In
November 1986 after the trial of Jeremy Bamber the trial Judge Mr Justice
Drake ordered an enquiry into the conduct of Esssex Police. The investigation
was directed by the Chief Constable, Mr Robert Bunyard. The review was
conducted by Detective Chief Superintendent Dickinson of Essex Police
assisted by DI Storey.
This
investigation consisted of interviews with Police officers and witnesses but
no statements were taken although statements and other material submissions
from pre-trial were used during the enquiry. It was also noted that the
papers available did not include any written records of the original senior
investigating officer DCI Thomas Jones who died in a tragic accident at his
home on 11th May 1986.
The
Dickinson report was an account which relied heavily on the accounts of
Jeremy Bamber’s relatives and in particular his uncle Robert Boutflour. The
final report does not accurately reflect events which were uncovered by
Dickinson and Storey. It is only post 2002 appeal that extensive handwritten
accounts of interviews have been disclosed to the defence.
Missing
from the Defence copies were the interviews of Julie Mugford and her mother
Mary Mugford. In addition to this many of the senior police officer’s
interviews are also missing.
Overall the review inaccurately drew on accounts which contradict the original statements of witnesses and even contradicted court testimony. It also presented Jeremy Bamber in a biased way using the accounts of Julie Mugford and Robert Boutflour to provide a complete character assassination of Jeremy presented as a money hungry sexual predator who was also engaged in “unsavoury homosexual activities”.
At the
end of the report DCI Dickinson concluded that the most senior investigating
officer had not visited the scene until after the bodies had been disturbed.
He also found that owing to a "shortage of resources," senior
officers DCI Jones, DI Cook and DI Montgomery had failed to request that a pathologist and ballistics expert attend the
scene with the bodies in situ. Recommendations were made pertaining to these
points and also included issues of training and force communication with
other police sources.
DCI
Dickinson would have us believe that Jeremy Bamber was so sophisticated that
he managed to fool a large number of senior and junior police officers at the
scene and later a pathologist and ballistics expert. We put it that it is
highly unlikely and improbable that experienced police officers attending
such a tragic scene would have ignored key evidence if they had not been 100%
convinced that Sheila Caffell had killed the family.
In 2002
the appeal court judges placed little significance on any of the Dickinson
report referred to by the Defence including the issue of inheritance an area
which has developed further in light of evidence disclosed since the 2002
appeal which brings into question the credibility of key prosecution
witnesses in particular that of Robert Boutflour.
|
PoppyMeze
Saturday, 1 September 2012
Jeremy Bamber: Dickinson Inquiry:Perversion of justice
Labels:
DCI Jones,
DCS Dickinson,
DI Storey,
DICook,
Jeremy Bamber,
Justice Drake,
Mugford/Smerchanski,
PSBews,
Robert Boutflour,
Sheila Caffell
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