Stephen Lawrence murder: Dobson and Norris found guilty
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[url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-16347953]Source 1[/url]
[url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-16097242]Source 2[/url]
[quote]Two men have been convicted of the racist murder of black London teenager Stephen Lawrence 18 years after the attack.
Gary Dobson, 36, and David Norris, 35, were found guilty by an Old Baily jury after a trial based on new forensic.
Scientists found a tiny blood stain on Dobson's jacket that could only have come from Mr Lawrence.
As he was led away, he told the jury they had condemned an "innocent man". Sentencing will be on Wednesday.
Stephen's parents, Doreen and Neville, wept in court as the jury found both men guilty. Duwayne Brooks, Stephen's best friend who had been with him on the night of the murder, [url=https://twitter.com/#!/DuwayneBrooks/status/154211886261469184]tweeted: "Some justice at last"[/url].
The original failed investigation led to the Metropolitan Police being branded as institutionally racist.
Stephen Lawrence was 18 when he was stabbed to death near a bus stop in Eltham, south London, in April 1993. Police identified five men who were later named in a damning public inquiry as the "prime suspects".
By that time there had already been a catalogue of police errors and two failed prosecutions, one brought by Stephen's parents, Doreen and Neville Lawrence.
But in a four-year-long cold case review, a fresh team of forensic scientists uncovered microscopic evidence linking the men to the murder - evidence that the police had held all along.
The material - blood stains, clothing fibres and a single hair belonging to the teenager - were recovered from the clothes of the suspects which had been seized in 1993.
Scientists recovered the material using advanced techniques which were not available to the original case scientists.
Dobson and Norris, who denied the murder, said their clothing had been contaminated as police mixed up evidence down the years. Detectives spent months establishing the movements and handling of the exhibits since 1993 - and the jury were told that contamination was implausible.
Gary Dobson, jailed in 2010 for drugs trafficking, is among a small number of men to have been tried twice for the same crime after the Court of Appeal quashed his 1996 acquittal for the murder.
In an exclusive interview with the BBC's Panorama, Stephen's mother Doreen Lawrence said: "I don't forgive the boys who killed Stephen. They don't think they have done anything wrong.
"They took away Stephen's life and there is nothing in their behaviour or anything to show they they regret what their actions have done and the pain it has caused us as a family."
Acting Assistant Commissioner Cressida Dick, who ordered the 2006 cold case review that led to the convictions, said the case had been extremely important for the Lawrence family, the Metropolitan Police and society at large.
She said: "It has been a unique case in policing. Firstly the horrible, horrible nature of the attack on the night. The time in which it has taken to bring anybody to justice and the tireless campaigning of the Lawrences.
"There is no comparable case. All homicide cases are terrible, but for us it is a very important case. Most importantly we wanted to be able to bring people to justice for the killing and try to give Doreen and Neville Lawrence and their family some sense of justice."[/quote]
[quote]Gary Dobson and David Norris have been found guilty of the murder of Stephen Lawrence, the black teenager stabbed to death by a gang of white youths at a London bus stop in 1993.
The pair have spent their entire adult lives denying any involvement in one of the most high-profile unsolved cases in British history. So who are they?
To the British public, Gary Dobson and David Norris have come to be defined by the death of Stephen Lawrence.
They were among five white youths from Eltham in south-east London arrested shortly after the 18-year-old was killed there.
Mr Dobson, who was 17 at the time and attending a college, lived with his parents and younger sister on the nearby Brook Estate.
Mr Norris, the one member of the close-knit group who wasn't based on or near the estate, lived with his mother in Chislehurst, another part of south-east London.
He had met one of the group - Jamie Acourt - through a football team they played for aged 14, and was introduced to the others through him.
He was 16 and had left school when Stephen died.
The Stephen Lawrence Inquiry in the late 1990s, which looked into the teenager's death and the subsequent police investigation, cited evidence from locals that portrayed the group as aggressive youths who regularly intimidated people they came into contact with - often with knives and threats.
Much of this intimidation was due to their connection to Mr Norris's father, Clifford, a convicted drug smuggler who was on the run in 1993 but later served an eight-year prison term for drugs and firearms offences.
"Police officers told us that they believed that the influence or fear of Clifford Norris infected the investigation of the murder, in that potential young witnesses or young people in possession of information held back because they knew of Clifford Norris' existence and close interest in his son's welfare," states the report from the inquiry, which was presided over by retired judge Sir William Macpherson.
A BBC documentary broadcast in July 2006, called The Boys Who Killed Stephen Lawrence, contained the allegation that Clifford Norris bribed a detective involved in the investigation into Stephen's murder, although a subsequent investigation by the Independent Police Complaints Commission concluded that the claims were unfounded.
At the time of Stephen's death, Eltham was an ethnically polarised area where racist tension bubbled under the surface of suburban life, occasionally coming to the fore in the form of verbal insults, graffiti or - at its most extreme - violence.
"It should be recorded that racist crime and violence were not new to the district. Both Eltham and Thamesmead had bitter experience of such crime by 1993," the Macpherson report stresses, before citing examples of racially charged flashpoints.
Their reputation as local aggressors meant Mr Dobson, Mr Norris and their friends were prime suspects after Stephen's death.
Police surveillance of their homes began four days after the killing and the five were arrested, with two charged.
But the Crown Prosecution Service felt there was insufficient evidence to prosecute, and the charges were dropped in 1993.
A year after Stephen's death, secret surveillance footage filmed in Mr Dobson's Eltham flat captured the men's hate-filled racist outlook on life.
In the 1994 video, which was shown to the Old Bailey jury in the 2011 murder trial, Mr Norris was heard to say: "I would go down Catford and places like that I am telling you now, with two sub-machine guns."
Using extremely racist and sexually explicit language, he said he would take a black person, torture them, skin them alive and set them alight.
"I would blow their two arms and legs off and say 'go on, you can swim home now'. They would be bobbing around like that."
He also shared an anecdote about beating up a black man, thought to be in his 60s, in a park following an argument.
The surveillance footage "showed violent racism at its worst," concluded Sir William Macpherson.
His 1999 report refers to the five suspects as being "infected and invaded by gross and revolting racism".
At this month's trial, Mr Norris, now 35 and a father of one, told the court he was "ashamed" of his behaviour in the video.
Mr Dobson, 36, also said he was "disgusted and embarrassed" by the racist language he used in the video.
Three years after Stephen's death, a private prosecution was brought by the Lawrence family, but the case collapsed and Mr Dobson, Neil Acourt and Luke Knight were acquitted of murder.
The case against Mr Norris and Jamie Acourt collapsed before reaching court.
Despite the acquittal and collapse, the group accused of killing the teenager struggled to free themselves from the cloak of suspicion.
Perhaps the most famous of example of this was a Daily Mail front page in 1997 which openly flouted libel laws.
Featuring images of the five suspects, the newspaper carried the headline "murderers", under which it stated: "The Mail accuses these men of killing. If we are wrong, let them sue us." Later all five went on television to deny any involvement in the murder.
The vilification of the suspects in some quarters was sharply brought into focus in 1998 after they appeared at the Lawrence Inquiry.
During an outpouring of public contempt, the men were jostled, spat at and targeted with bottles, prompting them to spit and throw punches in retaliation.
At the 2011 Old Bailey trial, both Mr Dobson and Mr Norris admitted becoming angry men who had grown to resent the world after being spat at and verbally abused on a regular basis by members of the public who saw them as murderers.
In 2010, Mr Dobson began a five-year jail term for drug dealing after he admitted supplying a class B drug.
Similarly, Mr Norris, an unmarried father-of-five, has lived on the wrong side of the law.
In 2002, he was jailed for a racist attack in which he threw a drink and shouted racial abuse at a black police officer.
Two years later, just months after his release, he was sentenced to 13 months behind bars for a pub burglary and handling a stolen vehicle.
The defence told the court in that case that Mr Norris had been unable to find employment since being arrested in the Lawrence murder inquiry.
Describing his client as "depressed" and "paranoid", Mr Norris's barrister called the burglary an impulsive offence by a man "without any realistic means of particularly well remunerated work".
Double jeopardy change
In September 2010, 17 years after Stephen's death, Mr Dobson and Mr Norris were arrested and charged with murder, following the Court of Appeal's decision that fresh forensic evidence warranted a trial.
The 2011 trial was the second occasion in which Mr Dobson appeared at the Old Bailey in connection with the murder.
In the past this could not have happened, because of the double jeopardy rule which prevented a suspect being tried a second time for a crime.
But the law was changed in 2003 to allow the prosecution to apply to quash an acquittal if a court was satisfied that there was new and compelling evidence to be put before a jury.
And, with the emergence of new forensic evidence that appeared to link them to the crime, they took to the stand in an attempt to disprove any connection to a killing that came to define their lives. This time they failed to convince the jury.[/quote]
[img]http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/53801000/jpg/_53801148_dobson_norris304_cps.jpg[/img]
Good, better late than never.
I thought this was in the US at first, until I saw the pictures. It seems kind of weird, but sometimes you can seem to tell people in the US and UK apart.
[QUOTE=Mingebox;34032344]I thought this was in the US at first, until I saw the pictures. It seems kind of weird, but sometimes you can seem to tell people in the US and UK apart.[/QUOTE]
or, you could've taken the time to read the first sentence
anyways, it's strange that they found them guilty 18 years later, but better late than never
David Norris? Any affiliation to Chuck?
[QUOTE=Alien_23;34033219]David Norris? Any affiliation to Chuck?[/QUOTE]
Chuck Norris joke.
[video=youtube;-NuONuafxwk]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-NuONuafxwk&feature=related[/video]
How was that a joke exactly?
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