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Wednesday, 9th December 2009

William Wallace denied day in court

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Published Date: 19 April 2009
HIS heart may have been brave but it would be sinking today.
Legal chiefs have ruled that the name of William Wallace – Scotland's medieval matinee idol – can never be cleared.

Scotland on Sunday can reveal that the body that examines potential miscarriages of justice in Scotland was asked to look into the
700-year-old conviction of Wallace but refused to do so.

The Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission (SCCRC) decided it had no jurisdiction over the London court that found him guilty of treason.

And its English sister organisation has confirmed it will never pursue the Wallace case, which is regarded by historians as being based on trumped-up charges against the man who led the Scottish army in the wars of independence.

Most historians have long recognised that William Wallace was wrongly convicted of treason in London in 1305.

The knight – effectively the ruler of Scotland – had been accused of betraying an English crown that he did not recognise.

Gerry Sinclair, chief executive of the SCCRC, said last night that the organisation would not carry out such a review.

"I was asked whether we could consider the conviction of William Wallace," Sinclair said. "I had to point out that, as he had been tried and punished in London, it did not fall within our jurisdiction, but would be for the English Commission to consider."

The Criminal Case Review Commission, the equivalent of the SCCRC in England and Wales, said it would not review cases such as Wallace's because of tougher appeal court rules south of the border.

The SCCRC recently looked into the Appin murder, the notorious killing of Colin "the Red Fox" Campbell in 1752. The murder had been the inspiration for Robert Louis Stevenson's novel, Kidnapped.

However, Sinclair and his team decided not to refer the case to the Court of Appeal, because they did not feel it would be in the public interest.

He said: "Our own statutory provisions place no time limit on the review of cases, but clearly some time limit has to be applied, as it cannot be in the interests of justice to spend public time and resources on historical miscarriages which can achieve no practical benefit today."

But many experts have been champing at the bit for the chance to review the Wallace case, which was a milestone in the history of European law as well as the troubled relations between England and Scotland.

Wallace's English nemesis, Edward I – 'Longshanks' – is regarded north of the border as a murderous, invading tyrant. In England, however, he was seen as a reformer who created much of the current legal system, including the introduction of solicitors and barristers.

The Wallace trial was designed to show that English law – as well as brute force – held sway north of the border.

"The treason charge was simply a concoction based on the assumption that Scotland was a province of England," said historian Tom Devine. "In that sense it was a mistrial.

"Scotland had been recognised as an independent nation by the papacy and, therefore, any treason charge was just a reflection of an arrogant English monarchy."

Wallace admitted a whole stream of charges other than treason. Lawyers argue that these might be made to stick, even 700 years on. Devine said: "Wallace was portrayed as a brigand. But one man's brigand is another man's national hero."

John Finlay, who teaches history of law at Glasgow University, said: "It was technically possible for a knight to be tried by someone other than his own sovereign for crimes against the code of chivalry."

Leading mediaevalist Hector MacQueen, a law professor at Edinburgh, stressed that any review of the case would effectively have to decide whether Scotland was independent or not and, therefore, whether Wallace owed any allegiance to Edward.

"Any review would be a mediaeval legal minefield," MacQueen said. "In fact, the whole issue has been a minefield for years. Perhaps it is better left to historical monologues than the Court of Appeal. I happen to think Wallace was innocent. But then, I am biased."

David Ross, the convener of the William Wallace Society, admitted some of his hero's followers may have committed atrocities.

Many had been brutalised by horrific excesses carried out by the English occupying army, including the massacre of thousands of civilians after the fall of Berwick. But he claimed Wallace himself was a pious man who was murdered by his enemies."This is a man," Ross argued, "who did not do anything wrong but fought to protect his country from incredibly aggressive invaders."



The verdict of history

Scotland's historic victims of miscarriages of justice include:


1 Mary, Queen of Scots. Marie Stuart was beheaded for treason in 1587; she was said to have been plotting to betray her cousin, Elizabeth I.

2 James Stewart. The Culloden veteran was convicted and hanged for the 1752 murder of Colin Campbell, the Red Fox, a hated land factor. Stewart was found guilty by a jury of 15, 11 of whom were Campbells. Few historians think he carried out the crime.

3 Thomas Muir. A radical inspired by revolutions in America and France, Muir was sentenced to 14 years' exile in Australia for sedition and calling for universal suffrage in 1793. Muir was the first foreigner ever to be made a citizen of France and was nominated as Scotland's first president by exiled republicans.

4 James Wilson. One of the leaders of Scotland's 1820 Rebellion, Wilson was sentenced to death by an English court convened in Glasgow after marching on the city under the banner "Scotland Free or a Desert". He was hanged and beheaded.

5 Helen Duncan. The Scot was one of the last people in Britain to ever be jailed for witchcraft in 1944 after she revealed that a Royal Navy warship had sunk during a seance. Her conviction eventually led to the repeal of the Witchcraft Act.



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  • Last Updated: 18 April 2009 8:04 PM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
  • Related Topics: William Wallace
 
1

im brian and so is my wife,

edinburgh 19/04/2009 00:47:17
very interesting stuff,i found this page on the internet about james wilson,the way the then gov worked in scotland has a simularity to present times
aye jiggery pokery by HM Gov indeed
http://dcwilson.tripod.com/
2

Robroyston Wallace Monument,

Robroyston 19/04/2009 01:54:15
Gerry Sinclair, chief executive of the SCCRC said:

"... it cannot be in the interests of justice to spend public time and resources on historical miscarriages which can achieve no practical benefit today ..."

Can we take it that Mr Sinclair's omission of the word "alleged" is deliberate?

Anyone interested in the current state of the site of Wallace's capture should visit the following new website:

http://www.robroyston.org

RWM.
3

donald,

glasgow 19/04/2009 06:57:36
Glesga Labour Cooncil refuses to acknowledge the site at Robroyston where Wallace was Grassed up. Do they intend to celebrate Menteith Day?

They refuse to have any ,or John MacLean statues, instead they prefer Imperialist statues to mark their support for oppression.
4

,

19/04/2009 10:42:11
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
5

im brian and so is my wife,

edinburgh 19/04/2009 11:58:51
im not surprised labour wont have statues to john maclean,as he stated at his trial,"no man or gov will stop me ,from exercising my right to free speech"
yes brown doesnt want the scottish electorate to speek as they want to
also bbc wont show ,that bbc alba one about HM GOV stopping scots from wanting or even trying for self gov,on the main bbc scotland or other bbc stations
why? scared the truth will bite?
6

Newton_Invented_Gravity,

19/04/2009 12:31:47
'Have you ever considered removing the large potato from your shoulder?'

I would love to know what that babble actually means. Think it's time you went home, son.
7

Media at One,

19/04/2009 13:06:41
This story is proof that there are certain people within our society that are nothing more than bleating and pathetic individuals.
A 700 year old conviction cannot possibly be overturned and even if it was, who would benefit? What would it achieve?
I am so happy that any move to investigate this case have been cancelled.
8

hoblar,

19/04/2009 16:00:22
"This story is proof that there are certain people within our society that are nothing more than bleating and pathetic individuals."

You are confusing your obvious dislike of historical fact and accuracy with those among us who use history, mistakes and otherwise, as lessons to shape the future. No point in hiding under your bed!

Such is historical context and truth, and there is nothing bleating or pathetic except your keeness to come on here suddenly and call people names for reasons perhaps best left to your bleating self.

"A 700 year old conviction cannot possibly be overturned and even if it was, who would benefit? What would it achieve?"

Who cares about overturning this conviction, based on the charge of treason against a country that, among all Scots in history, Wallace certainly DID NOT owe any allegiance to whatsoever, in fact, it is fair to say that as a former Guardian of Scotland, somebody who went to war and fought two enormous pitched battles against Invaders led by Longshanks (Edward I of England) he was the exact opposite to a loyal or disloyal citizen of England!

Overturning the 'conviction' isn't the point, it is the INVESTIGATION that some bleaters fear!

"I am so happy that any move to investigate this case have been cancelled."

Why, what difference could this make to your life? lol

You sound like you would be frightened to death of an investigation for some reason, but the fact is that Wallace was tried and executed, but under no circumstances could he be convicted against an English king, not of treason, the treason charge was to put a point about the Independence of Scotland and what England erroneously believed about their own claim on Scotland, and that claim was firmly established by Scotland and Scots themselves when it was utterly rejected in the First and Second Wars of Independence!

Again:

"I am so happy that any move to investigate this case have been cancelled."

Are you indeed?

You heard of the Stone
9

hoblar,

19/04/2009 16:01:24

You heard of the Stone of Scone?

Ian Hamilton and some student friends reclaimed this stone, stolen from Scotland by Edward I (Longshanks) at about the same time that Wallace came to prominence in Scotland, and the Uk authorities eventually knew exactly who had removed the stone from the coronation chair of England, now the British throne.

Do you want to know why the British authorities were; "so happy that any move to investigate this case have been cancelled."?

In other words why they never charged Hamilton and his friends with theft?

Well, I will tell you; Because charging them with theft would have left the british authorities and crown with proof of ownership, and it is a matter of very public record that this stone was indeed stolen from Perth, Scotland in 1296!

That is the reason.

That was why Hamilton was never prosecuted, and that is why some people like yourself are scared of investigating historical mistruths, anomalies and cover ups; scared of the truth and the Scottish public understanding something worth knowing about their history.
10

Yonthing!,

20/04/2009 15:03:43
I can't believe in our current financial climate there are people proposing we waste vast amounts of public money reviewing a case that is not only 700 years old but which would also make no difference to current society.

This is just another example of why Scottish Independence is a bad idea - vast sums of money wasted on re-writing history books to suit the victor.

Shelter the homeless, feed the poor, treat the sick, heat the elderly. Far more important.

 

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