
My dad was wrongly jailed so now I fight for justice – at least 30 long-term inmates are innocent, says actor Tom Conti
MISSION FOR JUSTICE My dad was wrongly jailed so now I fight for justice – at least 30 long-term inmates are innocent, says actor Tom Conti
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window)
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
HE is one of our giants of stage and screen, starring in everything from Shirley Valentine to Oppenheimer.
Stalwart actor Tom Conti has spent decades at the top of his game, most recently playing Einstein in Christopher Nolan's epic about the birth of the atomic bomb.
Sign up for Scottish Sun
newsletter
Sign up
14
Tom Conti believes there may be as many as 30 long-term inmates in the UK who have committed no crime
Credit: Getty
14
After starring in Twelve Angry Men, Conti started tyring to identify potential real-life miscarriages of justice
Credit: Supplied
14
Tom as Albert Einstein in Oppenheimer
Credit: Alamy
14
Tom with Pauline Collins in Shirley Valentine
Credit: Alamy
But it was a stage role in Twelve Angry Men that led the Oscar-nominated actor to discover a passion that few movie fans know about.
Conti privately spends hours poring over legal documents and court transcripts to try to identify potential real-life miscarriages of justice, with the hope of freeing those wrongly imprisoned.
The actor — once described as the thinking woman's crumpet after starring in 1989 romantic comedy Shirley Valentine — believes there may be as many as 30 long-term inmates in the UK who have committed no crime.
Conti says it does not take a rocket scientist to realise there is something seriously wrong with Britain's dangerously overcrowded jails.
Read More on crime
WOKE & BROKE Cops demand more taxpayer cash & spend millions on 'woke' ideas as crime soars
And the actor blasted the notoriously slow Criminal Cases Review Commission for dragging its feet on cases such as 'Beast Of Birkenhead' Peter Sullivan, who spent 38 years protesting his innocence before his conviction was overturned earlier this month.
Conti told The Sun: 'It's an absolutely shocking story.
'I don't know how this guy is going to manage now. He's been completely institutionalised.
'He's been told what to do every minute of the day for 38 years.'
'Damaged my father'
Conti became interested in forensics while researching a book he wanted to write in 2014, and got in touch with Tracy Alexander, an expert in cold cases.
As a thank you for the advice, he left her tickets for his latest play at the time, Twelve Angry Men, in London's West End.
Man jailed 38yrs ago for beating florist to death CLEARED after DNA bombshell
They later went for dinner, where Tracy told Conti about UK charity Inside Justice, which campaigns to resolve major miscarriages of justice.
It was a conversation that struck a personal chord.
Conti's father Alfonso was one of 4,000 Italians interned by Britain during World War Two.
They were sent to camps on the Isle of Man in 1940 after Italy's Benito Mussolini declared war on Britain and France.
Almost overnight, ordinary Italians were considered the enemy.
Conti said: 'Winston Churchill famously said, 'Collar the lot'.
'Collar the lot'
'It must have damaged my father a bit, but he got over it and never resented the British because it was a time of war.
'So, I kind of had knowledge, second-hand, of what it was like to be locked up having committed no sin.'
The actor soon found himself on Inside Justice's advisory board, giving guidance on cases to a panel of blood spatter, fingerprint, fibre and DNA experts.
It might be easy to dismiss Conti as another do-gooder with too much time on his hands, but he is clearly no pushover.
While he worries about the state of the UK's overcrowded jails and questions whether rehabilitation programmes might be the answer, he also says 'we need to take violent people off the streets'.
A bear of a man, a charmer with twinkling eyes and an aura of mischief, the actor caused a stir in 2015 when he publicly switched political allegiance from Labour to the Tories.
14
Peter Sullivan, branded 'Beast of Birkenhead', was wrongly convicted of killing 21-year-old Diane Sindall in 1986
14
After serving 38 years, Sullivan was acquitted of killing Diane
Credit: Mercury Press Agency
14
Inside Justice is also battling for Roger Kearney, whose case was featured on BBC investigation Conviction: Murder At The Station
Credit: Solent News
14
Kearney remains in prison for Paula Poolton's murder
Credit: Hampshire Police
The Tony Award winner said that socialism was becoming 'a religion of hatred' and even considered running for London Mayor after Boris Johnson.
Conti acknowledges there are a huge number of prisoners who apply to Inside Justice 'because they are bored and it gives them something to do', but insists there is a vigorous vetting process.
He said: 'It's fairly easy to weed out the ones who are doing that, but there are genuine cases — maybe between 20 and 30 individuals — who are serving long sentences.'
The charity is currently working on several high-profile cases, including that of killer nurse Colin Campbell, formerly known as Colin Norris, who was jailed for life for killing elderly patients in two Leeds hospitals in 2008.
Originally from Glasgow, Campbell was convicted of murdering Doris Ludlam, 80, Bridget Bourke, 88, Irene Crookes, 79, and 86-year-old Ethel Hall.
His case is currently being heard at the Court of Appeal, where his barrister argued that the evidence against Campbell, 49, was circumstantial, and medical advances could now provide other reasons for the women's deaths.
14
Colin Campbell was jailed for life for killing elderly patients in two Leeds hospitals in 2008
Credit: PA:Press Association
14
Ethel Hall, 86, was one of Campbell's victims
Credit: Handout
14
Bridget Bourke, 88, was another of his victims
Credit: Ross Parry
14
Doris Ludlam, 80, was also murdered by Campbell
Credit: Collect
14
Irene Crookes, 79, was also a victim of killer nurse Campbell
14
Forensics expert Tracy Alexander
Credit: BAFS.org.uk
Inside Justice is also battling for Roger Kearney, whose case was featured on 2016 BBC investigation Conviction: Murder At The Station, which later streamed on Netflix in 2023.
Viewers were left 'flabbergasted' after Hampshire police destroyed evidence that Kearney, 67, hoped would prove his innocence after lover Paula Poolton, 40, was found stabbed to death in the boot of her car. The case against him was mainly circumstantial.
Paula's family remain convinced the cops got the right man, while police claim an officer destroyed the items without first consulting his senior.
Conti said: 'Our fibre expert went to get the exhibits but, when she arrived, the police said they had been destroyed. I find that jaw-dropping.
'This was this man's last hope of getting a conviction overturned and this is what happened.'
The actor is hugely frustrated at the pace of the Criminal Cases Review Commission which, he says, does not act quickly enough to refer cases to the Court of Appeal — or force the police to hand over exhibits.
Conti revealed that Inside Justice has even offered to loan its experts to the CCRC to speed things up, but were rebuffed.
He said: 'The CCRC is just not fit for purpose. Most of them work from home when they really should be in the office to discuss cases face to face.
'A real travesty'
'They resolutely refuse to pass cases to the Court of Appeal. They decide whether or not there's a chance of success.
'They don't have any scientists examining evidence and our experts have offered their services for nothing.
'Our scientists have said, 'If you want to send us exhibits, our people will examine them free of charge'. Instead they send them to a lab for 'presumptive' substance tests, whereas we would test for everything.'
The CCRC refers around 3.5 per cent of its cases to the Court of Appeal — and around seven in ten of those cases succeed.
In 2008, Peter Sullivan, now 68, asked the CCRC to look for DNA evidence that could exonerate him from the murder of 21-year-old barmaid Diane Sindall in 1986 — evidence that eventually pointed to an another suspect.
The technique that ended Peter's ordeal this year was available back then — but the CCRC says it was told by forensic scientists that they were unlikely to uncover any useful DNA.
There have been absolutely massive advances in science that can reveal new things... the Criminal Cases Review Commission is not fit for purpose
Conti says: 'It's a real travesty. There have been huge advances in science over the past ten or 15 years, absolutely massive, that can reveal new things about cases.
'We need the CCRC to move quicker.'
Conti might be earnest about the issues close to his heart, but he is also entertaining and fun, with a sharp sense of humour.
He's very proud of his daughter Nina, a comic ventriloquist, who he calls a genius for going on stage without a script, and his actor grandson Arthur, who starred in last year's hit Beetlejuice Beetlejuice.
Conti, who lives in Hampstead, also retains a sense of childlike wonder, talking about how excited he was when he got the chance to sit in Einstein's actual chair while filming Oppenheimer at Princeton University.
He avoided early starts on set by insisting the make-up artist left his wild Einstein hair on for the duration of filming, shocking locals.
He said: 'The first morning, I was in the make-up chair at about 5am because the hair had to be done and the moustache curled properly.
'Later that day, I went back into make-up and they said, 'Right okay, we'll get you cleaned up'.
'I said, 'Wait, we're doing four days of shooting, so why don't we just leave it?'.'
Conti laughs: 'There were definitely double-takes when I went out for supper those nights.'
The star might not be the real Einstein, but he is hoping that, with a handful of clever experts, he can make a genuine difference.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scottish Sun
37 minutes ago
- Scottish Sun
Sports legend ‘new favourite for I'm A Celeb' after admitting he's ‘desperate' to do show
Will this star finally make it to the jungle after years of fighting for a place? DOING A 180 Sports legend 'new favourite for I'm A Celeb' after admitting he's 'desperate' to do show Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A DARTS legend is being tipped to star on this year's I'm A Celebrity after making no secret of his desire to be on the show. Phil 'The Power' Taylor has noted for years his hope to appear in the Australian jungle reality show, and if the bookies are anything to go by. Sign up for the Entertainment newsletter Sign up 5 Phil 'The Power' Taylor has become the bookies fave to appear on the show Credit: Getty 5 The star previously said he was up for all of the challenges Credit: Rex 5 The 16-time world champion is looking for a new challenge after retirement Credit: Getty Images - Getty The 16-time world champion, 65, has had odds of him joining this year's contestants slashed down to 3/1 by Ladbrokes, who believe he could be vying for the jungle crown. Cal Gildart of Ladbrokes said: 'With a record number of world championships, Phil Taylor knows all about stealing the spotlight at the back end of the year. 'But Ally Pally is a long way from the jungle, so it remains to be seen whether that success translates if he pitches up in the camp this winter.' Phil has been making his interest in joining the show clear since at least 2017, with him noting how much he would love to take on the challenge. At the time, he said: 'I would do the jungle. Strictly I am not sure, though it would do me the world of good as it would get me fit. 'I have been asked to do the jungle but was always busy.' But I'm a Celebrity – known for its gruesome challenges that include munching on 'delicacies' such as kangaroo testicles and fish eyes – has so far not given him the call. The series typically films towards the end of each year, starting in October, which for Phil would have been the height of the darts season ahead of the World Championships. In 2023, Phil, who scooped a record 85 major titles in his career, shared again he was up for the task, believing there was 'no challenge he couldn't do'. "I know they're not going to put anything in there that's going to hurt you,' he said. Watch I'm A Celeb's most terrifying trials from 1,000ft drop to Table Of Terror "I know you can get bitten, and something can go up your nose or whatever but we'll just have to see. Do you know what I mean? It would be a challenge and something I've never done before. So I would quite enjoy it I think." Yet he did admit he "can't keep his mouth shut" - which could spell danger for his fellow campmates. Last year, after confirming his retirement from darts at the age of 64, he stated again how he was desperate to give the series a go. Taylor shut down the rumours of his participation for that year, but did not rule out the possibility of doing it in the future. He said: "I'd be interested but not this year, it's too late. "Someone mentioned I was the favourite in the bookies but I said 'I have no idea how'." 5 Phil said that the challenges don't scare him - but fears he 'couldn't keep his mouth shut' Credit: Rex


Scottish Sun
an hour ago
- Scottish Sun
I love glamming up my girl for nursery, trolls tell me her outfit is totally inappropriate but I don't see the issue
The mum explained her daughter 'loves the nail shop' NO KIDDING I love glamming up my girl for nursery, trolls tell me her outfit is totally inappropriate but I don't see the issue Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) SENDING your little one for their first day at the nursery or school is a huge milestone for millions of parents. But now one mum has come under fire after sharing the outfit her daughter was wearing ahead of the big day. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 2 The mum sparked fury after she showed off her daughter's outfit for the first day of nursery Credit: TikTok/@kytoyouu 2 The little girl, who is between the ages of four and five, was also rocking a brand new mani covered in gems Credit: TikTok/@kytoyouu The mother, only known as @kytoyouu, took to TikTok to share the proud moment - however, the video quickly sparked a fierce reaction. In the now-viral video, the little girl, who is between the ages of four and five, could be seen showing off her freshly-done manicure. The glam mani included French tips, as well as a huge variety of gems glued on top of the nails. All chuffed with her brand new manicure, the girl then struck her best poses, as she modelled her clothes. Giving the viewers an adorable spin, the excited child showed off her baby blue button-up shirt which was teamed up with beige flares. Matching the flares was also a mega bow tie, as well as two scrunchies on her wrist. ''Kindergarten, please be kind to my baby,'' the mum said in the video. But while the little girl looked adorable, the clip soon went viral for all the wrong reasons, amassing more than 2.8million views. As over 10,000 people flooded to comments to share their thoughts, critics slammed the mother and dubbed the outfit 'inappropriate'. One viewer said: ''dress her appropriately to her age.. it's not that difficult.'' Mums slam Molly-Mae after she refuses to discipline Bambi for biting a child & accuse her of using toddler as 'ragebait' Someone else agreed, writing: ''🤨 Acrylics or even press ons in kindergarten is crazy. ''Just messing up that baby nail beds & they not even fully developed. ''Kids play & are rough so I hope she don't hit them nails on something.'' What age can you take kid to get their nails done? MUMS have sparked controversy after allowing their kids to get acrylic nails. But just how old do they have to be to be allowed to get them done legally. According to the National Occupational Standards, anyone under the age of 16 has to be accompanied by an adult. They also need written consent from a parents or guardian. It's also a good idea to check that the salon you're planning to go to - just to ask if they offer services to children. A horrified social media user said: ''Can we PLEASE let kids be KIDS.'' ''She's going to school not the club,'' another critic mum-shamed the TikToker. Luckily for the mum - who said her daughter ''loves the nail shop'' - there were also a few of those who didn't see an issue with the outfit. A fellow mum wrote: ''Let a girl be a girl!! My daughter is 7 and I take her get her nails done! Anything that makes her happy!'' ''y'all act like she got stilletto nails and heels on, girl please,'' someone else hit back at the harsh critics.


Scottish Sun
2 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
I was so angry at shoplifters I put up signs calling them scumbags – the whole world's behind me but Keir didn't like it
SCUMBELIEVABLE I was so angry at shoplifters I put up signs calling them scumbags – the whole world's behind me but Keir didn't like it Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) THE name of Rob Davis's shop reads: 'R.U.N. Ragged'. And inside, Rob really is run ragged. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 9 People from all over the world want to show their support for Rob Davis, owner of a tiny shop in a Wrexham side street Credit: Paul Tonge 9 Rob put up a written sign calling shoplifters scumbags Credit: WNS The phone won't stop ringing and pinging, while tens of thousands of messages are clogging up his email. People from all over the world want to show their support for the 59-year-old owner of this tiny shop in a Wrexham side street because he is standing up to thieves. Problems began when Rob decided to fight back against thefts from his store, which sells retro, used and new clothes, and memorabilia. In spidery handwriting, he wrote a note apologising for having to keep cabinets locked because of 'scumbags'. A short time later a police officer came into the shop after being alerted by a member of the public who claimed the sign was 'provocative and offensive'. Rob says: 'He wanted to give me the heads-up about the sign. 'The police are back-pedalling and saying they can't find a record of a complaint. 'Prime Minister is not dealing with the problem' 'But I have done nothing wrong. The only people offended by the word 'scumbags' are scumbags themselves.' 'It prompted me to make signs and print them properly because my writing is quite spikey and hard to read.' Now every one of the five glass-fronted cases in the shop is locked and carries a neatly printed four- by-two-inch sign which reads: 'Due to scumbags shoplifting, please ask for assistance to open cabinets.' N-ICE ONE- Iceland boss says customers will be PAID to snitch on thieves His approach to dealing with shop thefts, which have risen 20 per cent this year to 530,643 cases nationwide, has struck a chord with the public — and not just in this country. He has had more than 20,000 messages of support on his email and phone calls from as far away as Australia, South Africa and the US. A woman in Tennessee wanted to send him her great-grandmother's jewellery from the 1920s and '30s to sell and help make up his losses from shoplifting. Last week Rob spent a couple of hours working out that articles about his war on thieves have attracted well over 1.5million comments. Rob says: 'I have seen not one comment defending shoplifters.' He was even invited on to Channel 5's Jeremy Vine Show but reveals that his interview was cancelled because researchers could not find anyone to oppose Rob's views on thieves being scumbags. While we are talking, people come into the shop to give their support. A middle-aged lady, who did not want to be named, says: 'What you said was absolutely right. 9 Rob's R.U.N. Ragged vintage shop Credit: Paul Tonge 'It's disgusting that all our police officers can do is to come into a shop and tell you to take it down.' She continues: 'Last week in London I watched five women who were massive. 'I thought they were just fat but they had all this food and washing powder stuffed under their clothes. I'd seen nothing like it.' Rob tells her: 'The outpouring of support has been phenomenal because it is highlighting the plight of small shopkeepers in Britain and around the world. 'In the UK, shoplifting is an epidemic. Big companies are the only ones that seem to be able to get anybody prosecuted for it. 'If the value of the things that are stolen are under a couple of hundred quid, for local small businesses nothing happens.' New analysis by The Telegraph shows that nearly six in ten prolific thieves — defined as having at least 15 previous convictions — avoided prison last year. I don't want to fill my shop with locked cabinets. But I felt I had to put up a note to explain to my legitimate customers why I've done it Rob North Wales police set up Operation Blizzard to hit repeat shoplifters with restraining orders. They say Wrexham had 731 shoplifting reports from April and December 2024 compared to 817 in the same period in 2023. But Rob's shopkeeper neighbours in Bank Street told us they no longer report every theft. Posing by one of his display cases with the now-famous sign, Rob says: 'I don't want to fill my shop with locked cabinets. 'But I felt I had to put up a note to explain to my legitimate customers why I've done it.' His scumbags message has become such a media sensation that he's had the signs put on T-shirts and tote bags, which he hopes to sell to offset some of his losses from shoplifting. Rob says: 'I thought long and hard about what I would say. I've since been told that 'scumbags' is a word that can be used on TV and radio because it doesn't describe anybody's race, creed or colour. 'It's non-offensive unless you are a scumbag.' Rob was amazed to learn that Sir Keir Starmer's spokesman had put out a statement that 'scumbag' is not a word the Prime Minister would use. He says: 'What's he doing even getting involved? He's got bigger fish to fry than whingeing about scumbags. 'In my opinion the Prime Minister is not dealing with the problems of shoplifting — not visibly, anyway.' 9 Police wanted to take Rob's signs down, pictured a now typed up version of Rob's apparently controversial sign Credit: Paul Tonge North Wales Police stated that Rob had not committed any offence but previously advised him to take down or 'reword' the note. The saddest thing that I can see is an empty coat hanger because I know someone has stolen a jacket or a shirt. That just guts me Rob The force said it was for him 'to decide whether he displayed such a sign in his store' and vowed any further retail crime would be investigated 'at the earliest opportunity'. 'Cafe opposite has had vinegar bottles stolen' Every morning just before opening his door, Rob prepares for another day of trading by checking for items that have been stolen the day before. He says: 'I walk around the shop, I straighten everything up and I make sure all my stock is visible, tidy and neat. 'The saddest thing that I can see is an empty coat hanger because I know someone has stolen a jacket or a shirt. That just guts me. These aren't thefts to feed the family because you don't have any money. 'This is an impulse purchase shop where you see something that you love or you're a collector and you find that missing piece to complete your collection. You can't eat socks and shirts.' Outside in narrow Bank Street, Rob points out the war games shop two doors down has a brand-new door. He says: 'That's because someone kicked it in and made off with stock. 'It's not just shops that suffer from shoplifting. Even the cafe opposite has had cruet sets, vinegar bottles and even spoons stolen. They've all got to be replaced at their cost. 'Shoplifting is everywhere and people are sick to death of it.' Some thieves are so brazen they just try to walk out with Rob's stock. He recalls: 'A chap came in with a big bag for life. He needed it because he was trying to steal a bright yellow Tonka toy truck. 'It was on the top of his bag with my tag hanging off and he's trying to tell me the toy is not mine. So I took it back out of the bag. I don't advocate anybody confronting scumbags but small businesses like mine need help from the public Rob 'This thief's friend who was stood at the door decided to threaten me. He said, 'That's my bag — you can't touch it. Next time I see you I'm going to do you. I'm going to burn your shop down.' 'These are the things you've got to put up with. I take no notice of it because I know it's bravado. 9 'A couple of weeks later I confronted this chap in the street. I said, 'Come on then, thief — you said you're going to do me. We'll go around the corner where there's no cameras.' 'He just put his head down, mumbled something incoherent and scuttled off. 'I don't advocate anybody confronting scumbags but small businesses like mine need help from the public. 'If you are worried, most small businesses have their telephone number on their sign. 'Go outside, walk up the street, phone the shop to let him know he's under siege. 'We need the public's help because the knock-on is that customers are paying for the shoplifting as well as the shopkeeper. 'We have to put up prices because of these scumbags.' WHAT THE OTHER SHOPS SAY 9 Hair studio owner Ceri Clutton says: 'I support the 'scumbags' sign. I'd have put up something stronger' Credit: Andy Kelvin / Kelvinmedia THE hair studio a few doors down from Rob's shop is run by Ceri Clutton, 46. She says: 'We had hairdryers and a dozen brand-new hair straighten-ers taken by intruders. We had to stay closed for a couple of days. 'I support the 'scumbags' sign. I'd have put up something stronger.' 9 Mark Norfolk has only just had the front door of his shop replaced after a break-in in March Credit: Andy Kelvin / Kelvinmedia MARK Norfolk, 57, has only just had the front door of his shop replaced after a break-in in March. He said: 'The culprit was caught and sent to prison. 'Insurance covered the £2,500 for the new door and I was awarded £250 by the court. I haven't seen any of the money yet.' 'I have blatant shoplifting of small items that I don't bother reporting but it all mounts up.' 9 Hari Gould's cafe no longer provides smart cutlery and condiments for customers Credit: Andy Kelvin / Kelvinmedia THE cafe opposite Rob's shop no longer provides smart cutlery and condiments for customers. Owner Hari Gould, 30, says: 'I lost them from about 20 tables within a month. People were even taking the salt and peppers. It all adds to my costs.' He also lost £1,000 of food when a burglar broke in and left the freezer open. The thief was convicted and ordered to pay a small sum back each month. Hari says: 'It was hard to claim the money and after a while I could not be bothered with the hassle.' 9 Rachel Prince has installed security cameras Credit: Andy Kelvin / Kelvinmedia RACHEL Prince, 39, has security cameras to try and protect her clothing alterations shop. She says: 'Anti-social behaviour is a big problem. Teenagers in balaclavas or hoodies feel they are untouchable. They seem to think they can come in and bully older people and steal what they want.'