The prosecution has offered no evidence against four young men who were accused of conspiracy to murder after Black Lives Matter activist Sasha Johnson was shot at a party in Peckham last year. They are formally found not guilty
A bit more info: Sasha Johnson shooting: case against four men collapses
[Mark Heywood QC] said four men in balaclavas, who the prosecution had believed to be the defendants, had approached the house and discharged a weapon at guests, striking Johnson, who was in a relationship with the oldest son of the family who lived there. He stressed there was nothing to suggest she was targeted because of her anti-racism campaigning and involvement in the BLM movement.
Heywood said the wider background had been a “falling out” and “hostility” between Deriggs and Brown and the two youngest occupants of the house, who were aged 18. But he said the case against the defendants for an alleged conspiracy was based on “circumstantial evidence” and there was no direct evidence identifying any of them. The core evidence came from contact with each other, phone data and their movements, the court heard.
Announcing that the test for the case to proceed to trial had not been satisfied, Heywood said: “For very good reasons it is not possible to set out in full in open court the reasons it is so but it should be understood the relevant considerations have been given the most anxious and careful scrutiny.
[...]
Mr Justice Hilliard QC recorded formal not-guilty verdicts. The judge said he believed the director of public prosecutions had knowledge of the case.
Not sure what to make of this. Strange, if the case was built purely on circumstantial evidence, that it (supposedly) originally met the threshold for charging them. Also - excuse my ignorance - but when charges are dropped before a trial has begun, is it usual to record a 'not guilty' verdict? Isn't it enough just to drop the charges? Given that no evidence has been heard, to be sure that they were not guilty (rather than simply not being able to justify proceeding to trial) wouldn't it be necessary to know who was responsible?
I am sure someone with more knowledge of criminal law than me will be able to interpret what's happened better than I can, but I find this all very odd.
JMO
ETA: If the police initially ruled out any connection to SJ's activism work in the belief that this was a dispute between the men who have now been exonerated and some of the residents of the household having the party, does this mean that that can now be considered a plausible motive again?
Family of equal rights activist Sasha Johnson release harrowing photo
Family of black equal rights activist Sasha Johnson release harrowing photo of her after shooting | Daily Mail Online