Hello there,
As per the joining instructions - I'm a new poster who came across this site following some internet research that I have been doing into unsolved crimes.
In terms of the day job - I've recently taken on a new role in press and public affairs for a health think-tank/charity (not a journalist, I'm the one that feeds them!) which is a part-time concern as I have (temporarily) given up the running around the hamster wheel full-time in order to finish my first novel. It concerns a murder, hence my research brought me here. I also do a fair amount of freelance to keep the pennies trickling in.
I've long been interested in apparent or non-apparent miscarriages of justice and continue to be amazed at the way in which people will construct a ludicrous story in order to satisfy their own belief in guilt or innocence. Common sense seems to go completely out of the window in order to make facts fit - I think the offline equivalent is hammering non-matching jigsaw pieces into submission with your fist!
Case in point - and no offence intended - I think someone referenced an experiment into bloodied water buckets to prove/disprove one of the sidebars of the Bamber case. You absolutely cannot cut a limb and think it is the same as menstrual blood. They are composed of different materials - apples and oranges. Again, not getting at anyone, but I find myself more and more pointing out fallacies of this type and also rehashing the old adage: "The plural of anecdote is not evidence".
So here I am - entirely open-minded to the point where something is nonsensical, I've read extensively about the Kisko and Evans when it comes to miscarriages of justice for instance. The system makes mistakes, but sometimes there is a keen and self-evident truth supported by science, psychology and plain old boring common sense.
Nice to 'meet' you all - albeit in cyberspace,
M
PS. Yes that is me in my avatar, I'm a little Welsh dragon.