There seems to be a little bit of confusion in relation to this afternoon's happenings.
I am not privy to these very recent proceedings in the GBC trial (so please, draw no inference from my comments) but what is likely to have happened is extremely standard in circumstantial cases such as this.
Upon the closing of the prosecution case, the defence may ask the Judge to consider a "no case submission" meaning that in the opinion of the defence, there is no prospect of a reasonable jury finding the defendant guilty. It is rare for such a request to be obliged, particularly when the case has gone through a committal hearing but it does happen from time to time.
What this does NOT mean is that -
- ABC was definitely murdered in the opinion of the Judge.
- A conviction is inevitable or even likely.
- GBC has confessed that he was in any way involved in ABC's death or made submissions that he would plead to a lesser charge.
Like most here, I do have an opinion, a strong one at that but I believe the Crown case is weak. By no means do I believe the prosecution erred in any way, they worked well with what they have but this one was always going to be an uphill battle.
- Conflicting witness options in relation to the cause and direction of GBC's facial wounds (and to a lesser degree, his chest abrasion/rash/bruise).
- No evidence placing GBC at the scene where ABC's body was discovered.
- No clear cause of death.
- While ABC didn't appear to be suicidal, many of us who have lost loved ones in this most tragic of manners would attest that it certainly isn't always obvious that someone is at risk of harming themselves. One cannot absolutely exclude suicide no matter how happy or content someone seems.
I don't believe that the defence will call any witnesses. Of course I could be wrong but I'd be very surprised if they did.
I can only hope that if GBC is indeed responsible for the death of his wife that he is convicted and appropriately punished, however if you asked me if I was confident of a conviction then unfortunately I couldn't answer in the affirmative