Dolly, Judge Bright should have commissioned you to write his sentencing remarks.
This was so weak. I'm disappointed.
Can I just say that this forum has given me an astonishing number of new ways in which to describe piles. You are all geniuses lol.
"Chalfonts"; "Arsegrapes" and my personal favourite "Buttock McNuggets"
Inspired.
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BIB I do find that surprising. Not doubting your word for one moment Net, but SRF didnt give me that impression. I felt he did far too much manipulating of the evidence.
Have said it on here before, but I think there is a fine line between Defence Counsel who do their very best , with dignity and thoroughness, for a client who they clearly know is guilty - and the type of Defence SRF produced, which was borderline offensive imo and overly supportive of IS.
The Queen-v Ian Stewart St Albans Crown Court 23rd February 2017
Sentencing remarks of His Honour Judge Bright QC
...snipped...
I have been referred to the decision of the Court of Appeal in the case of R. vNARENDRA TAILOR 2007 EWCA Crim 1564, which I accept bears some similarities to the facts of this case, in which the Court of Appeal found reasons for reducing the sentence to one below the 30 year starting point set for a murder for gain. In my judgement the Court’s reasoning in the case of TAILOR has no application to the facts of this case.
I'm having the same issue!!
Sorry IB, I definitely have missed the post. Bear with me while I get through a busy morning and then I'll have a moment to go back and find it all.
Also - 34!!!!! :fireworks:
I concur Tortoise but I'm consoling myself with the de facto whole life sentence. Everything we discussed is inferred in the sentence. They don't hand out many of those so we know what the Judge really thought.
Perhaps he didn't want to go too off piste in case the shitebag used it as a means to appeal. Play it with a straight bat and all that. Probably wrong but carpe diem and all that!
BIB I do find that surprising. Not doubting your word for one moment Net, but SRF didnt give me that impression. I felt he did far too much manipulating of the evidence.
Have said it on here before, but I think there is a fine line between Defence Counsel who do their very best , with dignity and thoroughness, for a client who they clearly know is guilty - and the type of Defence SRF produced, which was borderline offensive imo and overly supportive of IS.
I suspect it was the solicitors who loathed him, rather than the barrister. They tend to have much more one to one time with the defendants and would have known him much better.
Unfortunately all defendants are entitled to a good and proper representation and SRF had to do his job. There were certainly moments where his true feelings leaked out (he groaned when IS got his Monday morning nap time wrong for example). We must never forget a QC is at the height of the advocacy profession. He's not going to put a foot wrong in representing his client no matter what his own feelings are. We shouldn't think badly of him for doing his job. If IS never actually told him he was guilty, he's obliged to defend on the evidence his client gives him to defend on.
I would bet £20 he did for his first wife
I have had good information, I can't say too much about from whom because I'm sworn to secrecy. (It's not OBF!).
The main points are he was under suspicion from the very start, mainly from the way he behaved while alone with family liaison officers and his anxiety whenever the garden was searched. Also his own lawyers absolutely loathed him.
Hey Tortoise - Really? Gosh that's disappointing. That's one speech I'd have loved to have written!
And my friend the Bish is right (as usual), let IS rot in jail for as long as it takes for him to shuffle off. For a narcissist like him, being deprived of his freedom is the worst possible punishment. I hope he survives most of those 34 years, he will hate every moment! And his thoughts will endlessly turn to the privileged life he could have had, married to a millionaire author. That's a VERY apt punishment!
Fair enough, but he should not deliberately misrepresent the evidence. I do not think he did an honest job.
I wonder if he went a bit heavy on the pour for the first wife
just to be sure....
[wink wink]
I suspect it was the solicitors who loathed him, rather than the barrister. They tend to have much more one to one time with the defendants and would have known him much better.