Woody79 wrote: » I agree that he's guilty on balance of probability, but is there a reasonable doubt of his guilt? If you were on a jury would you convict on basis of no doubt of his guilt. I presume the credibility of the witnesses would swing the decision one way or another,I certainly believe Bailey would have a case to answer if the statements,evidence etc was gathered and handled properly.
MoonUnit75 wrote: » Not moving away is hardly proof someone wasn't intimidated! We've already covered this ground, unless she entered witness protection or left the country, where could she go under her own and her families names without being located by Bailey?
They know he has had extremely violent outbursts. I'm absolutely amazed at how his brutal attacks are consistently minimised. 'Consumed by his troubles' :rolleyes:
Darc19 wrote: » Close neighbour? They lived over 3 miles apart. 3.2 miles as the crow flies, 3.9 miles by road. Very rough terrain. Pitch black. You'd do very very well to walk it in an hour and a half and that would be someone that was sober and fit in on a fine summer's day
dublin49 wrote: » Woody79 wrote: » I agree that he's guilty on balance of probability, but is there a reasonable doubt of his guilt? If you were on a jury would you convict on basis of no doubt of his guilt. I presume the credibility of the witnesses would swing the decision one way or another,I certainly believe Bailey would have a case to answer if the statements,evidence etc was gathered and handled properly. Witnesses to what? Him saying he did it when full of drink. That might make me think hes guilty, but I wouldnt send a person to jail for murder based on that.No evidence of him being at murder site and no confession by him. - without those I couldnt convict him, even though I dispise the man.
boege wrote: » Plus 11. Soaked a heavy dark coat, with buttons, in a bucker of water a few days after the event, in the middle of winter. (Witness by Italian(?) girl leaving the shower in IB's house) (This I found very interesting!). The burnt materials, included clothing with buttons.
[Deleted User] wrote: » I agree that he's guilty on balance of probability, but is there a reasonable doubt of his guilt? If you were on a jury would you convict on basis of no doubt of his guilt.The doubt in my head would be there is nothing to conclusively link him to being at murder sight at time. All of the above suggests that he had the motive, the opportunity and was probably capable of such a crime. Maria Farrells evidence is not reliable and does'nt aid or take away from his guilt. He is never going to court or jail for this crime. As said earlier by another poster he got lucky with poor police investigation.
Henry... wrote: » Is there any evidence either way that he used the car
boege wrote: » Plus 11. Soaked a heavy dark coat, with buttons, in a bucker of water a few days after the event, in the middle of winter. (Witness by Italian(?) girl leaving the shower in IB's house) (This I found very interesting!). The burnt materials, included clothing with buttons. For me the totality of evidence in the programme is what changed my mind.
Ms Boarina also told gardai that she saw a mark on Mr Bailey’s forehead but she could not remember where exactly it was located. She also recalled seeing dark clothes soaking in a bath but at some stage during her stay there, they were removed from the bath.
c.p.w.g.w wrote: » If IB did do it...then who does the unidentified blood belong to...
Woody79 wrote: » dublin49 wrote: » Witnesses to what? Him saying he did it when full of drink. That might make me think hes guilty, but I wouldnt send a person to jail for murder based on that.No evidence of him being at murder site and no confession by him. Theres lots of statements from Bailey that are challenged by witnesses.such as the neighbour who saw the fire on the 26th which Bailey said didnt take place then,The witnesses that would testify to his knowledge of the crime before he should have known that he denies,etc,if the prosecution were able to demonstrate he was lyng about aspects of his statement I think he would be in trouble,
dublin49 wrote: » Witnesses to what? Him saying he did it when full of drink. That might make me think hes guilty, but I wouldnt send a person to jail for murder based on that.No evidence of him being at murder site and no confession by him.
dublin49 wrote: » Woody79 wrote: » Theres lots of statements from Bailey that are challenged by witnesses.such as the neighbour who saw the fire on the 26th which Bailey said didnt take place then,The witnesses that would testify to his knowledge of the crime before he should have known that he denies,etc,if the prosecution were able to demonstrate he was lyng about aspects of his statement I think he would be in trouble, Trouble? Can they place him at the scene?Him having 3 or 4 days to burn all evidence was a terrible police failing, as was crime scene evidence and not taking photograph of his hands and arms. Is he a truthful reliable trustworthy person? No, but that does'nt mean you can convict of him of murder? The police messed up evidence gathering in the days after murder. Its as simple as that.
Woody79 wrote: » Theres lots of statements from Bailey that are challenged by witnesses.such as the neighbour who saw the fire on the 26th which Bailey said didnt take place then,The witnesses that would testify to his knowledge of the crime before he should have known that he denies,etc,if the prosecution were able to demonstrate he was lyng about aspects of his statement I think he would be in trouble,
dark crystal wrote: » The soaked heavy dark coat in the bucket was originally dark clothes in the bath. Her initial statement in 1999 (three years after the murder) has changed somewhat between then and now.https://www.irishtimes.com/news/crime-and-law/ian-bailey-had-fresh-scratches-on-arms-the-day-body-found-court-told-1.3908180
MoonUnit75 wrote: » See post a few pages back, she clearly says in the Netflix doc that the clothes were in a bucket in the shower. She also says her english was not great at the time.
FileNotFound wrote: » Yes she has a story for the Netflix doc. Sure episode one the medical examiner seems to lie about the time it took for him to get to the scene. Not a great start.
jetfiremuck wrote: » Jesus the fact that they lost the gate ffs. Ex cop in the chair....not impressed typical if you ask me. Bailey knew her I believe. Strange that she was murdered by the gate ....why not near the house. her ex husband / family have some pull and deep pockets in getting the case kept on the front burner. Starnge that Sophie would come to ireland xmas week
MoonUnit75 wrote: » If someone is going to claim she changed her story, then at least get what she says in the two separate statements right.
Ken Mc Carthy wrote: » How the french could find a guilty verdict is but another crime
Mr Ian Bailey - a man who by his own admission is a liar, a humbug, a hypocrite, a vagabond, a loathsome spotted reptile and a self-confessed chicken strangler.
noc1980 wrote: » A woman is murdered and there's a close neighbour with the following... 1. A history of battering women. 2. Away from his home and without an alibi at the time of the murder. 3. Changed his account multiple times of his whereabouts at the time of the killing. 4. Confessed numerous times, including telling 2 witnesses "I went too far" - leaving no room for "black humour" interpretation. 5. Had a wife who 'didn't know' if he did it. 6. Displayed a scar on his head that wife couldn't account for prior to the murder. 7. Lit a fire destroying clothes and a mattress in backyard. 8. Knew earlier than he 'should have' of murder. 9. Knew there was no rape when he 'couldn't have' 10. Claimed to not know the victim, disputed by others. Does all this make IB guilty? No but some on here seem to think if there isn't a CSI tv show load of forensic evidence that all other evidence is worthless. Ridiculous. That man should have stood trial.
OMM 0000 wrote: » New theory. Pervert was standing at the window watching her undress. He would do this every night. She had suspected she was being watched, and was ready to catch him that night. She ran out and caught him as he legged it down the dirt path. She grabbed his arm and threatened to call the police. It escalated and he ended up hurting her badly. He panics and kills her.
[Deleted User] wrote: » dublin49 wrote: » Him having 3 or 4 days to burn all evidence was a terrible police failing, There was a few days before the murder and him being suspected. Plenty of time to burn evidence.
dublin49 wrote: » Him having 3 or 4 days to burn all evidence was a terrible police failing,
odyssey06 wrote: » He can't account for his whereabouts on the night as he was likely drunk and had a blackout. He had no motive. He did not personally 'know' Sophie, he was likely introduced to her once briefly in public and stated that in his evidence to the Guards. He wasn't hiding anything. They had no emotional connection OR romantic relationship and there is no financial motive.
Mantis Toboggan wrote: » BOOM, Bombshell, case closed! Find the pervert find the killer!