Britain has a legal system which is presumed to have, at it's foundation, one inflexible principle, that everyone
is considered to be innocent until proven guilty.
However, in 1992 a man was convicted of a criminal offence without the prosecution producing any evidence that there
had even been a crime committed. On top of this, the evidence which could prove the man innocent was withheld by the jury
by his own defence barrister.
Unbelievable?
Read more on The New Barns Case page.