Lockerbie
revelations:
Statement of Dr. Hans
Koechler, International Observer at the Lockerbie Trial, on Recent
Reports in the Scottish and British Media
Vienna, 14 October
2005/P/RE/19402c-is
The Austrian professor who
was appointed by the United Nations as international observer at the
Lockerbie trial in the Netherlands today commented on reports in the
Scottish and British media about new doubts on the handling of the case
by the judicial authorities.
Dr. Hans Koechler said that
the dramatic shortcomings and errors in the conduct of the trial that
have been brought to the attention of the Scottish Criminal Cases Review
Commission (SCCRC) confirm his earlier assessment that the Lockerbie
trial resulted in a “spectacular miscarriage of justice.” (BBC News,
14 March 2002) Dr. Koechler pointed to the following information that
transpired in the media and that puts in doubt the very integrity of the
judicial process in the Lockerbie case:
1.
The credibility of a key forensic expert in the trial, Mr. Allen
Feraday (UK), has been shattered. It was revealed that “in three
separate cases men against whom Mr. Feraday gave evidence have now had
their convictions overturned” (BBC, 19 August 2005). Mr. Feraday
had told the Lockerbie court that a circuit board fragment found after
the disaster was part of the detonator used in the bomb on board Pan Am
flight
103. In the first case
where Mr. Feraday’s credibility had been questioned the Lord Chief
Justice had stated that Mr. Feraday should not be allowed to present
himself an expert in electronics.
2.
A retired Scottish police officer has signed a statement
confirming that the evidence that found Al-Megrahi guilty was
fabricated. The police chief, whose identity has not yet been revealed,
testified “that the CIA planted the tiny fragment of circuit board
crucial in convicting a Libyan” for the bombing of the Pan Am jet (Scotland
on Sunday, 28
August 2005). The fragment was supposedly part of the timing device that
triggered the bomb. The circumstances of its discovery –
in a wooded
area many miles from Lockerbie months after the atrocity –
have been mysterious from
the very beginning.
3.
Much earlier, a forensic specialist of the American FBI, Tom
Thurman, who was publicly credited with figuring out the fragment’s
evidentiary importance, was later discredited as a forensic expert. A
1997 report by the US Justice Department’s Office of the Inspector
General found “that in a number of cases other than Lockerbie, Thurman
rewrote lab reports, making them more favorable to the prosecution. The
report also recommended Thurman be reassigned to a non-scientific job
because he lacked a background in science.” (American RadioWorks /
Public Radio, March 2000)
4.
The most recent revelation relates to a mix-up of forensic
evidence recovered on the ground in Lockerbie with material used during
a series of test explosions in the course of the investigation. In one
case, a garment which was damaged in a test explosion was presented as
if it was the original garment found on the ground (which was completely
undamaged). This garment was supposedly placed in the suitcase
containing the bomb. “It casts serious doubts over the prosecution case
because certain items that should have been destroyed if they were in
the case containing the bomb are now known to have survived the blast.”
(The Observer, London, 9 October 2005)
All these facts – which are
now before the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission – confirm the
serious doubts about the Lockerbie proceedings originally raised by the
UN-appointed observer, Dr. Hans Koechler. In his comprehensive reports
on and evaluation of the Lockerbie trial (2001) and appeal (2002) as
well as in his statement on the
compensation deal
made between the US, UK and Libya in 2003, Dr. Koechler had criticized
the highly politicized circumstances in which the case was handled and
drew the attention of the international public to the possible
interference of intelligence services from more than one country.
New light is being shed on
his original
conclusion that the trial
was not fair and that the basic requirements of due process had been
neglected by what The Herald (Glasgow) most recently has referred
to as a “distasteful political fix” (12 October 2005). It has been
reported that secret talks are under way to transfer the convicted
Libyan national to a North African country,
which may
frustrate the efforts at a
retrial under Scottish law.
It is worthy to note, in that regard, that the decision of the SCCRC
about a retrial or new appeal has again been delayed until some time
next year, Dr. Koechler said.
As reported by
The Herald, it appears that the key players – the three countries
involved in the Lockerbie dispute – “are so anxious to avoid a retrial
that officials are said to have held secret talks to secure a get-out
clause.” Commenting on these revelations, Dr. Koechler stated that only
a retrial, if conducted in a fair, impartial and transparent manner
according to the requirements set by UN Security Council resolution 1192
(1998), including the presence of international observers, will do
justice to the convicted Libyan national and to the victims’ families
who deserve to know the full truth about the case. This is also
imperative under the fair trial standards set by the European Convention
for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, he said.
Dr. Koechler reiterated his
call for an independent public inquiry about the background of the
terrorist crime as well as the criminal investigation and prosecution by
the Scottish judiciary and the institutions of the United Kingdom. He
stated that the falsification of evidence, selective presentation of
evidence, manipulation of reports, interference into the conduct of
judicial proceedings by intelligence services, etc. are criminal
offenses in any country. In view of the above new revelations and in
regard to previously known facts as reported in Dr. Koechler’s reports,
the question of possible criminal responsibility, under Scots law, of
people involved in the Lockerbie trial should be carefully studied by
the competent prosecutorial authorities.
In a TV talk with Anne
Mackenzie for BBC Newsnight Scotland (1 September 2005) Dr.
Koechler said that, while he does not question the integrity of Scots
law as such, the handling of the Lockerbie trial has nevertheless
seriously damaged the reputation of the Scottish legal system. A
“political fix” such as the one reported last week in the Scottish and
British media would confirm these doubts and further undermine the
confidence in the integrity of the Scottish judicial system. He also
said that he is afraid that, because of the political interests involved
in the case, the full
truth
– including the identity of those responsible for the planning,
financing and actual perpetration of the crime – may never be known.
In today’s statement Dr.
Koechler emphasized that the “global war on terror” cannot be fought
credibly and with a chance of success if – in the worst case of
terrorism in the history of the United Kingdom – the search for truth is
abandoned for political expediency and criminal justice, i.e. the rule
of law, is sacrificed on the altar of political and commercial
interests.
END/ Lockerbie
revelations: Statement of Dr. Hans Koechler, International Observer at
the Lockerbie Trial, on Recent Reports in the Scottish and British
Media/P/RE/19402c-is |