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Failed Justice
Failed Justice: The Craig and Bentley Case Revisited | M J Trow
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Uncovers the wrongful conviction of Derek Bentley, revealing new evidence that challenges his unjust execution in 1953. On 2 November 1952, two teenagers, Derek Bentley and Christopher Craig, tried to break into a warehouse in Croydon, Surrey. The police were called and in the minutes that followed, Craig wounded one policeman and shot another dead. At 16, Craig was too young to hang, but Bentley, at 19, was not. Even though he had not fired a shot or carried a gun and was under arrest at the time PC Sidney Miles died, Bentley was deemed to be guilty of murder. The law – of joint felonious enterprise – was unjust and Bentley had an IQ of 66 (the national average is 100). Even so, he was hanged at Wandsworth in February 1953. Nearly forty years later, PC Claude Pain, who was there at the time of the shooting, told a different story. He was on the warehouse rooftop and saw the whole thing. What really hanged Bentley were the words he allegedly used, ‘Let him have it, Chris’. And Pain did not hear those words. M.J. Trow's Let Him Have It, Chris, published in 1990, was based on Pain’s new evidence. Eight years later, the conviction against Bentley was overturned – not as a result of police corruption, but because of the appallingly partial performance of the trial judge, Lord Goddard. At the time, access to any material relating to the case was denied and only now, with the Freedom of Information Act, can Pain’s testimony be refuted. He was not on the roof. His original deposition is still in The National Archive. This book aims to put the record straight. There was indeed a dreadful miscarriage of justice in 1952 – one of many before and since – and, in a way, Claude Pain was part of it.
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2nd Nov 1952 in Croydon, Surrey & two teenagers, Derek Bentley (19) & Christopher Craig (16), tried to break into a warehouse from the rooftop. Police were called & in the ensuing minutes, one police officer was wounded & another was tragically killed. It's one of the worst examples of the British 'justice' quirk of joint felonious enterprise (continued)

OutsmartYourShelf - where everyone complicit in the crime can be charged with murder if someone is killed in the carrying out of the crime - & brought about the frankly ludicrous situation where the person who fired the gun served time in prison, whilst the one who was not carrying a gun, didn't fire a shot, & was under custody of the police officers on the rooftop for almost all the time, was hanged. 10h
OutsmartYourShelf Short Review: Excellent review of the case & correction of the author's previous book on the case. 4.5🌟

My thanks to #NetGalley & publishers, Pen & Sword, for the opportunity to read an ARC.

Full Review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/7119874065
Read 15th-19th Jan 2025

#ReadAway2025 @Andrew65 @DieAReader @GHABI4ROSES
10h
DieAReader 🎉Excellent 6h
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