No, that, should it ever happen, would only mean that they were mistaken.
Well that makes it okay. Not a lie, or anything sinister, just eight SCRO experts who have all ‘independently’ checked the prints and were merely
'mistaken'. Checked on multiple occasion with multiple charts prepared etc etc over the last 13 years. And what do we end up with? A great big OOPS!
Perhaps you can help out the readers with the following.
I gather from your posting that if the Inquiry report back that both prints were misidentified the SCRO exeprts line will be ‘oh well we must have been mistaken’.
If I take you back to two separate letters prepared by David Russell, lawyer to Peter ‘Doyen’ Swann he publicly commented on your chums position regarding ‘mistakes’.
On 23 February 2006 Mr. Russell wrote directly to Jack McConnell, Scottish First Minister and I quote verbatim:
‘Not one of the SCRO Fingerprint Experts acknowledged or accepted that they had made “an honest mistake’.
Mr. Russell had previously stated in a letter to the Scottish Executive in 2005:
‘… there was no “honest mistake” on the part of the Co-Defenders...The four Co-Defenders will not, under any circumstances, give evidence that they made an honest mistake…The four Co-Defenders will not, as stated, admit to “honest mistake”.
Your posting suggests that if, sorry when, the Inquiry comes back and shows your daddy and his pals got it wrong, then it will show they merely made mistakes.
Where my problem with this is, if these experts have publicly stated that any mistakes are not ‘honest’ mistakes, then what are these mistakes?
Dishonest mistakes?
What is a dishonest mistake?
In fact the reality is the SCRO experts were so adamant that they had not made any ‘honest mistakes’ they wrote and officially complained to the Scottish Ombudsman.
http://news.scotsman.com/latestnews/McC ... 2763839.jpMcConnell is accused over McKie case claim
02 April 2006
By KATE FOSTER AND EDDIE BARNES
A GOVERNMENT forensic expert at the centre of the Shirley McKie fingerprint scandal has lodged an official complaint against First Minister Jack McConnell over his notorious "honest mistake" claim to parliament.
Lawyers acting for Fiona McBride, who ministers now say was wrong to identify McKie, have demanded McConnell be investigated by Scotland's public services ombudsman, the body which examines complaints of maladministration in the public sector.
McConnell told MSPs in February that "all concerned" in the affair had accepted the experts had acted wrongly. "All sides have accepted that," he added.
However, McBride and three other experts who are accused of making a mistake, continue to maintain they were right in their actions, and claim McConnell wilfully misrepresented their position.
McKie's print was identified by the experts at a murder scene in 1997. The former police officer denied having set foot in the area, triggering a nine-year battle to clear her name. The row turned into a major scandal in 2000 when police alleged evidence of "criminality" within the Scottish Criminal Records Office (SCRO) over the matter.
McKie was finally awarded £750,000 by ministers last month, but the affair has continued to bedevil amid near unanimous calls for a full public inquiry.
McBride has insisted all along that she was correct to identify McKie. SCRO officials say they were shocked when McConnell suddenly announced last month that there had been an "honest mistake".
Her lawyer, David Russell, now claims that McBride had been effectively "gagged" by the SCRO under threat of disciplinary action.
Russell told Scotland on Sunday: "We first issued a complaint to the Office of the First Minister that he had misled parliament. But they have ignored that complaint, so we have decided to take our complaint to the Public Services Ombudsman."
A spokeswoman for the Public Services Ombudsman said it would not comment on individual cases until investigations had been concluded.
A Scottish Executive spokesman said: "Scottish ministers have always made clear that they believed settling with Ms McKie was the right thing to do. The McKies chose to settle out of court rather than take their case forward in a court."
The spokesman added: "Ministers are now focused on what they see as the real priority here - building on the work done to improve the fingerprint service in Scotland over the past five years to establish a truly world-class service."
What you are also alluding to is mass incompetence on a scale never seen before in the entire history of fingerprinting.
Can we assume from your posting when the Inquiry comes back and reports that both (or more) prints were misidentified, if they were simply errors, then your chums will issue a personal apology to the McKie’s over their ‘mistakes’ and also issue an apology to the Scottish Public over their ‘mistakes’?
I am sure Ken McIntosh MSP will be able to have them attend the official Scottish parliamentary debate where they can issue their apology in public?
I am encouraged by your posting that finally you are waking up and smelling the coffee. It feels good doesn’t it my friend.
In the meantime please enlighten us what your understanding is of a ‘mistake’ that is not an ‘honest mistake’?