Pies4shaw wrote:stui magpie wrote:A question P4S, I could google this but I like your brevity.
My understanding is a court of appeal in this case would be a number of judges (however titled) who would review the case based on the appellants argument.
can you please explain what the grounds for appeal are, what the powers and limitations of the court of appeal are and how much discretion they have?
Can they just quash a conviction or does that send it back to another trial? do they have to stick to the grounds or do they have scope to go outside?
Here's the position in Victoria:
http://www.judicialcollege.vic.edu.au/e ... /27867.htm
I think the answer to your main question about grounds of appeal is in paragraph 8 - but the document contains a number of links that you or others may wish to explore. It is important to appreciate, though, that the right is governed by statute (at the present time, our Criminal Procedure Act 2009), so it may well differ from jurisdiction to jurisdiction or be altered from time to time in Victoria. It's also important to appreciate that convictions in different courts lead to different appeal processes. So, eg, if the conviction is in the Magistrates' Court, the appeal lies to the County Court and is in the nature of a full re-hearing (on new evidence). Save in very unusual circumstances, the Court of Appeal does its task with the transcript of evidence from the trial.
As to the Orders the Court of Appeal may make on a successful criminal appeal, see
http://www.judicialcollege.vic.edu.au/e ... /27876.htm
Thanks for that P4S.
It would seem to me, as a layman, that in this case the most likely approach is to argue the verdict of the jury is unreasonable or cannot be supported having regard to the evidence.
In a case where you have 1 word against another with no other relevant evidence, you would think the arguments reportedly made by Pells team would sufficient to raise reasonable doubt.
Using the standard of proof of balance of probabilities, I can see him being found guilty, under the standard beyond reasonable doubt (and granted I wasn't there and didn't hear the testimony) I struggle.
I've read and quoted elsewhere the concept that humans tend to make decisions based on emotions and try to justify them later with logic. This could be an example when you have a (reportedly) compelling witness giving testimony that would have tagged the emotional centres of the jurors, vs a generally stern unlikable figure who doesn't testify and relies on his defence to provide their version of facts to support his innocence.
In the battle of facts vs emotion, emotion will win.
As an aside, I found it interesting that the Magistrate reportedly criticised Pell for his lack of remorse. That's a strange statement to me and a borderline non sequiter because if a person maintains they are innocent, how and why would they suddenly be remorseful for something they maintain they didn't do?
Being found guilty means you have been found guilty according to the legal process. It doesn't, as history has shown, that it means the person actually did it.
I fully appreciate that the large number of people who were victims of paedophile Priests and the systematic cover up by the catholic church would be celebrating the guilty verdict and I don't wish to denigrate them in any way. their suffering was real.
If an innocent man is convicted of a crime and as a result a number of victims of similar crimes are able to feel symbolically vindicated and the organisation that tacitly supported those crimes is forced to reassess things, is that a miscarriage of justice or a good outcome?
In the circumstances, I'm inclined to say both
Every dead body on Mt Everest was once a highly motivated person, so maybe just calm the **** down.