Crosswords0 min ago
Margaret Moran 'not fit to stand trial' over MP expenses charges
"...suffering from a depressive illness and extreme anxiety and agitation, and the stress of the proceedings and allegations she was facing made it impossible for her to participate in court proceedings."
Surely this applies to many white-collar crooks who've been caught out?
Does that mean they should get away with it?
http://www.guardian.c...t-moran-not-fit-trial
Surely this applies to many white-collar crooks who've been caught out?
Does that mean they should get away with it?
http://www.guardian.c...t-moran-not-fit-trial
Answers
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No best answer has yet been selected by rojash. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Megrahi was reported to have terminal cancer; I'd imagine that was fairly easy to diagnose, though any estimate of how long someone has to live will always be speculative. So I wouldn't swear his doctors were wrong. Saunders however miraculously recovered from Alzheimer's "moments after leaving prison", according to Wikipedia.
I do not want to belittle mental illness which I realise is a genuine condition, but being depressed after being caught stealing should not let anyone escape justice.
I she is not guilty, then she is a fool not to defend herself. If she is guilty then she should plead guilty and get it over with as quickly as possible.
But then she might be deemed too ill to go to prison because it might depress her.
I she is not guilty, then she is a fool not to defend herself. If she is guilty then she should plead guilty and get it over with as quickly as possible.
But then she might be deemed too ill to go to prison because it might depress her.
It's a joke. It makes a mockery of genuine depression sufferers who didn't get their illness because they were caught stealing from the tax payers.
She's not depressed. She's pissed off and scared.
She is also accused of falsely claiming £14,805 for boiler repairs and work on her conservatory.
I know heating engineers are expensive....but c'mon!!!
She's not depressed. She's pissed off and scared.
She is also accused of falsely claiming £14,805 for boiler repairs and work on her conservatory.
I know heating engineers are expensive....but c'mon!!!
I do hope that the QC and the psychiatrist do not mean what the QC said ( ' she is unfit to stand trial') in the strict legal sense. If the psychiatric evidence and the legal argument is that, that she's incapable of understanding the nature of the proceedings or instructing her counsel, she'll be committed to a mental hospital!
Nice try, sounds good to the defendant, the QC earns his money for a bit of arm-waving to please her, and it's bound to fail.
Nice try, sounds good to the defendant, the QC earns his money for a bit of arm-waving to please her, and it's bound to fail.
Because of the contempt in which crooked MP's have been held, it is a short step to imagine that a woman who would cheat the nation would also cheat the legal system.
I don't think the logic holds up at all.
Professional psychiatrists are not in the habit of 'letting off' criminals by using their expertise to deny legak orocess, it just doesn't fly.
The knee-jerk reaction is to assume that a woman who has faked expenses is faking a mental illness, but anyone who knows anything about depression knows that faking it to an expert is highly unlikely.
I therefore err on the side of sympathy, given that like everyone else passing moral judgements, I know nothing about the case, or the individual concerned.
We should not be too quick to leap into the national default mindset of shadenfreude.
I don't think the logic holds up at all.
Professional psychiatrists are not in the habit of 'letting off' criminals by using their expertise to deny legak orocess, it just doesn't fly.
The knee-jerk reaction is to assume that a woman who has faked expenses is faking a mental illness, but anyone who knows anything about depression knows that faking it to an expert is highly unlikely.
I therefore err on the side of sympathy, given that like everyone else passing moral judgements, I know nothing about the case, or the individual concerned.
We should not be too quick to leap into the national default mindset of shadenfreude.
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