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Murder trial witness escapes prison term

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Published Date: 24 February 2009
A RELUCTANT witness at the trial of a man who murdered a waiter on Orkney avoided a jail sentence yesterday for contempt of court.
Cator Moyes, 33, had given police a statement at the time of Shamsuddin Mahmood's murder in 1994 that Michael Ross held racist views. However, at Ross's trial last June, Moyes went back on the statement and claimed it was inaccurate.

Ross, 30, a former Black Watch sergeant, was convicted of shooting the Bangladeshi waiter at a restaurant in Kirkwall and was ordered to serve at least 25 years of a life sentence.

Yesterday, Moyes was taken before the trial judge, Lord Hardie, at the High Court in Edinburgh to be sentenced for contempt of court. David Taylor, defending, said Moyes, of Murrayburn Park, Edinburgh, was of limited intellect and had tried to abide by his oath as a witness to tell the truth.

Lord Hardie said he had decided on "an unusual course" of placing Moyes on probation for two years and ordering him to do 200 hours' community work.





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  • Last Updated: 23 February 2009 11:33 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

2Right,

On Location 24/02/2009 01:57:11
The very same happened in the TC Campbell case with witness Joe Granger and he was sentenced to 5 or 6 years for perjury.

Now look what has happened to Campbell & Steele's case, All along they were innocent and have been declared Innocent by our Courts but this does nothing to help Granger who said the Police Beat him till he signed a confession.

Will the Courts now Quash Granger's Conviction ?

Perhaps the courts would be better advised to seek the answers to why people are not adopting their statements rather than just presuming the witness's have lied because the police say otherwise.
2

Curious Yellow,

Edinburgh 24/02/2009 10:02:14
2Right 0- you're off the beam agian mate. There's a world of a difference between contempt of court and perjury.

 

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