RE: Caroline Flack
Statement from the Crown Prosecution Service:
“We do not decide whether a person is guilty of a criminal offence - that is for the jury, judge or magistrate - but we must make the key decision of whether a case should be put before a court,”
It said every decision is based on a two-stage test in the Code for Crown Prosecutors, which is applied equally to all types of crime.
"Prosecutors must consider if the evidence supports a realistic prospect of conviction, meaning a court is more likely than not to find the defendant guilty, and if it is “in the public interest” to prosecute.
That means asking questions including how serious the offence is, the harm caused to the victim, the impact on communities and whether prosecution is a proportionate response,”
Guidance for prosecutors when considering domestic abuse allegations gives specific advice on how to proceed when a complainant does not want to support a prosecution, which can often be a feature of these difficult cases.
It provides guidance on the information required to understand why a complainant may withdraw support and the different options that should be considered, including proceeding without the complainant’s support if other evidence is available.
Prosecutors can proceed with charges without a victim’s support in cases including alleged domestic abuse and sexual assault, in order to guard against coercion or intimidation by abusers."
As put forward in the statement the CPS will only look to bring a charge to court if they think there is a realistic chance of conviction, in abuse cases (particularly sexual assault) that can be very difficult because they often boil down to he said she said. If the CPS thought there was a decent chance of conviction when they know full well how difficult that can be then there must of been substantial evidence.
I will reiterate what has already been said, in that just because the alleged victim did not want the charge to go ahead does not mean it should not have. Victims in abuse cases would want to have charges dropped because they may fear retribution from an abuser for taking the stand against them, being coerced by the accused (this is why she was not allowed to contact the alleged victim) or could be suffering from Stockholm Syndrome. Putting all that aside the charges against her were very serious, if she did indeed smash a lamp over his head then he can count himself lucky he did not incur worse injuries, you can't let that kind of behaviour to go unchecked otherwise it sends a message to the abuser & to society at large that you can get away with it. Justice has to be served.
Now this does not mean that I have no sympathy for Miss Flack, nothing that she did warranted her death or the extreme psychological pressure she was put under. There is a petition going around called Caroline's Law trying to get manslaughter charges against the press, I'm not exactly sure how that would work. Perhaps a better law to bring about would be anonymity for defendants in criminal cases until proved guilty.
If i could find a girl that had the looks of Gal Gadot, breasts of Sophie Mudd with Demi Rose's ass, the personality of Jessica Ennis, the grace of Kendall Jenner on the red carpet and then behind closed doors the raw sexual energy of Nicole Snow i'd know i was dead and gone to heaven, so i'll just take Demi Rose's ass and Nicole's sexual energy
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