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View Full Version : Human rights case to go to court



Perdita
17-11-2008, 10:43
A murder victim's elderly mother is to drag the entire criminal justice system into the dock at a landmark inquest.

Verna Bryant's daughter Naomi was killed by a rapist who had been freed from a life sentence because his human rights were placed ahead of protecting the public.

Anthony Rice also used the threat of human rights action to secure a relaxation of his licence conditions - making it easier for him to kill.

Now every Government agency involved in the case - considered the worst example of a criminal's rights being put ahead of those of the law-abiding public - will be forced to explain itself before a coroner.

Those to be called at the inquest include the Ministry of Justice, probation service, parole board and MAPPA, a panel of police and other experts supposed to supervise freed danger men.

Because it has already been established that Miss Bryant was unlawfully killed, Hampshire coroner Grahame Short will deliver a so-called 'narrative verdict' in which he is free to criticise all those involved for the litany of blunders which allowed Rice to strike.

Campaigners hope the unprecedented hearing, expected to begin in September and last for three weeks, will lead to seismic changes in the justice system.

Verna Bryant, a widow of 70, says she hopes it will prevent another family suffering the same agony as her own.
Her 40-year-old daughter was murdered at her home in Winchester after meeting Rice in a pub.
She was choked with a pair of tights then stabbed 16 times and stripped before her body was hidden under her bed, where it was found by her 14-year-old daughter Hannah.

Mrs Bryant told the Daily Mail: 'My daughter had human rights too until Anthony Rice took them away.'
Full inquests are not normally held into murders, with the finding of how the victim died being left to the criminal courts. But, because Rice pleaded guilty, the full details were not heard in court. The Government carried out an inquiry into the killing, but in private.

Mrs Bryant, backed by the civil rights group Liberty, was determined a full public inquiry should take place. Liberty also used the Human Rights Act to demand that Mr Short - who had decided there would be no inquest - reopen the case.

The coroner agreed that, under Article 2 of the Act - the right to life - he would investigate at an inquest whether public bodies could be held responsible for the murder.
Liberty's legal officer, Anna Fairclough, who requested the public inquest for the family, said: 'It should make clear that their tragic loss might have been avoided if the authorities involved had been more alert to the warning signs.'

Mrs Bryant had originally announced, in 2006, that she would be using the Human Rights Act to sue the Government.
But her lawyers say that, rather than seeking compensation, she wants to ensure there is no repeat of the Rice scandal.

They believe the inquest is the best way of achieving this.

The Government report into the case has already found that 49-year-old Rice was freed to murder because officials placed his human rights above protecting the public.
Chief Inspector of Probation Andrew Bridges said the career criminal - who had 22 convictions including assaults on young girls - should have been considered too dangerous to release.

But he was allowed back on to the streets by a Parole Board which placed 'increasing focus' on his human rights rather than keeping the public safe.
His licence conditions were later changed to allow him to stay out until 11pm to attend pub quizzes - even
though he had in the past tried to rape a woman at knifepoint while drunk.

A litany of blunders:
Prison staff and Parole Board were not informed that Rice had a history in Scotland of sex attacks against young girls.
In January 2001 a psychologist concluded there was a 72 per cent likelihood he would be convicted of a sexual offence again within 20 years but he was rated only a 'high' rather than 'very high' risk.
He was not banned from drinking alcohol upon his release, despite a previous attempted rape committed while drunk.
Electronic tagging was never even considered.
Rice was placed in a hostel run by a charity in a village despite it having only ' limited' security arrangements. Residents were given their own keys.
Hostel staff and police were unaware that Rice assaulted a woman with a brick four months before the Bryant murder. He was left feeling 'he could do anything and get away with it'.


I believe that if people can't respect other's human rights, they should not be entitled to theirs. I wish Verna Bryant all the good luck in the world.

miccisy
17-11-2008, 15:02
Im sorry but in my honest opinion anyone who takes someone elses life or hurts/ rapes another person should be stripped of their human rights.

I think murderers, rapists, peadophiles, etc should be locked in a tiny room forever with no food just water and should be left there until they die.

The Human Right act is stupid. Its just a cop out for prisoners who want to get away with the crime they have done.

StarsOfCCTV
17-11-2008, 19:03
I live near a bail hostel I would never flippin leave the house if I knew he was living nearby!

Criminals shouldn't have human rights to that extent. You do the crime you blimming well pay the time!! :angry:

Abbie
17-11-2008, 19:07
The Human Right act is stupid. Its just a cop out for prisoners who want to get away with the crime they have done.

I agree.
I mean I would never go as far as saying a murderer should be killed to match the crime, because then we has humna being are dropping to their levels, but they should certainly have life sentence!