Brian Peacock wrote:

Brian Peacock wrote:
Obviously, there's no statute of limitations anymore. Bishop Hollingsworth was also accused 40 years after the event. Only managed to get charges dropped due to a dusty, old church committee records book that proved he was 600 km away at the time of the fraudulent claim by the avaricious criminal who wanted money, & lots of it!mistermack wrote: ↑Tue May 01, 2018 2:30 amCardinal Pell has now been falsely charged.
What next? God knows.
I wish he'd bummed me. I could do with some spending money.
I always thought the kids who wanted to be altar boys were a bit gay. I didn't realise the scale on which they were corrupting these men of god.
Anyway, the same applies to them as any other. If they didn't speak up at the time, their evidence is worthless. Or should be.
True enough. But the statute of limitations only starts ticking from the age of maturity (18 or 21). It was supposed to be about 6 years. Now it seems the longer the interval, the more persuasive the argument. So waiting 20 yaers is better than 6. Waiting 30 or 40 years is better than 20.mistermack wrote: ↑Tue May 01, 2018 12:04 pmYou need to take account though, of accusations made by people who had no chance at all of making a successful charge against an abuser.
Such as young children, in the custody of powerful organisations like the Catholic Church.
It's a bit different to hard-bitten aspiring actresses accusing the likes of Bill Cosby years after the incident.
It depends on the situation at the time, whether not saying anything was understandable and credible or not.
But at the same time, if YOU want to be considered innocent till proven guilty, then you have to accept that principle for others. And the sad fact is that guilty people will get off. Because nobody can KNOW what they did decades ago.
It's a bitter pill that we all have to swallow. If you start convicting just on probabilities, many more innocent people will spend their lives in prison. And it could even be you.
George Pell: Court quashes cardinal's sexual abuse convictions
A full bench of seven judges ruled unanimously in Cardinal Pell's favour, finding that the jury had not properly considered all the evidence presented at trial.
"The High Court found that the jury, acting rationally on the whole of the evidence, ought to have entertained a doubt as to the applicant's guilt," said the court in its judgement
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