Mercury (Hobart)

No date for lawyer trial

Thompson denies influence

- JESSICA HOWARD

THE start date for a trial of a lawyer charged with perverting justice in relation to Susan Neill-Fraser’s murder appeal bid is still up in the air.

Jeffrey Ian Thompson, 55, a former member of Neill-Fraser’s legal team, who has previously pleaded not guilty to two counts of perverting justice, appeared in the Supreme Court in Hobart via telephone on Wednesday for a directions hearing.

Mr Thompson is accused of attempting to influence a potential witness to identify a person from a photo array in June 2017. It is further alleged he prepared a document outlining the evidence he would or could give for NeillFrase­r’s appeal, relating to witness identifica­tion from the photo array.

The court heard a trial date had been set down for November 8, with 12 witnesses expected to be called during the five-day event.

But Mr Thompson’s lawyer John Munro said senior counsel availabili­ty could be an issue due to interstate barrister David Edwardson QC being involved in another trial in November.

Justice Brett said he had made considerab­le adjustment­s to the court calendar for the November listing.

“I would have thought six months’ notice was enough even for someone like Mr Edwardson — that’s more than anyone else gets,” he said.

Mr Munro said he accepted the court had done all it could to accommodat­e interstate counsel and would go back to Mr Edwardson for further instructio­ns. Justice Michael Brett adjourned the case until May 27.

Neill-Fraser has appealed her 2010 conviction for the murder of her partner Bob Chappell, 65, in 2009. She is serving a 23-year sentence.

The Court of Criminal Appeal is yet to publish its decision following the murder appeal hearing.

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