Okay…let’s apply some logic here. Corrine Mitchell was one of the last witnesses to be called.The alleged photograph would have, at that point, been entered into evidence and the owner questioned on the witness stand. Corrine, as we know when called to give evidence was asked about the parka and denied Luke had had one before Jodi’s death. At that point don’t you agree that any prosecutor worth his salt would then hold up the photograph of Luke wearing the parka and proclaim triumphantly “ in that case how do you explain this photograph?”. Absolute slam dunk. Corrine’s credibility shattered beyond repair and no need for all that nonsense with the tattoo parlour.
Rosalind McInnes made it clear in her Jan 2005 BBC article that there was an “….absence of visual material”
Meaning - the trial weren’t sharing photographic exhibits with reporters to publish
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/4192947.stmThe few exhibit that were published from the trial only appear to have been published
after the trial had concluded
And there appears to have been only one photographic exhibit of psycho killer Luke Mitchell ever published - a copy of a Polaroid with him wearing a t-shirt
The jury had already heard the evidence from all of the witnesses regarding the missing parka and from the gig on the 13th June 2003
Why would Alan Turnbull need to repeat this for the jury?
Alan Turnbull told Corinne Mitchell other witnesses had seen her killer son wearimg said parka
before his murder
The jury had already heard the other witnesses and seen any and all photographic exhibits
Corinne Mitchell had not
All Alan Turnbull needed from Corinne Mitchell was her claiming her killer son didn’t previously own a khaki green army style parka jacket
When Corinne Mitchell denied this in front of the jury - that would have been the ‘slam dunk’ to which you refer
Other witness evidence had already confirmed to the jury he did own one
before his murder
When Alan Turnbull asked Corinne Mitchell;
“
Are you sure, Mrs Mitchell, that you understand the importance of telling the truth in court?"
Suspect the jury would have known by this point that Corinne Mitchell was not telling the truth in court
The jury, by this point, had also heard from umpteen witnesses in regards to the various knifes her killer son owned and had been seen with
’The court heard that police had questioned Mrs Mitchell about a knife on April 14, 2004, when she was arrested and charged with attempting to pervert the course of justice, and the same day Mr Mitchell was arrested.
She said she found the knife later that day in a bag after her house had been searched by police. It was only then that she remembered she had bought her son a "skunting" knife from a catalogue as a Christmas present in December 2003, after Jodi's death. She said he needed it for a camping trip.
"How could the police have missed it?" asked Alan Turnbull QC, prosecuting.
Mrs Mitchell said: "I don't know."Corinne Mitchell’s “I don’t know” reply didn’t help her either