why because they were issuing the orders for police to intercede in the due process, of course again something to favour the police who had worked hard in the community on the basis that MacDonald was guilty, confidentiality and all that wink and nudge stuff.

So MacDonald not getting a fair trial seemed to be an ambition of the Crown well before it started. Then on the opening and conduct of the Trial we got to see a range of other 'events' which I wrote about at the outset and said were designed to influence the Jury. The parade of distressed witnesses, in some case attractive and sad women, being called many times to offer tearful testimony that could have been given on a single occasion - intention? To accumulate the misery and distress of those witnesses against the defendant, theatre indeed. We even got to see Sue Schwalger shepherding particular witnesses through a 'side' door so as for them not to have to walk  past MacDonald - deliberate impression? That he was dangerous and the witnesses were fearful of him and therefore even in the absence of proof he was guilty.

We very nearly saw a Miscarriage of Justice work against Ewen MacDonald, and it wasn't through lack of trying on the police and Crown's behalf - essentially they tried everything they could to prejudice the case against him; most importantly burying evidence that he hadn't been at the murder scene and trying to fudge proof that he'd been at home, seen by others at the time of Scott's death. All this before the bizarre murder on a bicycle scenario. One that had MacDonald biking to the murder scene carrying a shotgun without a shoulder strap and returning from there with the same shotgun and 3 puppies - truly the crime narration of idiots. Dangerous and ruthless idiots however, folks willing to overlook proof of MacDonald's clear innocence, overlook anything apparently, discovery, procedure, bias and anything else one should expect from the Justice system in order not to falsely convict an innocent man. Will Schwalger, Neale and Vanderkolk be asked to explain, or will this case fall on the final words of Schwalger's attempt to indicate they'd got the right man and really there was no one else to look for. Sure.

3 comments:

  1. But this is the way 'Justice' works in New Zealand, didn't you know?

    Police apparently lie, even to Royal Commissions (see Chris Burt's posting yesterday for proof). Solicitor Generals know best: as David Collins did, when ordering a retrial for Bain despite the Privy Council hints; as the Solicitor General did who rejected the findings of the Royal Commission of Inquiry on the Crewe case. Crown prosecutors play the game to win, using gamesmanship, not being impartial and presenting truthful evidence as they are mandated to.

    The question is why? Why has it come to this? Why do we allow it to continue?

    Is it because, usually, the police DO get the right person? They seem to have become a bit slack about reliable evidence: perhaps this complicity between Police and Crown is the result?

    And why do we allow it to continue? Perhaps because those who care are seen as having some axe to grind, and their opinions are therefore ignored or discounted. There is certainly a very strong knee-jerk reaction to those who, like Chris Birt and Joe Karam, stand up and say "wait a minute. Something's not right here!"

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  2. There are appear to be at least 2 answers proceeding forward. The first step however must be independent investigations into these cases, Thomas, Bain, Watson and others and charges laid - the alternative is private prosecutions.

    Those two answers would be for the Courts to reject any evidence of this nature immediately with a presumption that charges should be thrown out. The police and Crown have only done it because the Courts have been willing to allow such evidence. I mean such things as evidence showing up where there have already been extensive searches, or where vital evidence on a Crown file is not disclosed.

    The second answer would be separation of the Crown and Police from prosecutions because it is that alliance that always features in Miscarriages of Justice. The smiling Morris photographed showing how he imagined Arthur had fired into the Crewe farmhouse. Vanderkolk introducing theatre into the MacDonald trial and somehow not 'knowing' that Neale already knew that MacDonald's shoe could not have caused the footprint into which Scott Guy's blood ran. Ex DS Weir admitting that there was 'a stance' at work in the prosecution of Bain that held some effect on evidence being with-held and as we all know now, a lens appearing late one night in an area already carefully searched.

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  3. good points here but the one thing I cannot see any logic in is why the press seem to be hounding the verdict. Still.
    The police had hours of video taped denial of murder ,sure it took a while to cough the criminal damage and stock theft charges,what do people actually think suspects say "fair cop"
    and admit straight away?
    A denial used to be as good as a an admission IF it could be proved that the denial was knowingly not true.
    I'm finding it hard to see where the good cause to suspect came from.Mind you the verdicts done and dusted and the disgraceful behavior of the Crown Prosecuted have been brought out.Schwalger now promoted to Superintendent and tucked safely away in HQ. Vandervalk ? well lets just wait and see.

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