The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

‘A reasonable jury wouldn’t convict’

- LUCINDA CAMERON

No reasonable jury could have convicted the late Abdelbaset al-Megrahi of the Lockerbie bombing , appeal court judges have heard.

The bombing of Pan Am flight 103, travelling from London to New York on December 21 1988, killed 270 people in Britain’s largest terrorist atrocity.

Former Libyan intelligen­ce officer Megrahi, who was found guilty in 2001 of mass murder and jailed for life with a minimum term of 27 years, was the only person convicted of the attack.

A third appeal against his conviction began at the High Court in Edinburgh yesterday.

Claire Mitchell QC, representi­ng the Megrahi family, said the original trial court agreed the disaster was caused by the explosion of an improvised device in a Toshiba cassette player.

It was in a brown suitcase along with various items of clothing that were bought at Mary’s House in Malta.

The court heard that during the trial, shopkeeper Tony Gauci gave evidence that a man resembling Megrahi had purchased the clothing at his store.

She said the Crown case in the original trial was that the suitcase was loaded on to flight KM180 at Luqa Airport, Malta, which flew to Frankfurt. The bag was then transferre­d to a feeder flight for Pan Am 103 from London and on to that flight itself.

She said the Crown case did not establish how the suitcase was loaded on to the flight from Malta.

Ms Mitchell said: “The absence of any other explanatio­n of the method by which the suitcase might have been placed on board KM180 is a major difficulty for the Crown case and one which has to be considered along with the rest of the circumstan­tial evidence.

“That is a critical issue because I say in this case that the way in which that major difficulty was overcome was by the court making the finding that on December 7 Meg ra hi purchased the clothing.”

Appeal judges heard the trial court found the reliable parts of Mr Gauci’s evidence were the person who purchased the clothes was Libyan and the clothes were bought from his shop.

The High Court heard that Mr Gauci said Megrahi resembled the buyer but did not make an unequivoca­l identifica­tion.

Ms Mitchell said there were questions over whether the date of the purchase was December 7 1988, a date when the Crown could prove that Megrahi was in Malta, or a different date. She suggested the evidence did not reach the necessary base level of quality.

The QC told the court: “It is submitted in this case that no reasonable jury, properly directed, could have returned the verdict that it did, namely the conviction of Mr Megrahi.”

An appeal against Megrahi’s conviction was lodged after the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission referred the case to the High Court in March, ruling a possible miscarriag­e of justice may have occurred.

Megrahi was released from prison on compassion­ate grounds while terminally ill with cancer in 2009. He returned to Libya and died in 2012.

 ??  ?? HIGH COURT APPEAL: Al-Megrahi leaving prison in 2009.
HIGH COURT APPEAL: Al-Megrahi leaving prison in 2009.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom