logo
Chief executive of miscarriage of justice review body resigns

Chief executive of miscarriage of justice review body resigns

Glasgow Times02-07-2025
Karen Kneller, who had held the position since 2013, has left her job at the Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC), it was announced on Wednesday.
Last month former victims Commissioner Dame Vera Baird became the interim chairwoman of the CCRC, having been asked by the Lord Chancellor to carry out a review of the organisation.
The CCRC had been heavily criticised for its handling of the Andrew Malkinson case, one of the worst miscarriages of justice in British legal history.
Ms Kneller's resignation came after former chairwoman Helen Pitcher resigned in January, but claimed she had been scapegoated over the Malkinson case.
Helen Pitcher resigned in January. (CCRC/PA)
Dame Vera said: 'The CCRC has a vital role to play in the criminal justice system, but confidence in the organisation has been badly damaged. Confidence in our work must be restored.
'I thank Karen for her work at the CCRC over many years.'
Amanda Pearce, who is CCRC casework operations director, has been appointed interim chief executive.
Mr Malkinson served 17 years in prison for a rape he did not commit, and was knocked back twice by the CCRC until his legal team carried out crucial DNA testing that was then repeated by the commission and led to his release.
A review found that he could have been released 10 years earlier if the CCRC had obtained new DNA evidence as early as 2009, and thousands of cases are being reviewed in the wake of the bungled handling of the case.
In May, the Commons Justice Committee also warned that the position of the current chief executive of the CCRC, Karen Kneller, was no longer tenable.
MPs said in a report it followed 'unpersuasive' evidence from her on the CCRC's challenges and response to public criticisms in April, and concerns on the performance of the review body.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Exclusive poll: Labour voters are rallying to Jeremy Corbyn
Exclusive poll: Labour voters are rallying to Jeremy Corbyn

New Statesman​

timean hour ago

  • New Statesman​

Exclusive poll: Labour voters are rallying to Jeremy Corbyn

Photo by. The new left-wing party in the process of being launched by Jeremy Corbyn and Zarah Sultana might lack a name, a leader, and a policy platform beyond tackling 'the crises in our society with a mass redistribution of wealth and power' and 'campaigning for the only path to peace: a free and independent Palestine'. What it doesn't lack is potential supporters. New polling by Ipsos, seen exclusively by the New Statesman, finds that one in three people who voted Labour in 2024 would consider voting for the new Corbyn-Sultana initiative. That figure rises to nearly half (46 per cent) among 2024 Labour voters who would consider voting for an alliance between this new party and the Greens. The new outfit says that over 700,000 people have already signed up on the 'Your Party' website to register their support. For context, Reform UK made national headlines by claiming to have surpassed the Conservatives' membership numbers by hitting 130,000 members last December. Of course, registering for Your Party is free, while there are fees for becoming actual members of political parties (£35 a year for Reform, £39 for the Conservatives, and £70.50 for Labour at the standard rate). But the scale of interest in the new venture is striking, even when virtually nothing is known about it six weeks after Sultana dramatically announced she was quitting Labour for good to set up some kind of alternative. The potential for a left-wing option for those dismayed by the direction Keir Starmer's government has taken in its first year has long been discussed. In June, before Sultana's announcement, George Eaton reported new polling from More In Common which suggested a 'new Corbyn-led party' would win 10 per cent of the vote. Nearly two months later, Ipsos finds that has doubled: 20 per cent of voters consider themselves very or fairly likely to back the Corbyn-Sultana offering, rising to 33 per cent among voters aged 16-34. (A reminder: under government plans the voting age will be lowered to 16 at the next general election.) The big question mark – other than the party's yet-to-be-determined name – is how it interacts with the Green Party. The Greens are spending the summer engaged in a furious leadership contest, with MP duo Ellie Chowns and Adrian Ramsay facing off against 'eco-populist' London Assembly Member Zack Polanski. (If you missed the debate between Polanski and Ramsay on the New Statesman podcast, check it out and watch the sparks fly.) As Megan Kenyon pointed out, Polanski has argued that 'the Greens should occupy a more progressive, populist space on the left in order to confront the infectious populism of Nigel Farage's Reform. He has called for a wealth tax, a better approach to net zero and a more robust left-wing position on immigration.' In vibe terms, that's very similar to the on offer from Corbyn and Sultana. Is there space on the left of British politics for two rival populist parties? Most pollsters and strategists are sceptical, which is why there has been so much talk of some kind of pact or alliance – informal or otherwise – between the two to avoid splitting the vote. The Ipsos polling finds that, while the public on the whole are unsure on the merits of a pact, there is widespread support among people planning to vote for either option: 70 per cent of people who say they would vote for the new left-wing party (it really needs to decide on a name, if only for the sake of word counts) would back an alliance, as would 60 per cent of Green Party supporters. This isn't surprising: an alliance is the best way of avoiding the left-wing vote being split and wasting a whole load of votes. But given how antagonistic the Green leadership contest has already become, plus how much debate and confusion there is over who will lead the new left-wing party, negotiations for how such a pact might work are unlikely to be smooth. Insurgent populism works best when there is a one big-name charismatic leader (just ask Nigel Farage). Subscribe to The New Statesman today from only £8.99 per month Subscribe Nonetheless, almost a third of Brits – 31 per cent – would consider voting for a united ticket. That rises to 51 per cent for voters aged 16-34. 'These figures show that a new left-wing party led by Jeremy Corbyn and Zarah Sultana has the potential to shake up British politics,' says Keiran Pedley, director of politics at Ipsos. 'A significant number of younger people are at least prepared to consider voting for it and a majority of those aged under 35 say they would consider voting for some kind of alliance between the new party and the Greens. Clear policies around change, the NHS, poverty and wealth taxes could be popular.' That should sharpen minds in Downing Street: however chaotic the launch may have been, and whatever the fate of the last group of high-profile MPs who decided to start their own initiative (farewell, The Independent Group), the appetite for a challenger to the left of Labour is real. Related

Where is Amanda Knox now? True story behind Disney+ show
Where is Amanda Knox now? True story behind Disney+ show

Scotsman

timean hour ago

  • Scotsman

Where is Amanda Knox now? True story behind Disney+ show

Disney Plus' limited series about Amanda Knox has started today 📺 Sign up to our Arts and Culture newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox is released weekly on Disney Plus. It is based on the true story of her wrongful conviction for the murder of Meredith Kircher. The case was one of the most high-profile of the 2000s. One of the most notorious murders of the early 2000s is the subject of a new series on Disney Plus. The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox is based on the true-story of the killing of Meredith Kircher. The British university student was on exchange in Italy when she was murdered. Her roommate, Amanda Knox, was wrongfully convicted and locked up by the Italian authorities. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Disney Plus describes the show as being 'inspired' by the true-story of the killing and Amanda's journey to set herself free. But what happened to Amanda Knox after she left prison? Here's all you need to know: When is The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox out on Disney Plus? Grace Van Patten in The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox | Disney Plus The limited series made its premiere on Disney Plus today (August 20) with two-episodes. The rest of the show will then be released weekly on the streaming platform on Wednesdays. Episodes will be available from 8am British time - which is 9am in Europe. For American audiences it releases at 3am ET/ 12am PT on Wednesdays. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox will have eight episodes in total. It is scheduled to finish on October 1. Who is in the cast of the Disney Plus show? Grace Van Patten and Giuseppe de Domenico in The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox | Disney/Andrea Miconi The series stars Grace Van Patten, Sharon Horgan, John Hoogenakker, Francesco Acquaroli, Giuseppe De Domenico and Roberta Mattei. Grace Van Patten plays Amanda Knox, while Sharon Horgan is Edda Mellas. John Hoogenakker plays Curt Knox and Francesco Acquaroli isItalian prosecutor Giuliano Mignini. Giuseppe De Domenico plays Amanda's co-accused Raffaele Sollecito, while Roberta Mattei is Monica Napoleoni. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Grace Van Patten is known for appearing in shows like s Nine Perfect Strangers and Tell Me Lies. Viewers may recognise Sharon Horgan from the likes of Catastrophe and Apple TV's Bad Sisters. Where is Amanda Knox now? Following the murder of Meredith Kercher in November 2007, her roommate Amanda Knox was arrested alongside her boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito. They were held in prison until standing trial in early 2009. After being convicted, Amanda was sentenced to 26 years in jail. In the years after, the convictions came under much scrutiny and a second-level trial in 2011 found Knox and Sollecito not guilty. The duo were eventually exonerated for murder by the Italian supreme court in 2015. Upon her return to America after her time in prison in Italy, Knox went back home to Seattle and continued her studies at the University of Washington. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad In the years since her exoneration, she wrote a memoir about her case and has devoted herself to writing and activism for the wrongfully accused. She hosted The Scarlet Letter Reports on Facebook Watch, a series which examined the "gendered nature of public shaming". Knox worked for a time as a reviewer and journalist for what then was West Seattle Herald. She is married and had her second child in 2023. She made a cameo appearance as herself in the first-season finale of romantic comedy TV series Laid in 2024. Knox has also been the subject of a Netflix documentary in 2016 called Amanda Knox.

Stirling union members to honour sole Scots woman who died at Auschwitz with visit
Stirling union members to honour sole Scots woman who died at Auschwitz with visit

Daily Record

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Record

Stirling union members to honour sole Scots woman who died at Auschwitz with visit

The study tour will be an opportunity for members to learn about the atrocities of the Holocaust and to pay tribute to the only Scottish woman known to have died there. Trade union campaigners from Stirling are set to embark on an educational journey to the Auschwitz concentration camp next week to highlight the horrors of the Holocaust and pay tribute to the sole Scottish woman known to have perished at the site. ‌ UNISON's Stirling branch members will depart on Wednesday, August 27, where they will honour Jane Haining – a Scottish missionary working for the Church of Scotland who tragically lost her life at Auschwitz. ‌ She was detained there after putting her own safety at risk to assist Jewish schoolgirls, but was eventually captured by the Gestapo. She faced accusations of having "worked among the Jews"; had shed tears whilst placing yellow stars on the pupils clothing; had let go of her housekeeper, who was an Aryan; had tuned into BBC news broadcasts; had entertained numerous British guests; was involved in political activities; she made visits to British prisoners of war; and she posted packages to them. ‌ The Stirling branch representatives will unite with fellow UNISON members from throughout the country in undertaking the visit and showing their respect, which they claim will "educate members, activists and the wider community to ensure these events are never forgotten". The Stirling branch will be dispatching delegates Stuart Thomson and Aaron Higgins on the trip. Upon their return they will relay their experiences to their branch colleagues and the broader community. Stuart Thomson, Stirling Council trades steward at Allan Water House, said: "I'm incredibly grateful to have the opportunity to represent UNISON on this study tour to Auschwitz. ‌ "By learning about the atrocities that took place, and remembering those who died, we ensure these events are never forgotten and future generations are protected. Importantly, we will share our experiences with our branch members when we return." Mark Ferguson, Scottish Convenor of UNISON, added: "Observing first-hand the atrocities which took place instils a responsibility on us all to ensure future generations do not repeat these murderous acts. "We are very honoured to work with the family of Jane Haining to help us to commemorate her selfless bravery. We must never forget that the Holocaust was a state programme designed to destroy particular groups and we must remember all those affected."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store