Click to download this item.
This is a unique copy of the life story of Tom Sargant. He died before he finished it - and it was never published. It covers the creation of "Justice" the London-based law reform group that changed the face of British justice.
Click to download this item.
This book is one of the first in the great movement of the eighties. It follows up the first series of the BBC's "Rough Justice" programme - transmitted in 1981. It covers the cases of Jock Russell, the McDonaghs, John Walters - and many more.
Click to download this item.
This book follows up the second series of the BBC's "Rough Justice" programme - transmitted in 1985. It covers the cases of Margaret Livesey, Ernie Clarke and George Beattie.
Click to download this item.
This is the original article from 1984 which introduced the idea of suggestibility - a major advance in tackling false confession cases.
Click to download this item.
This summing up of Clarke's trial will be of particular interest to anyone who reads his case in "More Rough Justice" Clarke was the only black man in South Shield where the murder took place for which he was convicted. It is a notable example of a British miscarriage of justice in the seventies.
Click to download this item.
This is one of the most outrageous cases in the history of the English Court of Appeal in this century. How can the Court of Appeal dismiss a case whilst accepting the chief forensic evidence (indeed the only evidence ) in a case is falacious? Read here and see.
Click to download this item.
The story of how the Lord Chief Chief Justice Lord Lane in 1985 used foul means in an attempt to stop a campaigning BBC programme series and the scandalous manner in which the BBC responded.
Return to
Front Page