[JA12] Are these not the natural reactions of any mother whose child has suddenly died for no apparent reason?
[JA13] Are these not the natural reactions of any mother whose child has suddenly died for no apparent reason?
[Note 13] How would the doctor know if this was an over-reaction? How many times had she witnessed a mothers reactions in such circumstances?
[Note 14] Yet Dr Williams said that any biological tests on blood would be meaningless.
[JA15] Why tell her about the nosebleed if she had anything to conceal?
[JA16] If this witness was introduced to the jury as such, this would have produced a prejudicial effect on the jury.
[Note17] Dr Cowan and a sergeant had not noted any bruises or external marks at the hospital on 13th December. The post-mortem on Christopher was carried out on 16th December.
[JA18] Was this decision based on any medical evidence? If not, what can the opinion of this doctor be worth? If the cause of death was simply a guess to expedite the funeral arrangements then the doctor's credibility would be an issue. If the cause of death was however accurately described at the time, then Christopher was not murdered. This doctor was the prosecution's main expert witness and the reliability of his testimony is crucial to this case since it was only he who examined the bodies of both children. Why did he change his view of Christopher's death one year later when the appellant's second child Harry died?
[Note19] This would be true of normal babies
[JA20] Why hadnt Dr Williams formed the same view at the time of Christophers post-mortem?
[JA21] These experts never examined Christophers body which had been cremated and only examined photographs which were apparently of "poor quality".