
This is the man who spent 38 years in jail for something he did not do. This journalist only spent seven weeks at His Majesty’s pleasure for something she did not do.
Ulstercon – Legal Voices starts here. Those in Radius Housing Association could not bear it as she was enjoying her retirement.
What is justice, what can happen when justice is not held. What if you are arrested for
nothing, and you take charge. This is the fifth book in the Ulstercon series, some of which is light hearted, such as “It could only happen to Tina” and the hard hitting, but unedited, “Belfast Money Machine”
which outlines the financial system in the housing sector in Northern Ireland. “Ulstercon –
Legal Voices” looks at the judicial system and how it fails people like a man who spent 38 years in jail for a murder he did not commit. His whole life was ruined, but not one person will be held accountable.
The book is an account of the court cases, the failure of five courts to uphold the law, and one woman’s fight for justice. After two years sitting at the computer writing court
documents, and even studying to become a lawyer herself, she is much closer to the
justice than she ever was.
Papers were deliberately lost, an Extended Civil Restraint Order was put on the case, and not one judge understood that this was a breach of Human Rights, and was not “without merit”. Judges simply recount what the previous judge said. Not one of them are lawyers, yet they dictate peoples’ lives.
Is it not unconstitutional to order a British Citizen out of Northern Ireland? Not according to the Judicial Conduct Investigations Office, who actually investigate nothing, like the Police Investigation and Review Commission.
| Please note: In accordance with Section 139 of the Constitutional Reform Act 2005, information about judicial disciplinary cases which relates to an identified or identifiable individual is confidential and must not be disclosed without lawful authority. This does not apply to formal action taken at the conclusion of the disciplinary process, which is published on the JCIO’s website as per the Lady Chief Justice’s and Lord Chancellor’s publication policy. Personal data is protected under the UK General Data Protection Regulation and the Data Protection Act 2018. |
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