Cibaman wrote:It might very well have made a difference, that's why it wasnt allowed as evidence.
That is not the reason. Evidence of either similar fact or character may be prejudicial in ANY case. If it wasn't, nobody would be trying to get it in!
The issue is whether its potential probative value outweighs its potential prejudicial effect. Clearly, the court here must have decided that it did.
Cibaman wrote: There was no real dispute over what Harwood did, therefore it was not necessary to demonstrate that he had a propensity to do that sort of thing. He wasn't acquitted because it was doubted that he had struck Mr Tomlinson, he was acquitted because it was doubted whether his actions constituted manslaughter. His previous conduct was not relevant to that issue.
On the very limited reports I read, there was indeed a real dispute by Harwood over what he did. But again, it was not his propensity to do the actions that was the point, but his "
mens rea", ie his intentions, the
reasons for doing them, the explanation for why he did what he indisputably did.
He was not acquitted because it was doubted whether his
actions constituted manslaughter. He was acquitted because the prosecution failed to convince the jury beyond reasonable doubt that those indisputable actions, in the particular case of a police officer on duty, were or were not the exercise of reasonable force which a police officer has the right to use. Thus a question of what he believed, not what he did, but why he did it. He claimed he only used what he then judged to be reasonable force. At his trial he said he now accepts he was wrong.
His story was that he believed Tomlinson was being obstructive. He said he
turned to reasonable force to make Mr Tomlinson move: a baton strike to the leg, followed by a firm push.
Harwood also told the court that "if he had realised" Tomlinson was walking away from police lines at the time he "would not have gone near him".
Quote:Mark Dennis QC asked PC Harwood: "You do now accept that what you did in relation to Mr Tomlinson was wrong?"
PC Harwood replied: "Like I said, now I do, but not at the time."
He went on: "Now I've seen all the evidence and I know how poorly Mr Tomlinson was I'm sorry that I got involved, I shouldn't have hit him with a baton and pushed him."