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By a single judge ,carrying on to a higher court .
any ideas from legal experts on here why an appeal would be rejected ? Would it be fair to say the judge is saying 'no legal grounds for an appeal' If that is so,why would a higher court think different ?
I
I am still unsure why there is such support for him and continued fascination with him. It was his idiocy (guilty or not) along with being on around 15-20K per week for 3 years (more so the idiots that gave him such a contract) that has contributed to what a mess we are in currently - along with so many other factors of couse. Supposedly the club also may lose 20 of 50 staff (some of which have mortages/families etc) and the club are in desperate straits (contacting clubs like Scunny to try and take Cresswell for instance). We do have so much more to worry about rather than planks like him and Williamson who bled the club dry for very little they gave back the other way. Sorry if that sounds harsh but way I feel.
Good summary of the law. There has been no info about the potential grounds.An appeal against a Crown Court conviction is heard by the Court of Appeal. The written basis of the appeal is initially considered by a single Court of Appeal judge (the 'single judge') who determines whether to grant leave (i.e. permission) to appeal.
This process is aimed at weeding out appeals that appear to have no merit.
If the single judge refuses leave to appeal then the application for leave can be renewed in which case it will be heard by the 'full court' (usually three Court of Appeal judges). In practice, if the full court decides to grant leave it will then go on to determine (i.e decide) the appeal at the same hearing.
Renewing an application for leave to appeal is not without risk; if the full court also considers the appeal to be without merit it has the power to order the appellant to pay the costs of the hearing and can also order that some or all of the time already served by the appellant should not count towards his sentence.
KerrAvon says.
I know this is going to make me unpopular and risk being flamed by some of the Chedites on here but it's time to face facts: Ched is guilty. Rape convictions are incredibly hard to get and the evidence has to be pretty damning and so it must be. Us mere civvies don't have all the facts to question the the conviction. The appeals court however does.
If you can't convince a judge through the early stage of an appeal that his conviction is unsound then he's got no chance of being released. End of story.
I know this is going to make me unpopular and risk being flamed by some of the Chedites on here but it's time to face facts: Ched is guilty. Rape convictions are incredibly hard to get and the evidence has to be pretty damning and so it must be. Us mere civvies don't have all the facts to question the the conviction. The appeals court however does.
If you can't convince a judge through the early stage of an appeal that his conviction is unsound then he's got no chance of being released. End of story.
There is no minimum sentence for rape. The sentence imposed was in accordance with the Sentencing Council guideline. It was neither lenient nor excessive. The 'profile' of a case has no bearing on sentence.
Thanks to the journo who was tweeting throughout the case, we heard all the evidence from both sides. There was no other damning evidence that has not been reported.
Ched was convicted on the whim of the jury. I don't for one moment condone what he did, but I still think the conviction was questionable.
Convicted rapist, end of story.
But if he wins his appeal and his conviction squashed, then he won't be a convicted rapist. The story is no way near ending
I can see where you're coming from, but in Ched's case 58 league and cup goals for the Blades can hardly be described as 'very little'.
Thanks to the journo who was tweeting throughout the case, we heard all the evidence from both sides. There was no other damning evidence that has not been reported.
Ched was convicted on the whim of the jury. I don't for one moment condone what he did, but I still think the conviction was questionable.
No new evidence? Presumably you can't just appeal because you do like the verdict.
Bert will be setting fire to himself in the car park in protest.
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