Fresh inquiry for South Wales Police over murder case
The Criminal Cases Review Commission has said there is a very real possibility that judges will quash the conviction of Alan Charlton over the murder of Karen Price, 15.
14 items found
As the police watchdog gives the all-clear to the South Wales force’s investigation of corruption claims over the Lynette White murder case, Simon Israel looks back at the history.
The Home Secretary has turned down requests for a public inquiry into the handling by South Wales police of the Lynette White murder case.
Lawyers representing a group of men wrongly accused of the murder of a Cardiff woman are to take the attorney general and home secretary to court in a bid to win a judicial review of the case.
The man jailed for murdering Cardiff prostitute Lynette White has given evidence at the trial of eight former police officers accused of fabricating evidence to wrongly convict three men.
Lawyers face serious criticism after a CPS inquiry into the aborted trials of 12 police officers involved in the investigation of murdered prostitute Lynette White, Channel 4 News has learned.
Home Secretary Theresa May is to order an inquiry into the collapse of the country’s biggest ever police corruption trial which fell apart at an estimated cost of £30m in 2011.
The Criminal Cases Review Commission has said there is a very real possibility that judges will quash the conviction of Alan Charlton over the murder of Karen Price, 15.
A senior detective who led one of the country’s biggest ever police corruption inquiries said he was “completely flabbergasted” with the the decision to abandon the trial of eight officers in 2011.
A highly critical report on the collapse of the country’s largest police corruption case is imminent but who is making themselves accountable?
Senior high court judges have expressed serious concerns over the failed prosecutions of south Wales police officers involved in the Cardiff Five miscarriage of justice case.
As an independent inquiry launches into the role of the prosecution service in the collapse of the biggest police corruption trial for years, Simon Israel speaks to a victim of the case.
The director of public prosecutions has expressed his concern at the collapse of Britain’s biggest trial involving former police officers – after a judge ruled they could not get a fair hearing.
A man wrongly jailed for the murder of a prostitute broke down today as he faced police on trial for causing his “nightmare” miscarriage of justice.
The former officers and two members of the public stand accused of involvement in a notorious miscarriage of justice, as Katie Razzall reports from Cardiff.