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Rajesh and Nupur Talwar: India: Major Development: 'Trial by Error': Aarushi Talwar case is being reconstructed in a new 'Serial'-like podcast..."This trial was driven by the media and by the public opinion it shaped. Not a day went by when there wasn’t a sensational headline or TV footage on everything from the Talwars alleged ‘swinging’ lifestyle to the murdered teen’s ‘sexual proclivities’. Even before the court announced its verdict, people had already pronounced their verdict: Guilty. Amid the hysteria, a few journalistic voices that stood out, for being neutral, incisive, analytical. Sensible, instead of sensationalist. Veteran journalist Avirook Sen’s was among those. Sen’s columns for the Mumbai Mirror had readers all over India, questioning for the first time, the assumptions they had made about the Aarushi Talwar case. It highlighted the flaws in the investigative process, the leaps made from scanty evidence to ‘establishment’ of guilt. Last year, Sen brought out his coverage of the case in the form of a book. It inspired the critically acclaimed Meghna Gulzar film, Talvar. And it prompted digital content company Arré to commission a podcast on the story, to Hauz Khas-based creative collective Jamun. On 1 May this year, Jamun’s Udayan Baijal (producer) and Ayesha Sood (director) will air the first episode of this podcast. “Trial By Error: The Aarushi Files” has been scripted and narrated by journalist Nishita Jha, and will have eight episodes in all, each focussing on different aspects of the case."

Next: Bulletin: Ben Butler: UK: Ongoing murder trial: On trial at Old Bailey for killing daughter Ellie, six, he confesses, under examination by his counsel that he had ‘minor violent altercations’ with his on-off partner Jennie Gray. "“I’m not here to say bad things about Jennie,” said Butler, but added that she was not submissive like “the bear from Rainbow”, referring to George from the 1980s children’s TV show. “She’s more like Zippy... and she’s confrontational,” Butler told the court. He protested that the prosecution had portrayed Gray as a victim of abuse who was afraid of him. “It’s not the situation the prosecution are saying. When I’m not doing what she wants we’ll argue and she’ll get in front of you face, at times pushing and shoving.” Asked if Gray had ever been violent with him, he replied: “Yes”. “She split my jaw open. She punched me with a ring. I don’t think I would have bled without the ring. Anyways, I probably deserved it,” he said..."The jury has heard how Butler was jailed in 2009 for a conviction for assaulting Ellie when she was seven weeks old. This was overturned by the court of appeal in 2010. He said the experience had haunted him and made him fear that any minor injury Ellie suffered would be picked up by the hospital staff and reported to social services. He said on the day his daughter injured her head after tripping over a hoover he rang his solicitor as well as a doctor because he was concerned he would be wrongly framed." Reporter Lisa O'Carroll; The Guardian;
Previous: Anna Vasquez Elizabeth Ramirez, Kristie Mayhugh and Cassandra Rivera: The San Antonio Four: Excellent piece by reporter O. Ricardo Pimental on 'the limbo between freedom and exoneration.'..."I understand some of the other issues here. We want a system that presumes that children who make such accusations should be believed. And they should be — until it is unreasonable for them to be. If the criminal appeals judges vacate the convictions based on “actual innocence” or because a state-sponsored expert at the trial gave now discredited testimony, the initial trial court will look to the district attorney for the next steps. The DA can retry, offer plea bargains or file a motion of dismissal. In the case of convictions vacated because of junk science, how that motion for dismissal reads could determine if the women are due compensation for wrongful convictions and imprisonment. If the DA asks for dismissal but doesn’t specify actual innocence, they are still technically exonerated but face an array of difficulties ahead beyond being denied compensation. They could have trouble expunging records and traveling abroad, said Ware. The system, for a variety of reasons, has an exceedingly hard time admitting it screwed up." The San Antonio Express-News;
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"First came the murders. Then followed the headlines. The year was 2008 and a 14-year-old girl called Aarushi Talwar was found murdered in her bed at home in Noida. Her parents Rajesh and Nupur Talwar, both practicing dentists, were distraught. The police named the Talwar’s missing domestic help as their main suspect – Hemraj Banjade. But when Hemraj’s body was also found on the roof of the Talwar home, sympathy for the parents quickly changed to suspicion. In no time at all, Rajesh and Nupur Talwar would be on trial for the murders of Hemraj and Aarushi. Even as the Talwars battled the accusations against them in court, another trial was playing out in which they had little chance of mounting a defence. This trial was driven by the media and by the public opinion it shaped. Not a day went by when there wasn’t a sensational headline or TV footage on everything from the Talwars alleged ‘swinging’ lifestyle to the murdered teen’s ‘sexual proclivities’. Even before the court announced its verdict, people had already pronounced their verdict: Guilty. Amid the hysteria, a few journalistic voices that stood out, for being neutral, incisive, analytical. Sensible, instead of sensationalist. Veteran journalist Avirook Sen’s was among those. Sen’s columns for the Mumbai Mirror had readers all over India, questioning for the first time, the assumptions they had made about the Aarushi Talwar case. It highlighted the flaws in the investigative process, the leaps made from scanty evidence to ‘establishment’ of guilt. Last year, Sen brought out his coverage of the case in the form of a book. It inspired the critically acclaimed Meghna Gulzar film, Talvar. And it prompted digital content company Arré to commission a podcast on the story, to Hauz Khas-based creative collective Jamun. On 1 May this year, Jamun’s Udayan Baijal (producer) and Ayesha Sood (director) will air the first episode of this podcast. “Trial By Error: The Aarushi Files” has been scripted and narrated by journalist Nishita Jha, and will have eight episodes in all, each focussing on different aspects of the case. For Udayan and Ayesha, the project presented a chance to bring together two phenomena they had following closely – the first of course being the Aarushi case, and the second, the Sarah Koenig podcast Serial.........While for Udayan, the Aarushi case is one that tells us who we are as a people and as a country, for Nishita Jha, working on Trial By Error had a deeper, personal aspect as well. Aarushi had been a close friend of Nishita’s younger sister Fiza. Did Nishita attain closure of some kind in returning to the case as a journalist all these years later? “Rather than closure, I do feel a sense of catharsis that I am finally able to talk and write about this case,” Nishita says. “Fiza was extremely close to Aarushi, and losing one's best friend to a brutal murder is beyond the scope of what anyone is emotionally equipped to deal with at fourteen. So my priority has always been making sure my sister gets through this in a sane way. It is only now that I am finally able to look at the case in depth, and address it as a journalist.” Trial By Error, Nishita hopes, will also make the media rethink its approach to covering similar stories in the future. “At some point, we as journalists need to think about what the urge to 'break news' is doing to the ethics of reporting: verifying sources, weighing in on when it's safe to reveal the identity of witnesses involved with a case most importantly – learning to see where and how power operates and influences a story. Without this, all we have is sensational clickbait,” she says. “I can't say if Avirook's book will influence the case, but I do hope the book and the podcast get people to at least think about the systems we have created a little more critically.” Trial By Error: The Aarushi Files will air on Arré and the Saavn app from 1 May, 2016


The entire story can be found at:


http://www.firstpost.com/india/trial-by-error-aarushi-talwar-case-is-reconstructed-in-new-serial-like-podcast-2732876.html

PUBLISHER'S NOTE:

I have added a search box for content in this blog which now encompasses several thousand posts. The search box is located  near the bottom of the screen just above the list of links. I am confident that this powerful search tool provided by "Blogger" will help our readers and myself get more out of the site.

The Toronto Star, my previous employer for more than twenty incredible years, has put considerable effort into exposing the harm caused by Dr. Charles Smith and his protectors - and into pushing for reform of Ontario's forensic pediatric pathology system. The Star has a "topic" section which focuses on recent stories related to Dr. Charles Smith. It can be found at:

http://www.thestar.com/topic/charlessmith

Information on "The Charles Smith Blog Award"- and its nomination process - can be found at:

http://smithforensic.blogspot.com/2011/05/charles-smith-blog-award-nominations.html

Please send any comments or information on other cases and issues of interest to the readers of this blog to: hlevy15@gmail.com;

Harold Levy;

Publisher: The Charles Smith Blog;

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