Fullchat wrote:
"Its is interesting to note the accusations of changed statements. There were a number of examples in the Daily Mail. What I saw was that there were omissions of non evidential facts i.e. the perception of what was or was not happening which was critical of the management. Certainly during my career I was told to write a statement with the evidential facts and not opinion unless it was of an 'expert' nature. Now whether this was right or wrong in this case is a matter for debate".
I hope he won't mind me elaborating, because it's an interesting angle.
In the early 80's and beyond, the way police officers were taught to write evidence was: include the facts only, not to include conjecture, presumption, your own thoughts, etc. You did occasionally, but you ran the risk of your evidence being inadmissible in court and it wasn't the done thing. Police officers prosecuted people in the magistrates courts for minor to middling stuff, then they'd have police employed solicitors to prosecute the more complicated magistrates court stuff and barristers dealt with the crown courts, as per today.
When the CPS was instigated, the responsibility for the submission of evidence was obviously passed to them...and...they wanted to know more of the bigger picture, so eventually the whole system has changed. Nowadays officers write considerably more and the lawyer/barrister talks you through your evidence at court and leaves out the bits that they feel would be inadmissible, so it's in your statement, but not quoted, whereas in the old days, it shouldn't have been in your statement at all.
1989 would have been a transitional stage. The CPS would be in place, but many, many officers would still be used to the 'old way' and would not be at all used to or comfortable with putting in more....except.....when something really got on their goat or they wanted to go that extra mile to convict someone or something was really important to them...e.g. 90 odd people dead, that the individuals at the shop floor thought was preventable and that the management had ****** up.
Meanwhile, the management read the statements, see all the conjecture and presumption and ask their staff to re-write it as per the norm (bearing in mind, that for them to be in a management grade, the way they were taught to provide evidence would have been way before the 80's, probably decades before).
So although backside covering would be a likely scenario, so would defending against civil litigation and complying with an excepted norm for evidence presentation at or about that time. It would be considered unprofessional to write too much 'hearsay' or presumption, which is some way different to fiddling the statements.
Last edited by: VxFan on Mon 17 Sep 12 at 00:33
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