Do Members of the Public Have a ‘Right to Know’ about Similar Fact Evidence? The Emily Perry Story and the ‘Right to Know’ in the Context of a Fair Re-Trial

<p>In South Australia in 1981, an intriguing criminal trial took shape around Emily Perry who was charged with two counts of attempting to murder her husband with arsenic. Similar fact evidence about the deaths of a former husband, a de facto partner and a brother led to a jury finding her gui...

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Main Author: Rachel M.A. Spencer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Oñati International Institute for the Sociology of Law 2014-10-01
Series:Oñati Socio-Legal Series
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ssrn.com/abstract=2507139
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spelling doaj-e2755216c0fc4ca086d31457ccc5acd42020-11-24T23:27:20ZengOñati International Institute for the Sociology of LawOñati Socio-Legal Series2079-59712014-10-0144750770307Do Members of the Public Have a ‘Right to Know’ about Similar Fact Evidence? The Emily Perry Story and the ‘Right to Know’ in the Context of a Fair Re-TrialRachel M.A. Spencer0University of South Australia<p>In South Australia in 1981, an intriguing criminal trial took shape around Emily Perry who was charged with two counts of attempting to murder her husband with arsenic. Similar fact evidence about the deaths of a former husband, a de facto partner and a brother led to a jury finding her guilty of the attempted murder of her husband who denied any claim that she had tried to harm him. An appeal to the South Australian Court of Criminal Appeal on the basis that the previous deaths should not have been brought to the attention of the jury was unsuccessful but Emily Perry&rsquo;s case went all the way to the High Court of Australia. Her conviction was quashed and she was never re-tried. <br /> This article examines the dichotomy of an accused&rsquo;s right to a fair trial (and the rules of evidence that flow from that right) and the public&rsquo;s so-called &lsquo;right to know&rsquo; about a person charged with a serious offence. It posits the Perry case as an example of the opposing perspectives of lawyers and journalists, and explores the different narratives to which the case gave rise. The paper questions whether a fair re-trial for Emily Perry would ever have been possible after the vast media attention that it received.</p> <p>En 1981 en Australia Meridional se desarroll&oacute; un fascinante juicio criminal alrededor de Emily Perry, a quien se acus&oacute; de dos intentos de asesinar a su marido con ars&eacute;nico. Pruebas similares sobre las muertes de un esposo anterior, su pareja de hecho y su hermano llevaron al jurado a declararla culpable de intento de asesinato de su marido, quien rechaz&oacute; en sus declaraciones que ella hubiera tratado de hacerle da&ntilde;o. No prosper&oacute; una apelaci&oacute;n a la Corte de Apelaci&oacute;n Penal de Australia Meridional alegando que las muertes previas no deber&iacute;an haberse mencionado al jurado, pero el caso de Emily Perry sigui&oacute; su curso hasta el Tribunal Superior de Justicia de Australia. Se anul&oacute; su condena y nunca se le volvi&oacute; a juzgar.<br /> Este art&iacute;culo analiza la dicotom&iacute;a entre el derecho del acusado a un juicio justo (y las reglas de evidencia que surgen de ese derecho) y el denominado &ldquo;derecho a la informaci&oacute;n&rdquo; del p&uacute;blico sobre una persona acusada de un delito serio. Plantea el caso Perry como un ejemplo de los intereses opuestos entre abogados y periodistas, y analiza las diferentes narrativas a que dio lugar el caso. El art&iacute;culo cuestiona si hubiera sido posible realizar un nuevo juicio justo despu&eacute;s de la amplia atenci&oacute;n medi&aacute;tica que recibi&oacute;</p> <p><strong>DOWNLOAD THIS PAPER FROM SSRN</strong>: <a href="http://ssrn.com/abstract=2507139" target="_blank">http://ssrn.com/abstract=2507139 </a></p>http://ssrn.com/abstract=2507139Similar fact evidenceright to a fair trialopen justiceEmily Perry casenarrativemediaHechos probados similaresderecho a un juicio justojusticia abiertacaso Emily Perrynarrativemedios de comunicación
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
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author Rachel M.A. Spencer
spellingShingle Rachel M.A. Spencer
Do Members of the Public Have a ‘Right to Know’ about Similar Fact Evidence? The Emily Perry Story and the ‘Right to Know’ in the Context of a Fair Re-Trial
Oñati Socio-Legal Series
Similar fact evidence
right to a fair trial
open justice
Emily Perry case
narrative
media
Hechos probados similares
derecho a un juicio justo
justicia abierta
caso Emily Perry
narrative
medios de comunicación
author_facet Rachel M.A. Spencer
author_sort Rachel M.A. Spencer
title Do Members of the Public Have a ‘Right to Know’ about Similar Fact Evidence? The Emily Perry Story and the ‘Right to Know’ in the Context of a Fair Re-Trial
title_short Do Members of the Public Have a ‘Right to Know’ about Similar Fact Evidence? The Emily Perry Story and the ‘Right to Know’ in the Context of a Fair Re-Trial
title_full Do Members of the Public Have a ‘Right to Know’ about Similar Fact Evidence? The Emily Perry Story and the ‘Right to Know’ in the Context of a Fair Re-Trial
title_fullStr Do Members of the Public Have a ‘Right to Know’ about Similar Fact Evidence? The Emily Perry Story and the ‘Right to Know’ in the Context of a Fair Re-Trial
title_full_unstemmed Do Members of the Public Have a ‘Right to Know’ about Similar Fact Evidence? The Emily Perry Story and the ‘Right to Know’ in the Context of a Fair Re-Trial
title_sort do members of the public have a ‘right to know’ about similar fact evidence? the emily perry story and the ‘right to know’ in the context of a fair re-trial
publisher Oñati International Institute for the Sociology of Law
series Oñati Socio-Legal Series
issn 2079-5971
publishDate 2014-10-01
description <p>In South Australia in 1981, an intriguing criminal trial took shape around Emily Perry who was charged with two counts of attempting to murder her husband with arsenic. Similar fact evidence about the deaths of a former husband, a de facto partner and a brother led to a jury finding her guilty of the attempted murder of her husband who denied any claim that she had tried to harm him. An appeal to the South Australian Court of Criminal Appeal on the basis that the previous deaths should not have been brought to the attention of the jury was unsuccessful but Emily Perry&rsquo;s case went all the way to the High Court of Australia. Her conviction was quashed and she was never re-tried. <br /> This article examines the dichotomy of an accused&rsquo;s right to a fair trial (and the rules of evidence that flow from that right) and the public&rsquo;s so-called &lsquo;right to know&rsquo; about a person charged with a serious offence. It posits the Perry case as an example of the opposing perspectives of lawyers and journalists, and explores the different narratives to which the case gave rise. The paper questions whether a fair re-trial for Emily Perry would ever have been possible after the vast media attention that it received.</p> <p>En 1981 en Australia Meridional se desarroll&oacute; un fascinante juicio criminal alrededor de Emily Perry, a quien se acus&oacute; de dos intentos de asesinar a su marido con ars&eacute;nico. Pruebas similares sobre las muertes de un esposo anterior, su pareja de hecho y su hermano llevaron al jurado a declararla culpable de intento de asesinato de su marido, quien rechaz&oacute; en sus declaraciones que ella hubiera tratado de hacerle da&ntilde;o. No prosper&oacute; una apelaci&oacute;n a la Corte de Apelaci&oacute;n Penal de Australia Meridional alegando que las muertes previas no deber&iacute;an haberse mencionado al jurado, pero el caso de Emily Perry sigui&oacute; su curso hasta el Tribunal Superior de Justicia de Australia. Se anul&oacute; su condena y nunca se le volvi&oacute; a juzgar.<br /> Este art&iacute;culo analiza la dicotom&iacute;a entre el derecho del acusado a un juicio justo (y las reglas de evidencia que surgen de ese derecho) y el denominado &ldquo;derecho a la informaci&oacute;n&rdquo; del p&uacute;blico sobre una persona acusada de un delito serio. Plantea el caso Perry como un ejemplo de los intereses opuestos entre abogados y periodistas, y analiza las diferentes narrativas a que dio lugar el caso. El art&iacute;culo cuestiona si hubiera sido posible realizar un nuevo juicio justo despu&eacute;s de la amplia atenci&oacute;n medi&aacute;tica que recibi&oacute;</p> <p><strong>DOWNLOAD THIS PAPER FROM SSRN</strong>: <a href="http://ssrn.com/abstract=2507139" target="_blank">http://ssrn.com/abstract=2507139 </a></p>
topic Similar fact evidence
right to a fair trial
open justice
Emily Perry case
narrative
media
Hechos probados similares
derecho a un juicio justo
justicia abierta
caso Emily Perry
narrative
medios de comunicación
url http://ssrn.com/abstract=2507139
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