T W A U ... The Chase....today's...
Film, Media & TV6 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by Bob Carter. 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.In some cases, and this case looks like a prime candidate, not shackling the police with a number of guidelines and best practices actually does solve cases. From my reading of the case, the two convicted of the crime had strong DNA evidence against them and from the rapes I assume it must be semen and bodily fluids. That is very strong indication and the subsequent confession helps.
Now if it were the UK this case would have been taken up by a solicitor who thinks...yeah this is an easy 500K in the bank. He would blow this case out of the water on 1) search warrant issued to board vessel? 2) interviewed under caution? 3) interview taped and free legal rep offered/present? 4) detainee given sufficient time to recover from alcholic effects before interview? 5) eyewitness accounts noted in police books 6) all forms served are signed and dated and correct? 7) and last but not the least confession extracted under duress.
Wonder why we dont solve that many murders or the perpetrators go scot free?
I think the Thai authorities were under severe politcal pressure to find these people in order for their tourist industry to show forgieners that the county is safe, remember that tourism is one of the major industries in Thailand. Justice had to be done, and seen to be done swiftly in order to recover from any potential lost revinue.
That said it all happened a wee bit too swiftly for my liking, and , as a supporter of the death penalty, I only hope the due process of the law was carried out, which I doubt it was.
well dom...
from the bermuda police:
He also said the Met was the world's most successful major city force, contrasting its 85 per cent murder clear-up rate with Paris, on 75 per cent, Dublin, 74 per cent, Amsterdam, 70 per cent, and Washington, 44 per cent. However, the Met force's clear-up rate for homicide - murder, manslaughter and infanticide - lags significantly behind the national average. While Scotland Yard recorded successes in only 85 per cent of cases in the last official statistics, covering 1998, the national average was nearly 95 per cent. After a spate of gangland murders, the Met statistics for 1999-2000 could be worse.
jim
It's a sad indictment on us all when a police force does its job with vigour and we all get suspicious and raise queries. (Me included, I might add)
None of us seem capable of believing the Thai police just happened to be on the ball in this case. The two suspects were drunk and boozers are not renowned for covering their tracks efficiently.
Speed of justice enables the family of the victim to move on. We have become obsessed with miscarriages of justice, lost regard for the feelings of victims in criminal cases and possibly grown too cynical and suspicious of the motives of police forces.
Three cheers for the Thai police on this occasion.
Thai police are famed for their ability to extract a confession to suit their requirements. It would appear that evidence (as reported to the media) points to guilt in this case, but that is a happy co-incidence.
More interesting is the death penalty. Normally (actually, always) in Thailand if you confess to a capital crime, the death penalty is commuted to life inprisonment. However, the Prime Minister, Khun Taksin Shinawatra, called for the death penalty to show justice is being done. However, Ms Horton's mother said that was not right. Nevertheless, it will happen as the boss man has spoken and tourism is paramount.