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On the fourth week of the trial, the defense
attorney Michael Mansfield QC told jurors that there was evidence that
Dando had been assassinated by a professional Yugoslavian hit man. He
suggested that her death was caused in retaliation for NATO bombings
in Belgrade. His claim was further supported by a National
Intelligence Crime Service report, which ordered the death of the
famous television presenter. “Miss Dando’s murder was a hit ordered
by Arkan, the leader of the Tigers,” Mansfield said. The arguments
made by the defense, focusing on the hit man theory, extended into the
fifth week. Mansfield also told jurors that there were threatening
phone calls received by Television Centre in London and BBC Belfast in
the days following Dando’s death. The caller had been said to have had
a foreign accent and had referred to Dando’s murder as an act of
revenge. The jurors learned that the caller had also threatened other
news personalities with being future targets. In a rebuttal against
the prosecution’s earlier statements, Michael Mansfield told the jury
that evidence linking Mr. George to the crime was “non-existent” and
that the prosecutors failed to produce a motive, weapon or witnesses
who saw him commit the murder.
Mansfield presented a witness who claimed to
have seen a man in a Range Rover car parked near Dando’s house on the
morning of the murder. The witness, a traffic warden, told the court
she had noticed the man waving at her while talking on a mobile. She
told the court that when she had first approached the car, she did not
see the man and was startled when she eventually noticed him. She
believed the man on the phone in the car had been attempting to
attract her attention. There was no evidence presented by either side
that connected Mr. George with a Range Rover vehicle.
Following closing statements by the defense and
prosecution, Mr. George’s fate lay in the hands of the jury. On July
2, 2001, the jury returned after five days of deliberation. Barry
Michael George had been found guilty of the murder of Jill Dando and
sentenced to life in prison.
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Newspaper
articles
(BBC News: July 3, 2001) |
According to British law, previous convictions
of the defendant could not be told to the jury to prevent prejudicing
the case. The BBC News reported what the jury had never learned --
that Barry George had been previously arrested for crimes, some of
which were assaults against women. In 1980, George had been fined for
the impersonation of a police officer. That same year, he was arrested
for the molestation of two women. One of the women had been attacked
by Mr. George in an elevator, a crime for which he was later
acquitted. The same year, Mr. George had been arrested for indecent
assault of a second woman. She had told the judge at the hearing that
he had followed her for several weeks prior to the attack. Mr. George
was convicted for indecent assault in 1982 and of attempted rape in
1983.
What jurors had also not learned throughout the
trial proceedings was that Barry George had been arrested in 1983 for
trespassing on the property of Diana, Princess of Wales. Mr. George
had been found armed with two knives, rope, combat paraphernalia and a
gas mask. George had been seen loitering near the grounds around
Diana’s home a total of four times during the same year before he was
turned away from the area. Therefore, Mr. George was a more
threatening and disturbed character than what his defense team had
initially portrayed. Based on Mr. George’s prior criminal records from
before the Dando charge, it was evident that stalking and other
violent acts were not unknown to him. According to The Mirror
newspaper who had interviewed the former wife of Mr. George, the
marriage was described by the Japanese national as “violent and
terrifying.” The marriage lasted from 1989 until the couple’s divorce
in 1994.
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