what we have here is a fundamentally flawed strategy by the CPS. In this trial and in all the other yew tree cases.
The CPS think they have a better chance of "mud sticking" if they load the cases up with lots of complainants. The good the bad and the ugly. The trouble is the numerous "make weight" complainants and cases who wouldn't get put near a court by the cps in a single case, drag down the whole case and make the better supported co-complainants a worse looking case.
Unless they get the idea of each complaint being heard on its own merits, they are going to destroy british justice totally. They have, in short, made the court system a laughing stock.
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