Yes, and she did, and she wrote up a correct prescription list, deliberately omitting Enalapril.
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What concerns me is that the onus is on the prosecution to prove beyond reasonable doubt the guilt. Bearing in mind how difficult that is in these cases it does make one wonder if over confidence played a part
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I've not yet met a single stupid barrister. I've questioned the ethics of a few, but none were stupid. There's no way they wouldn't have realised what they were up against imho, especially given the verdict.
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The MDU barrister representing Hayden's consultant at inquest was impressive. She was wrong but I have to say part of me appreciated that finally someone involved in my son's life could do their job so well. She came to us afterwards to say she was only doing her job
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Could there possibly be a legal reason why not? Would that bias the appeal, or wreck a possible retrial?
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Given it could have been live tweeted/covered daily indepth by a journalist, I doubt it.
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