Talk:Michael Stone (criminal)

Latest comment: 6 months ago by Pincrete in topic RfC - See also section

Greenwood edit

Something's gone wrong with this article - "Jason Greenwood" is arrested, charged and convicted, then "Stone" appeals unsuccessfully... WTF?

Conviction unsafe? edit

Well, I for one regard his conviction as unsafe, since no evidence of any kind was presented to the court or jury to indicate even his presence at or near the crime scene. The only evidence was that another convicted criminal, known to be a pathological liar, claimed that Stone had confessed by shouting the fact to him from the next door cell whilst awaiting trial. Er, that's it. That's the evidence. It is known that Stone had suffered for many years from mental instability. He knew it himself, and had asked to be taken into the care of an institution. He was refused, for the reasons given in the article, viz, his condition was regarded as untreatable, so under English law, they couldn't detain him, even at his own request. Fairlightseven 18/12/08

The article says some people still hold Stone's conviction as unsafe, however, the only evidence is this is from newspaper articles from 1999 - long before the more recent legal proceedings. I believe the statement should be removed unless more recent evidence can be produced. Dan100 (Talk) 08:01, 25 September 2006 (UTC)Reply

The article suggests that proposals to incarcerate people labelled as suffering from Dangerous Severe Personality Disorder have been dropped. This is incorrect. Indeed in the new legislation currently before the house it is the need for conditions to be treatable before mandatory incapacitation can take place that has been dropped. The article is currently substantially inacurate. Dr. D. J. Crewe 10:05, 16 March 2007 (UTC)Reply

POV-heavy section edit

However, the issue which really mattered, but which was not made clear to the jury, was the screamingly obvious fact that even if Stone had shouted his confession from the rooftops for the whole world to hear, it wouldn't have made the confession any more credible in proving that he was actually the murderer. This was because anybody following the news could have cobbled together the same confession.

Very One-Sided and Tabloidy; also the Last Link in External Links seems non-notable and non-useful. J.J.Sagnella (talk) 22:12, 12 April 2009 (UTC)Reply

Poorly worded sentence edit

There is no longer a requirement that treatments actually work, nor is there a requirement that patients participate in the treatment (ex: with taking therapies and other therapies that require active participation by the patient), merely that the treatment is considered appropriate, and is readily available to the patient.

The bit in brackets in the above sentence does not make sense to me. I can't fix it because I don't understand what it's trying to say, and I can't access the referenced source. Please reword. Thanks, RandomLettersForName (talk) 22:05, 23 June 2011 (UTC)Reply

I thought 'taking therapies' might be a typo for 'talking therapies', which would naturally require the cooperation of the person being treated. 94.194.104.41 (talk) 09:29, 25 June 2011 (UTC)Reply

Fate of Damien Daley edit

The article does not make clear whether in fact Damian Daley was in fact found guilty of the offense for which he was on remand or, if so, what sentence he got - or indeed what sentence would have been normal for such an offense by a career criminal with his record. This information is important to assessing Daley's credibility. Also the fact that the witness who admitted lying had also fabricated a confession, should be made clearer. After all, the fact that the police accepted and made use of a fabricated confession indicates how determined they were to convict Stone. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 82.43.84.56 (talk) 10:25, 25 June 2011 (UTC)Reply

Damien Daley is irrelevant to the case because even if Michael Stone had confessed to the prisoner Governor, there would still have been no value in the confession - it merely repeated what had been publioshed in the national press on 23rd September 1997.

If Kent police and the CPS weren't so determined to convict Stone using the testimony of prisoners, it is quite possible that Milly Dowler would still be alive today.

See also the case of Omar Benguit where the police and CPS relied exclusively on the testimony of crack heads to gain a murder conviction - and that conviction was gained only after a THIRD attempt on a 2nd re-trial - so the defendant had to face three trials in total. That is what you call determination to obtain a conviction. Londonlinks (talk) 23:33, 3 July 2011 (UTC)Reply

External links edit

Can the editor who is deleting the external link to the MichaelStone site please stop vandalising this page? The link is a reliable link to more resources about the case whether or not you agree with the content. We're not here to act as a censor based on our small paltry subjective opinion of what is "reliable" or not. The link is reliable which is all that matters. Londonlinks (talk) 22:07, 28 June 2011 (UTC)Londonlinks:Reply

Seeing as you have not done it I have opened a request at the External link noticeboard. Please read WP:VANDALISM - at wikipedia it means a specific thing which my editing here is not, so please stop that, I will take it as a WP:PA if you continue. Off2riorob (talk) 22:13, 28 June 2011 (UTC)Reply
If you are going to delete a reference or make an edit use the talk page to first discus your intentions beforehand with other editors. This is common courtesy. Don't assume that you know best and that you have a right to interfere with contributions from other editors - otherwise you will be banned as an editor.
If you have something useful to say then say it - but Wikipedia doesn't need editors who just sit there pressing the delete button.
Londonlinks (talk) 22:18, 28 June 2011 (UTC)londonlinksReply
Wikipedia:External_links/Noticeboard#Michael_Stone_.28murderer.29 - Off2riorob (talk) 22:19, 28 June 2011 (UTC)Reply

If I can jump into this at this point, this edit warring over the inclusion of the link isn't achieving anything. I'm sure you both know about WP:3RR at this stage, but it is worth pointing it out again. User:Off2riorob has started a discussion about this on Wikipedia:External_links/Noticeboard#Michael_Stone_.28murderer.29 as pointed out above, it makes sense that this be discussed there. I have warned User:Londonlinks twice about assuming good faith re accusations of vandalism, neither editor is vandalizing Wikipedia in my opinion. Can we please discuss this rather than edit warring over it? Quasihuman | Talk 20:57, 30 June 2011 (UTC)Reply

I have invited Off2riorob to use the appropriate forum such as the discussion page before unilaterally removing contributions from other editors without providing an acceptable reason, but he has not provided any such reasoning. Simply pressing the delete button is not what one calls editing. Where there is contention over a point, it should be discussed in the light of Wikpedia's guidelines and policies. Londonlinks (talk) 23:39, 3 July 2011 (UTC)Reply

Other material that can be added to this article edit

The articles in Criminal Law and Justice Weekly (may be behind a pay wall but sometimes can be accessed for free if you search for them by google instead of using the link)

http://www.criminallawandjustice.co.uk/features/Unconvincing-Conviction-Michael-Stone-%E2%80%93-Part-1 http://www.criminallawandjustice.co.uk/features/Unconvincing-Conviction-Michael-Stone-%E2%80%93-Part-2 http://www.criminallawandjustice.co.uk/features/Unconvincing-Conviction-Michael-Stone-Part-3 http://www.criminallawandjustice.co.uk/features/Unconvincing-Conviction-Michael-Stone-%E2%80%93-Part-4

are written by two barristers to argue for Stone's innocence and could contain a lot of references to primary sources, explanations of details like the boot-lace that was lost by police.

Someone with time&patience might search through this to see if the existing article is lacking anything important that might be found there.

The last of the articles summarizes evidence of Stone's innocence:

The significant height disparity between Josie Russell’s description of the murderer and Stone’s height (6ft 1in as against 5ft 7in);
Josie’s description of the murderer’s hair as yellow and spiky contrasted with Stone’s hair;
The absence of Stone’s DNA on the bootlace;
The total absence of any relevant microscopic evidence from Stone’s car;
The absence of any such evidence linking him to the murder scene;
The finding of hairs there which did not belong to him or the Russells;
The bloodstained fingerprint on one of the girl’s lunchbox which could not have been Stone’s and was very unlikely in the circumstances to have been made by Lin Russell;
The absurdity of Stone confessing to Daley when he had just been moved into segregation at his own request to avoid contact with co-inmates who might want to allege he had confessed to them;
The disappearance of the near complete length of boot lace from police custody at a time when in the light of continuing developments in DNA research tests on it could have led to Stone’s exoneration.

Createangelos (talk) 12:01, 14 August 2016 (UTC)Reply

Just to add more to this, I looked into the early press reports, saying that a Psychiatric nurse had reported Stone having said that he feels like killing someone, a week or so before the Chillenden murders. In fact he had said that he felt like killing *particular people who had wronged him in the past*.

Also, the conjectured motive (that he saw a happy family and was consumed by jealously over the fact that he had been brought up in care) is unsupported by evidence, while the motive for Bellfield (that Josie had caught his eye and then looked away, as had incited Bellfield to kill other women) is supported by Josie's testimony.

The fact that Dr. P. Sugarman had alerted authorities to the similarity between the photofit and Stone's appearance was perhaps known to both the jury and the jury in the retrial. This perhaps may have made the jury wonder what is the underlying reason a figure of authority in the Psychiatric profession would put Stone's name forward. Sugarman said it was only the match of the photofit that he was going by. Surely he was aware of the fact that Stone was from roughly the same area of Britain and that he had confessed homicidal feelings to his Psychiatric nurse.

It was maybe worse that this evidence was suppressed, and not given to the jury, as the jury knowing that there is some mysterious reason why Dr. Sugarman put Stone's name forward could leave an unanswered question in their mind. Of course, an unanswered question shouldn't go towards establishing circumstantial evidence of guilt, but juries are comprised of human beings.

With all the information now publicly available, it really seems that no jury would have convicted only on an unbelievable jailhouse confession through a pipe...when all the evidence supports that Stone was not involved.

The circumstantial evidence against Stone, such as that he was known to steal lawnmowers and a lawnmower had been reported stolen in that area, is vacuous, also. I can find a report of a stolen lawnmower in any district of England you wish, obviously. For the police to have done that is fine, but if there is nothing linking that lawnmower to Stone the evidence should be discredited publicly too, not left hanging around newspaper reports to influence any potential jury.

Journalists had a very serious responsibility here. Createangelos (talk) 12:00, 13 September 2016 (UTC)Reply

BBC's The Chillenden Murders (2017) edit

On 30 May and 6 June 2017 BBC Two broadcast a two-part documentary programme in which a team of independent experts re-examined the evidence: The Chillenden Murders. I would suggest that this article might benefit from a radical re-write in the light of the content of that programme. Alternatively a new article, entitled e.g. Murder of Lin Russell, might be warranted, in place of this one. Martinevans123 (talk) 21:51, 6 June 2017 (UTC)Reply

Someone has added the reference (thanks) however is there any source for the script or a summary of the documentary? Createangelos (talk) 23:25, 31 July 2017 (UTC)Reply
OK since the program is not available via the BBC website, I included another reference, and a single-line summary of the program from Daily Telegraph. I have now seen the program on youtube, but realize that youtube is not an appropriate source.
Regarding my earlier comment which said "journalists had a very serious responsibility here," just speaking as the Wikipedia editor who made that comment in the past, I would like to thank the BBC 2 crew for living up to that responsibility. Createangelos (talk) 17:31, 6 August 2017 (UTC)Reply
Especially in light of the recent announcements re Levi Bellfield, I still tend to think this article might be better tiled Murder of Lin Russell. Or else, at least, the apparent disparity between the current title here and that of Michael Stone (loyalist) should be addressed. Martinevans123 (talk) 15:49, 29 November 2017 (UTC)Reply
I agree that the article's current title leaves a lot to be desired. "Murder of Lin Russell" doesn't quite cover it, since she wasn't the only victim, and Stone's conviction hasn't been overturned (yet). If his conviction is overturned, then there would be clear grounds to change the article to "Chillenden Murders" or something similar and rewrite it to be more like the Backpacker murders or Bradford murders articles, but I think it's too soon for that now. Maybe "Michael Stone (criminal)" instead? Marianna251TALK 16:40, 29 November 2017 (UTC)Reply
I would not object to that change. Martinevans123 (talk) 16:42, 29 November 2017 (UTC)Reply
I'll go ahead and WP:BOLDly make the move, then. Marianna251TALK 16:47, 29 November 2017 (UTC)Reply

Lede: lead with the conviction, not the suspicion. edit

It seemed odd to lead the lede with a suspicion rather than the event for which he is convicted; in addition the use of the term serial killer is a little odd even if he is guilty of the second murder, though it does just about fit the definition. This edit therefore (a) re-orders the material to a more logical order, and (b) sticks to the bare facts of the suspicion of one other murder. My earlier edit to this effect was reverted by an IP address [[1]] with the edit summary: "Articles begin with a description of the person/event. He is a suspected serial killer, just like Stephen Akinmurele, John Bodkin Adams, Kieran Patrick Kelly". With respect to the IP editor his being a convicted murderer is of more weight than his being suspected of an additional murder, and should come first. The reversion of my first edit was in turn reverted by User:A09090091 [[2]]; the IP editor immediately re-reverted. [[3]]. My last edit, restoring the lede to the version I originally made, is here: [[4]].

Grateful for the views of other editors, and in particular for views on:

(a) should we start with the conviction or the suspicion?

(b) Is the use of the term serial killer appropriate?

Friendly regards and all respect to all, Springnuts (talk) 13:49, 8 February 2022 (UTC)Reply

Agreed, although I have doubts about the safety of Stone's convictions in the Russell case, it is not the job of Wikipedia to right great wrongs. Bellfield's alleged confession is interesting and has picked up a lot of media coverage, but it carries no legal weight at the moment and should not be given undue prominence in the WP:LEAD. The tag of "suspected serial killer" also carries no legal weight.--♦IanMacM♦ (talk to me) 13:58, 8 February 2022 (UTC)Reply
@Springnuts: IP raised concerns on his talkpage, I didn't oppose his statement. If the person is not serial killer, IP shall be informed and the article fixed (WP:BLP) A09090091 (talk) 15:51, 8 February 2022 (UTC)Reply
I have restored the content to the WP:STATUSQUO while this issue is still being discussed.
Both of those points you have raised are completely misleading. To ask whether we should "start with the conviction or the suspicion" is bizarre, since the article stating in the opening line that he is a suspected serial killer covers the fact that he has been convicted of two murders and is suspected of one more. On Wikipedia crime articles, it is standard to begin with descriptions of suspected serial killers with the description of them as suspected serial killers. That is why the category suspected serial killers exists [5], to classify and record all the articles pertaining to suspected serial killers. It would make no sense whatsoever to have Stone in the category of suspected serial killers yet omit any description of him as a suspected serial killer.
For context, here is a non-exhaustive list of British murderers who are described as suspected serial killers in the opening line of their article:
If you wanted to link at the list of Americans described as suspected serial killers we would be here all day. But some examples are:
We could go on. Most are all listed here [6].
The only possible reason you could have for going against regular standards and not calling Stone a suspected serial killer is that you do not think he is guilty of the Russell murders. Fine, you may think that, but as User:ianmacm succinctly says, "Bellfield's alleged confession is interesting and has picked up a lot of media coverage, but it carries no legal weight at the moment and should not be given undue prominence in the WP:LEAD". To remove the statement that Stone is a suspected serial killer based on the words of Levi Bellfield is clearly wrong. Stone is still legally the man who is responsible for the Russell murders. If his conviction gets quashed then by all means, remove the suspected serial killer description, since he would not be one. But as it stands, Stone has murdered two people and police themselves (and Stone in a confession) have stated that he is responsible for another murder. As it stands, Stone is a suspected serial killer.
Finally, and perhaps most importantly, point B is clearly misleading since a suspected serial killer and a serial killer are two very different terms. If this debate was about describing Stone as a serial killer in the opening line then I would obviously object. The way you have worded that point implies that this discussion is over whether he is a serial killer. No, it is in fact about whether the fact he has been suspected of being one should be recorded in the opening line. The Good Dante (talk) 20:48, 11 February 2022 (UTC)Reply
Oh yeah I should add that the IP was me when I was at work btw. The Good Dante (talk) 22:52, 11 February 2022 (UTC)Reply

Thank you for engaging. Please do not assume my views - as it happens you are completely wrong,and I invite you to delete your assumptions in your comments above. In any case, personal views are irrelevant: the man is guilty of those murders in the eyes of the law, and we must reflect that verdict.

Not all multiple murderers are serial killers. This man is suspected of a second attack/third murder, and if this suspicion is true then he he might be also determined to be a Serial killer. But "if" and "might" do not outweigh convicted, so we should at least start with the conviction.

As to his being a serial killer: I did not find this suspicion in any of the sources (but you may know better). It is certainly sourced that he is suspected of committing another murder, and so my edit included that in the lede. But to go beyond that to declaring him a suspected serial killer is WP:OR.

The views of other editors are requested.

Springnuts (talk) 13:27, 12 February 2022 (UTC)Reply

@Springnuts: well I think its a fair conclusion to make when, having not edited the Michael Stone article for 9 years, you suddenly appear when there is news about Bellfield confessing and decide to remove any suggestion of him being a suspected serial killer. Indeed you are correct that personal views are irrelevant, therefore I would invite you to explain why you think we should go against Wikipedia standards and exempt Michael Stone from being called a suspected serial killer when all others in the category of suspected serial killers are described as such in the first line of their article.
I find it completely ironic that you state that "personal views are irrelevant", then set out your own personal stance on whether Michael Stone does not meet the definition of suspected serial killer. Let us be clear here, Michael Stone meets the definition of suspected serial killer, no ifs no buts. That's not original research, it's just the letter of the law. It is not appropriate to put your own personal spin on it, it is not down to personal opinion, it is down to the fact that he has been convicted of two murders committed in one incident and has confessed to, and is suspected of, another murder committed in 1976. So saying he "might" be also determined as a serial killer clearly lacks a full understanding of what meets the definition of serial killer. It is, of course, notable that you began this thread with the admission that "it does just about fit the definition"., indicating that you previously accepted the fact that it is proper to describe him as such. In order to clear up any confusion about whether someone 'really' is a serial killer if they have only killed on two occasions, the best example to look at would be John Cooper. He killed four but only actually killed on two separate occasions, once in 1985 and once in 1989. Yet meets the criteria to be described as a serial killer and is rightfully described as such.
The concerns you have appear to have are that as you think that as Stone is best known for being convicted of killing the Russells, you believe that should be the first thing stated in the article. Therefore, I suggest a compromise. The first lines should state:

Michael Stone (born Michael John Goodban in 1960) is a British man who was convicted of the 1996 murders of Lin and Megan Russell and the attempted murder of Josie Russell, and who is a suspected serial killer. He was sentenced to three life sentences with a tariff of 25 years for the Russell killings.

That is a fair compromise to make whereby we start with his convictions for the Russell killings as you wish. We also still follow Wikipedia standards.
I really don't want to clash over this issue with you, but I am just concerned about the way you have come about altering my edits. Your subsequent reversion of my edit on the Murder of Billie-Jo Jenkins article is a borderline case of WP:HOUNDING, as you have clearly followed me there after disagreeing with my edits on this article. I would hope that in future I do not have to worry about the possibility of you reverting edits I make on other articles which you have almost never edited before because you are stalking my contributions list! In any case I hope we can both agree as editors to come to terms with each other. The Good Dante (talk) 16:09, 12 February 2022 (UTC)Reply

Happy with your proposed compromise edit, if you wish to make it, or I can. To be honest I have no memory of editing this article 9 years ago - though if you say I did then I’m sure that’s right. It was the recent publicity which drew my attention to it. For what it’s worth I don’t find the confession of another person convincing and I think the conviction is sound. But what matters is that this is what the sources overwhelmingly support. I did look at your contributions list: making a clean start you should perhaps expect some scrutiny of your contributions. Always happy to engage, as you have done, in the issues and improving the ‘pedia. With all respect, Springnuts (talk) 20:40, 12 February 2022 (UTC)Reply

Thank you, it is good we have come to an agreement. In fairness I should have suggested the compromise earlier. But yes I shall change it now. The Good Dante (talk) 20:48, 12 February 2022 (UTC)Reply

Chillenden murders edit

The double murder is more notable than him & should have its own article rather than be a redirect to this article. Jim Michael (talk) 19:12, 8 February 2022 (UTC)Reply

Date of birth edit

It's surprising that there is no source with a date of birth. His record at FreeBMD seems to be this one, which shows his birth was registered in the 2nd quarter. Martinevans123 (talk) 19:29, 8 February 2022 (UTC)Reply

The "see also" section edit

I'm a bit confused why there is a 'see also' section which lists apparent miscarriages of justice when the convict ended up proven guilty anyway. Is it a weird back-door type of NPOV or am I just being paranoid? Does the section suggest that non-circumstantial evidence will be found against Stone?


I mean, after an article about Biden will we have "see also: senile psychopath wreaks havoc" In short, how are these cases linked to the Stone case and what on earth is the reason for listing them when they have in common that there had been a misguided and totally incorrect notoin of a miscarriage of justice? I'm open minded to reading whatever reply there is about this, just sort-of mystified. Would anyone have an over-riding interest in skewing the article one way or the other?


I'm sure that society at large would welcome some definitive evidence one way or the other about this guy; a case based entirely on circumstantial evidence never sits reassurngly in history.

[edit 24 hours later: I sort-of like the section the way it is, though, too. Analyzing weird back-door NPOV is something Wikipedia is uniquely good at doing. ] Createangelos (talk) 00:29, 23 April 2023 (UTC)Reply

  • I don't really see an issue, the see also section exists to link to related or comparable articles, those that are tangentially related. The Michael Stone case is these days essentially defined by the debate of it being a miscarriage of justice, so related links on contentious miscarriages of justice cases in the UK are not irrelevant Snugglewasp (talk) 06:57, 23 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
If there is a relevant see also section it must not be indiscriminate or subject to POV. So if miscarriage of justice is the relevant related issue then a see also to a curated list of miscarriages of justice could be relevant. We have List of miscarriage of justice cases which has a UK section, but there remains a POV issue in linking that, in that those are listed cases recognised as miscarriages of justice, where as Stone's case is merely debated as one. Thus I don't think that would do. Linking that would be POV suggesting that this must be an unrecognised miscarriage of justice. But the reverse is also true if we link a bunch of cases where a potential miscarriage of justice was suggested and then someone admitted it or was proven guilty. We cannot have POV in the see also section (or anywhere). See also would have to be something that is unequivocally relevant and related without POV. I don't know what that could be, and I don't know why we need a see also section. Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 08:08, 23 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
In this edit [7] you restored the see also section despite this discussion. Please see WP:ONUS which I believe you are aware of, but which says:

The responsibility for achieving consensus for inclusion is on those seeking to include disputed content.

This section has been challenged by myself, by Truecrimefan22 and by Createangelos. You are the only one contesting for its retention at this point. That is a small but clear consensus against inclusion. I have reverted this now. Please do not edit war it back in without first establishing a consensus on what should be in that section here. Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 08:57, 23 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
But you also removed a link to a case (Murders of Kate Bushell and Lyn Bryant) that is nothing to do with miscarriages of justice and was simply linked due to its similarities and very close time proximity to the case, which is why parallels were drawn between the cases in the media. In no way does this fit with any argument that it needs to be removed because of POV surrounding miscarriages of justice. And further, I do not agree that linking to cases where a person was apparently guilty can be equated to the POV of linking to linking to obvious miscarriages of justice to suggest he might be innocent. Stone is guilty under the eyes of the law and has had multiple attempts to challenge this dismissed, therefore 'suggesting' that Stone is guilty is evidently not POV, it is the official position which we must follow, and by no means is it the same as 'suggesting' he is innocent, as that would be to contradict the rulings of a court of law (and subsequently several other legal bodies). So you are right, that would constitute a non-official spin that suggests that this case must be an unrecognised miscarriage of justice, but suggesting that the case is not an unrecognised miscarriage of justice is not the same as, well um, that is officially the case, as has been maintained on multiple appeals. Snugglewasp (talk) 09:11, 23 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
I removed the whole section with an edit summary that included "These are indiscriminate," a point I have made above. They are all indiscriminate, because they are selected by individual editor preference and knowledge. I did not remove them all because they are all about miscarriages of justice, I removed them because we have not established any objective criteria by which the see also section may be constructed. That is also why what you say about Stone's guilt is also immaterial. Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 09:17, 23 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
Sirfurboy, content should be left or restored to the WP:STATUSQUO while it is being discussed on talk:

To eliminate the risk of an edit war, do not revert away from the status quo ante bellum during a dispute discussion.

Therefore, you are just as complicit in edit warring here, and I return your request for me to not edit war with a polite request to you to self-revert and restore the content to the status quo while it is being discussed, if you are interested in avoiding further edit wars. In any case, you claim that users Truecrimefan22 and Createangelos have challenged the exact same content as you, but in fact this is misleading as Truecrimefan22 did not do the same as you as they removed only the Hall, Barrie and Weir entries (and one other) [8] and not the Bushell and Norris entries, while Createangelos's position is not unequivocal as you have portrayed it as, since they say above that they are "open minded" and that they actually see the positives of the section as well as the negatives. It is also then not true that I am "the only one contesting for its retention at this point" - Truecrimefan22 chose to retain the Bushell and Norris entries, and Createangelos also never challenged these, so if anything only you are contesting for those specific two entries to be removed. As a result, you re-establishing your favoured version with the unnuanced claim that others unequivocally support you and you have a clear consensus is clearly misleading and not appropriate, and so I once again ask that you self-revert as an act of goodwill. Snugglewasp (talk) 09:32, 23 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
But as I've just said above, you have no consensus for removing the Bushell/Norris entries. Only you have removed these or advocated their removal. Removing these specific entries under the auspices that there is a consensus for it is particularly incorrect and improper, and I request that you self-revert. Snugglewasp (talk) 09:36, 23 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
STATUSQUO comes from an essay, and I don't think I departed from it, as it was you who reverted material in, despite the discussion. In any case ONUS is a core policy. I challenged the content and we now must wait for the consensus to emerge. Let's see what other editors think. Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 10:15, 23 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
  • @Sirfurboy: how long are you just going to follow other editors you don't like to other pages and revert them? One editor, you, wants to remove the content entirely, while two (including me if it's not already obvious) are against this, while two others are either undecided or want a partial removal of the content. That is not a clear consensus or mandate for your actions, hence why I have reverted back to the stable version while you attempt to find editors other than you who wants the removal of the whole section.
The above comment was made by Structuralists. -The Gnome (talk) 17:27, 23 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
The one following editors around is you. You have never edited this page before, but you pop in here to revert contested material into an article against ONUS, apparently because I was the one to challenge it. And in case it is not clear, as three editors have objected to it, your reversion still does not have consensus. STATUSQUO was already metioned. You might like to review it. 13:10, 23 October 2023 (UTC)
The above comment was made by Sirfurboy. -The Gnome (talk) 17:27, 23 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
The status quo is to leave the article as it has been for years, not to revert it back to your version which lasted five days. Your edit has been challenged, the page is restored to the status quo while it is discussed and if and when you can demonstrate a clear consensus. Even if three editors have objected to it - which as has been made clear is not an accurate summary of the situation - two others have objected. That is not a clear consensus and I think you know that Structuralists (talk) 13:34, 23 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
I suggest if you want to debate what STATUSQUO (essay) and ONUS (policy) say, you do it on my talk page. Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 13:48, 23 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
Also to add, it is actually 4 editors who have contested this. This edit [9] by Tulzscha also reverted by Snugglewasp. [10] Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 18:01, 23 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
Well no, as one of those has made it clear below that their position is to remove one entry from the list, another is that they have "an open mind" but "sort-of like the section the way it is, though, too" and a third that wants a partial deletion of some: [11]. Only you want a a deletion of the section in its entirety. Four others want at least some of the entries to remain. Snugglewasp (talk) 19:20, 23 October 2023 (UTC)Reply

Military service? edit

I’ve heard a claim that Stone had served in, or tried to join, the military. Does anyone know if this is true, or has a source? Wally Tharg (talk) 16:14, 30 August 2023 (UTC)Reply

RfC - See also section edit

The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.



Should the page contain the following see also section?

  • Murders of Kate Bushell and Lyn Bryant – unsolved similar, and contemporary, high-profile random murders of a child and a mother out walking with their dogs in 1997 and 1998 respectively. Bryant was murdered three days before Stone was first convicted of the Russell killings
  • Colin Norris – subject of a similarly high-profile and current miscarriage of justice campaign
  • Simon Hall – UK murderer who maintained his innocence for years after his conviction and was helped by miscarriage of justice campaigners, only to go on to confess
  • Ernest Barrie – UK killer whose conviction was quashed after a Rough Justice campaign, only for him to go on to kill a man
  • Michael Weir – UK murderer who had his murder conviction quashed only to be found guilty again several years later

Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 13:34, 23 October 2023 (UTC)Reply

  • Oppose - The page is a biography of a convicted criminal in the UK. There is discussion of whether the conviction is safe, but the conviction has not been overturned. The selection of the see also targets lists has no objective basis and at some point three of the targets have been chosen to point to criminals where arguments were made that they had not committed the crimes only for them to be later shown to have done so. In April this year, an editor pointed out the POV issue with:

    I'm a bit confused why there is a 'see also' section which lists apparent miscarriages of justice when the convict ended up proven guilty anyway. Is it a weird back-door type of NPOV or am I just being paranoid?

    My concern is that any see also section that has a list of editor selected cases does not have a suitable objective basis for case selection to withstand arguments of bias - conscious or otherwise. Without objective selection criteria for the cases that ensure neutrality, I oppose any such see also section. Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 13:43, 23 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
  • Support - This content has stood for several years until you followed me here from the Richard D. Gill and Lucy Letby pages where you had previously clashed with me. Removing a link to the Murders of Kate Bushell and Lyn Bryant case, which is apparently simply linked due to its similarities and very close time proximity to the Russell case, is nothing to do with the miscarriage of justice argument, in no way does this fit with any argument that it needs to be removed because of POV surrounding miscarriages of justice. And further, I do not agree that linking to cases where a person was apparently guilty can be equated to the POV of linking to linking to obvious miscarriages of justice to suggest he might be innocent. Stone is guilty under the eyes of the law and has had multiple attempts to challenge this dismissed, therefore 'suggesting' that Stone is guilty is evidently not POV, it is the official position which we must follow, and by no means is it the same as 'suggesting' he is innocent, as that would be to contradict the rulings of a court of law (and subsequently several other legal bodies). So you are right, it would constitute an improper non-official spin to suggest that this case must be an unrecognised miscarriage of justice, but suggesting that the case is not an unrecognised miscarriage of justice is not the same at all, as, well um, that is officially the case, as has been maintained on multiple appeals. Snugglewasp (talk) 13:47, 23 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
    Just to clarify the record a little. No, the section has not stood for several years. See also was added on 17 September 2022, and expanded over a few ensuing edits. It was first contested on talk on 23 April, and then contested by three different editors on 21 July [12], 7 October [13] and 12 October [14]. Each time it was you that reverted the material back in. Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 18:27, 23 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
So, in other words, more than a year. Snugglewasp (talk) 19:13, 23 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
  • Support - because the content was the long-established stable version until Sirfurboy came to this page to continue his personal content disputes with both me and snugglewasp, and I have a very different view about those entries being non-neutral. On the contrary, the listing of both a case like Colin Norris where there are also concerns about it being a miscarriage of justice and them being innocent, and then mentioning other cases where they were actually maybe guilty offers an element of balance by linking to both 'maybe innocent' cases and 'maybe guilty' cases. The solution I think would be to maybe add another current suggested miscarriage of justice case to redress the fact that there are three 'maybe guilty' ones and one 'maybe innocent' one, but deleting the whole section is in my view is not necessary, especially considering the first entry is nothing to do with the miscarriage of justice element of this discussion and so shouldn't come under an arbitrary deletion of all content. Structuralists (talk) 14:05, 23 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
  • Comment - I would suggest the removal of Michael Weir specifically. Unlike the other people mentioned, Weir was never the subject of anything that could be described as a "campaign" to overturn the conviction; he appealed and had the conviction quashed on procedural grounds. Nobody other than his legal team advocated for him and the press did not take up his claim of innocence. The relevance of this case to Michael Stone is thus negligible at best. Truecrimefan22 (talk) 14:13, 23 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
  • Comment - I support your suggestion, Truecrimefan22, and I thank you for making a much more nuanced and reasonable suggestion. One way to balance it out could be to add one more 'probably innocent' case, but equally I think removing that one as one of the 'probably guilty' cases is also valid. Structuralists (talk) 14:19, 23 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
  • Oppose. The "See also" section is supposed to be about related or comparable articles [that] enable readers to explore tangentially related topics. That's per MOS:SEEALSO, which is rightfully loose but still enough to help us navigate issues such as this RfC. In the murder cases suggested for inclusion in this article, I fail to see any stronger relation than the fact itself of murder but that would cast an unacceptably wide net. A relation between two crimes, for example, would be about both culprits getting caught through some identical yet uncommon method or happenstance, e.g. DNA identification after more than a decade or so after the crime. -The Gnome (talk) 17:40, 23 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
  • (summoned by bot ) Oppose for reasons already mentioned. "long-established version" is no valid argument, does not mean version is "correct". The page is poorly written and imbalanced enough already.--Wuerzele (talk) 19:31, 23 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
  • Support. The Michael Stone case is currently defined by the debate about whether it is a miscarriage of justice or not. So linking to notable UK cases in which there is a debate about whether they do or do not constitute miscarriages is absolutely tangentially related. But I do agree with Truecrimefan that Michael Weir could be removed. 148.252.159.66 (talk) 19:34, 23 October 2023 (UTC) 148.252.159.66 (talk) has made few or no other edits outside this topic. Reply
Greetings, Wuerzele 148.252.159.66. There are many murder cases where a miscarriage of justice has been claimed, e.g. Murder of Leanne Holland, Murder of Leanne Holland, etc. Your notion of informing the reader about it would be better served by one simple link to the eponymous article. Take care. -The Gnome (talk) 21:35, 23 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
Think you’ve confused me with someone else there mate. And literally the OP says above why linking to that would be a bad idea? 148.252.159.66 (talk) 10:23, 24 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
Apologies for the wrong call. Edited your signature in. The point, however, still stands: There are many murder cases where a miscarriage of justice has been claimed. Citing them all, or even a token portion of them, does not provide any useful information or understanding. Each case is different. Hence my humble recommendation. Take care. -The Gnome (talk) 11:37, 25 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
See I think you are mistaken, The Gnome. If it was just about linking to claimed miscarriage of justice cases in the UK then I would obviously oppose, since you would be right to say that that casts the net far too wide. But it isn't about that. Those entries are linked much more specifically to previous very rare and similar UK cases where there was a similarly very-public campaign to free an individual but where they were eventually apparently still determined to be guilty years later. That is clearly not casting a wide net, since such public cases with such outcomes are indeed very rare (and even more rare in the UK, compared to somewhere else like the USA), but are comparable to the Michael Stone case as it has been characterised by a years-long and very public campaign to free him, but he is still being ruled guilty by legal bodies to this day decades later. To not recognise the similarities between these very specific and narrowly-defined cases is, in my view, symptomatic of outside editors being unaware of the background of the Stone case and what it is currently defined by - the decades-long and uniquely very public debate over whether it's a miscarriage followed by legal bodies repeatedly concluding that it is not. I agree with TrueCrimefan22's sentiments that the Michael Weir case can be jettisoned since it does lack that public campaign element, but that the others are more relevant since they involved similar public miscarriage campaigns with specifically comparable aspects MeltingDistrict (talk) 15:53, 25 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
Greetings, MeltingDistrict. I'm afraid you did not notice that my remark was addressed specifically to the reason invoked by 148.252.159.66 for supporting inclusion of the other articles in "See also." 148.252.159.66 wrote: "The Michael Stone case is currently defined by the debate about whether it is a miscarriage of justice or not. So linking to notable UK cases in which there is a debate about whether they do or do not constitute miscarriages is absolutely tangentially related."
Coming now, to your argument for inclusion, i.e. that cases where a miscarriage of justice is claimed by many people to have occurred are "very rare and even more rare in the UK, compared to somewhere else like the USA." First of all, this is an English-language encyclopaedia but it's not one mostly about England, Britain, or the USA. Second, were we to look for cases of murder where a miscarriage has indeed or is suspected to have occurred, we will find in our net a lot of catch. Especially when we take into account my first point. Yet, even ignoring the "rest of the world" and focusing on the Anglosphere, we get, beyond the avalanche of American cases, some of which involve the death penalty (e.g. Randall Dale Adams), well, Stefan Kiszko, Stephen Downing, Barry George, Winston Silcott, Suzanne Holdsworth, and so on. We do have a list of miscarriage of justice cases. Not a small catch! And just wait till we board the political murder fisherboat! What about the Birmingham Six and Judith Ward? Or even politician Jeremy Thorpe? Endless.
P.S. My emphasis in citations. -The Gnome (talk) 17:02, 25 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
Well I mean you've completely misrepresented my point there, and I would invite you to perhaps re-read what I said. I'll say again, I'm am absolutely not saying that it be right to just link to 'possible miscarriage of justice cases'. That was clearly not my point, but you've inaccurately concluded it was above by declaring that 'my argument' is that cases where a miscarriage of justice is claimed by many people to have occurred are "very rare and even more rare in the UK, compared to somewhere else like the USA." I'm not sure you've concluded from the full post I made that I am just arguing for entries just because they are claimed miscarriages of justice. No, and I'll repeat, I am saying that other than the first two the the entries are previous very rare and similar UK cases where there was a similarly very-public campaign to free an individual, but where they were eventually apparently still determined to be guilty years later. Now, I would be interested to hear you reel off a list of cases that come under that very specific and narrow definition. It's not about linking to cases that are claimed miscarriages, because you are correct, if that was the criteria we'd be here all day. It's about linking to very specific, similar cases and precedents where a very public, years-long miscarriage campaign has ensued but have ultimately still ended with a presumption of guilt. That is what the Michael Stone case is quite unique in these days, and linking to the very few other cases which have ended as such and have a separate article is not going to be endless. It's going to be links to a just a few relevant tangentially related previous cases, which is absolutely in fitting with what a see also section should include. MeltingDistrict (talk) 16:11, 26 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
Fine, let's take this avenue instead. You are now claiming that the Michael Stone case is "quite unique", yet you insist we should have in the "See also" section links to other cases. Methinks you do not realize the meaning of the term "unique." But even more importantly, could you clarify which criterion do you seek to impose? Is it that the ostensible miscarriage of justice still prevails? In which case, who ascertains it does? Not the courts, of course, since their decision is a verifiable fact, and certainly not, one hopes, us. Or is it that the case has caused a "public campaign" (or a "very-public campaign") to free the convicted person? Or do we deploy both ? Which would, of course, render the case even ...more unique, were we to use you terminology. -The Gnome (talk) 11:32, 28 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
I agree completely with Cameron Dewe's comment. -The Gnome (talk) 11:32, 28 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
  • Support - If there's anything 'non-neutral' here, it's Sirfurboy's motive in coming here to whitewash this content and previously claiming he had a consensus to do so, when no other editors were advocating for the deletion of the whole section and after his deletion was itself challenged. Sirfurboy spent many days recently clashing with me and Snugglewasp on another unrelated article, and then magically appeared to revert Snugglewasp's edit on this new page, presumably from looking at their edit contributions (which I'm not saying is illegitimate to do on here, but clearly he has a COI-style desire to oppose his adversaries' edits wherever). And the fact is that it is very misleading to pose this as a question of whether we should "add" this content as Sirfurboy has portrayed it as, with it actually being longstanding existing content that he has come on here after his clashes with other editors to challenge. It would be more accurate to introduce this RfC with "should we delete this content". MeltingDistrict (talk) 22:29, 24 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
Can you state your reasons for support other than editor conduct? It would help the admin who eventually closes this RfC to determine the weight of each argument. --CNMall41 (talk) 06:16, 25 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
Because I don't agree with this notion that it casts a net too wide to link specifically to a few fellow contemporary notable UK cases in which there has been very public miscarriage campaigns e.g. Colin Norris. There is actually very few of such contemporary cases over here - for the benefit of our American editors who may mistakenly assume that there are currently controversial miscarriage cases in the UK frequently like there is in a massive country like the USA. Likewise, I cannot agree that it is casting a net too wide to link even more specifically to previous very rare and similar UK cases where there was a campaign to free an individual but where they were eventually apparently still determined to be guilty years later. That is clearly not casting a wide net, since such public cases with such outcomes are indeed very rare (and even more rare in the UK), but are comparable to the Michael Stone case as it has been characterised by a years-long and very public campaign to free him, but he is still being ruled guilty by legal bodies to this day decades later. To not recognise the similarities between these very specific cases is, in my view, symptomatic of outside editors being unaware of the background of the Stone case and what it is currently defined by - the decades-long and uniquely very public debate over whether it's a miscarriage followed by legal bodies repeatedly concluding that it is not. I agree with the TrueCrimefan22's sentiments above that the Michael Weir case can be jettisoned since it does lack that public campaign element, but that the others are more relevant since they involved similar public miscarriage campaigns with specifically comparable aspects MeltingDistrict (talk) 08:33, 25 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
  • It's not clear to me that Murders of Kate Bushell and Lyn Bryant is that similar. Bushell and Bryant were a teenager and an adult woman killed in two separate knife attacks some distance and nearly a year apart; the Russells were an adult woman and her two pre-teen children all attacked with a hammer in a single incident. In the Russell case the perpetrator was relatively quickly identified and arrested; in the Bushell and Bryant cases no real progress has been made in 25 years. If parallels between the two cases have been discussed in reliable sources then we could potentially include it in the article; if they haven't then maybe we shouldn't be linking it as a "similar" case in the see also section.
    In general, I think that linking specific other crimes in the see also section is a pretty questionable business – there's always a question about why we have chosen those specific ones. In this case, I would consider the most obvious candidate for a see also link to be Murder of Patsy Morris, on the grounds that it's another case where Levi Bellfield has been suspected, but we haven't included that. My inclination would be that in contentious cases like this see also sections are just asking for trouble and we shouldn't include them, or at least shouldn't include specific cases in them; if for instance miscarriage of justice campaign were a blue link and yet we couldn't link it in the body for some reason that might be appropriate. Caeciliusinhorto-public (talk) 15:01, 26 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
In fairness, comparisons between the Bryant/Russell cases were directly made on the national Crimewatch episode that month, the one around the same time as Micheal Stone was convicted. So they were both in the news and compared at the time. In general I also support leaving the see also ones as they are 81.133.230.204 (talk) 18:25, 26 October 2023 (UTC) 81.133.230.204 (talk) has made few or no other edits outside this topic. Reply
  • Comment - I have also just noticed that this see also section and some other edits on this page that I think are problematic were added by sockpuppets of BarehamOliver [15]. Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 09:16, 27 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
  • Support keeping the links to the other articles in this section, provided the descriptions that explain how the other articles are related is also retained. Perhaps add citations to sources that also identify there are relationships between the articles, so that this can be verified and it is not a case of editorializing. - Cameron Dewe (talk) 03:37, 28 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
    Thanks for your thoughts. I think what you say is actually in line with comments above, e.g., The Gnome who points to MOS:SEEALSO. The point is that no one has provided any citations as to why links to various people who were acquitted and then went on to kill are in anyway relevant to this case. Do you really mean to support inclusion of Simon Hall, Ernest Barrie and Michael Weir in the see also here? Or do you mean that you support inclusion of some see also section, as long as it can be shown that the cases are closely connect and relevant (per Gnome et al.)? To be very clear for whoever does the close here: the intent of the RfC is not to say that no see also is possible, but only to agree that the current one suffers from a POV issue and can be removed. A good outcome of this RfC would be if editors provide a guideline for how a suitable section could be constructed, and I would commend your suggestion that citations should show that the cases are closely related for any individual cases to be selected.
    But to note again, the current see also names do not have this support and have an issue with POV. I note that EEng, who objected to this same inclusion on a different unrelated article, also made the point on his talk page to the sock who put this here and elsewhere, People are acquitted because there isn't the evidence to convict them, or to sustain a conviction on review. That doesn't mean they're angels, pure of heart, or incapable of offending later. You imply that Ernest Barrie was "acquitted only to go on on to offend again" (emphasis mine), when in fact there's no "again" here since as far as the law's concerned he wasn't guilty of the first crime -- that's what acquitted means. (User talk:EEng#Just to say). See our text for Michael Weir. We are still doing it. So, again, thank you for what you say, and I think the point you make is quite right, but I wonder whether this is not so much a "support" as a "comment - how it should be done". Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 08:30, 28 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
    @Sirfurboy: I see this as a Reader First issue. Are these links useful to the reader? In my opinion they are, so include them. I do not think WP:NPOV even comes into it, provided the descriptions are neutrally worded and factual. Following the links is a reader's choice, not yours. - Cameron Dewe (talk) 08:57, 28 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
Every link to another Wikipedia article is potentially "useful to the reader," Cameron Dewe. But the "See also" section" is not supposed to function like that ol' I Feel Lucky choice of yore. We have some rather loose but still helpful guidance from MOS:SEEALSO, e.g. Links in this section should be relevant and limited to a reasonable number. ... One purpose...is to enable readers to explore tangentially related topics, etc. We get to assess usefulness by the relevancy criterion, which has already been discussed at length in this RfC. I completely agree with you about putting the reader first and believe that the best way to serve the readers' requirements is to have all information in the right place. Take care. -The Gnome (talk) 11:54, 29 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
  • Comment - This section should be re-titled "should we delete this conten"t" anyway, since it's current wording makes it sound like the user is asking whether we should allow someone to add it to the article. Which, and am glad Cameron Dewe has noticed above, this discussion is not about; it is whether to keep the current version. Also, it should be further clarified to the few editors who think that this discussion as about whether to just link to miscarriages cases in general - that is not the case. The point is that other than the first two, the entries are previous very rare and similar UK cases where there was a similarly very-public campaign to free an individual, but where they were eventually apparently still determined to be guilty years later. It's unlikely you'll be able to reel off a list of cases that come under that very specific and narrow definition, let alone ones with their own article. It's not about linking to cases that are claimed miscarriages, because correct, if that was the criteria we'd be here all day. It's about linking to very specific, similar cases and precedents where a very public, years-long miscarriage campaign has ensued but have ultimately still ended with a conclusion of guilt. That is what the Michael Stone case is quite unique in these days, and linking to the very few other cases which have ended as such and have a separate article is not going to be endless. It's going to be links to a just a few relevant tangentially related previous cases and precedents, which is absolutely in fitting with what a see also section should include. MeltingDistrict (talk) 07:58, 28 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
    @MeltingDistrict: At first I was somewhat puzzled by the proposal made by Sirfurboy🏄, as in one post he appears to support inclusion and in the next, opposes it. I interpret this to mean all the comments for Support mean that the section should be kept while those that Oppose mean the the section should not. Since a "See also" section is a standard heading for Wikipedia articles, removing the heading does not make sense, and removing the content, particularly if it has been long-standing, does not make sense either. In this case I think editors need to put the reader first and provide a useful article even if the links to other articles are very tenuous. As a reader, I would rather have an article that links to some very tangentially related article in this space than one that omit one with an obvious relationship. I see this space as providing the reader with the choice to decide "if you liked this one, then here are some others you might be interested in too, as well as if were not satisfied by this article, try these others instead." It is for the reader to choose what editors (plural) suggest. - Cameron Dewe (talk) 08:50, 28 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
    Apologies if I was unclear anywhere. The RFC question itself has to be neutral (see WP:WRFC) so I asked: should the section be kept ASIS (and I pasted the current see also section, the ASIS version). That was the neutral question. I then explained why I oppose keeping the section ASIS. I have never opposed any See Also, but I do believe having nothing would be better than the status quo. But I welcome an RfC outcome that allows us to build a neutral and useful see also. Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 08:57, 28 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
    @MeltingDistrict: This is an RfC. The question is neutrally posed, and I think it is clear. Should the current see also section, as it is, remain in the article. An RfC is a discussion, and a useful outcome would be a clear steer on how a see also could be constructed. This would be useful if the result is "no, the current see also should not remain asis". The closer of the RfC will normally take such points into consideration in their close summary.
    You suggest that it is rare that someone would maintain innocence for years, and despite that, still remain incarcerated years later from unsuccessful appeals I have two points to maoke on that:
    1. This is not nearly as rare as you suppose. Commons committee evidence in 2021 revealed there were currently 1700 prisoners in the HM Prison system in the UK who were in this position, 96% continuing to maintain innocence beyond tariff. [16] This is just the UK.
    2. That is not what is in the see also section. The last three entries are selected apparently to make a POV point about Stone's appeal. Why else would we have a link to a case, and state its relation here is that they were acquitted only to go on and kill someone?
    Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 08:52, 28 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
    @Sirfurboy: You asked for comment, not a litigation discussion. I say keep the section, warts and all! - Cameron Dewe (talk) 09:00, 28 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
Sirfurboy, your statement above comes off as an attempt by you to re-model Cameron Dewe's support for the content remaining into support for your own argument that it should be deleted. Well no, this is my interpretation of what was said by @Cameron Dewe: he supports the idea of the links remaining because the descriptions provided help explain how the other articles are related, and that they should therefore be kept with those accompanying apt descriptions. He then suggests that if there are citations that might further help identify the relationships between the articles that they should be added to aid verifiability. And Dewe makes a very relevant point, as there are sources which do conflate the Stone and the provided linked cases together - e.g. these two: [17], [18], which involved discussing both the Stone and Simon Hall cases and their relevant CCRC appeals at a time when the Simon Hall case was similarly thought to be a miscarriage case like with Stone. If there are reliable sources which mention the Stone and Hall cases in the same breath, why would it be wrong for us to provide a see also link between them? And I think that if we used these two sources to provide further citations for the link being made, then that that would be to do exactly what Cameron is asking for: adding any extra citations to aid verifiability. MeltingDistrict (talk) 09:11, 28 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
Also, Sirfurboy, you have again misrepresented my argument after I have done my best to explain this to you and others here a number of times in the clearest possible terms - so I am given to wondering whether you are doing so purposely at this point in order to try and negate my point in the hope of a favourable close summary. You claim my argument is that "it is rare that someone would maintain innocence for years, and despite that, still remain incarcerated years later from unsuccessful appeals". No. Let me copy and paste what I said yet again, that other than the first two the entries are previous very rare and similar UK cases where there was a similarly very-public campaign to free an individual, but where they were eventually apparently still determined to be guilty (or there was a presumption of guilt) years later. I've said that Truecrimefan22 makes a valid point that the Weir case wasn't really a wide public campaign, so I agree with him that that one could be jettisoned. But the point is not that the cases are linked because of the 'unsuccessful appeals' aspects, it's the large public interest aspect. Because of the Barrie and Hall cases being well known due to their previous very visible campaigns, that is why there was such interest in them. Same with the Stone case. Stone's case = a very uniquely visible campaign for freedom that's ended (as of 2023) on an unsuccessful note years later. The Hall and Barrie cases? The same. Add that to the fact that the Hall and Stone cases were explicitly spoken about in reliable sources together during their campaigns: [19] [20], and you have cases between which similarities can be justifiably drawn. MeltingDistrict (talk) 09:51, 28 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
You have again misrepresented my argument As that was my first reply to you, I fail to see where the again comes from. I agree with him that that one could be jettisoned so technically you oppose the retention of the see also asis, and you agree that a see also section should be based on something other than editor whim. Some objective basis. You then define what you wish to use: it's the large public interest aspect. Why? Wouldn't it be better that see also directed to lesser known but more comparable cases than well known but unconnected ones? Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 10:13, 28 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
It was The Gnome that did a similar misrepresentation before, I meant that you have repeated their mistake and done a very similar thing again, perhaps you did not read where I clarified to him before? I think in general you should avoid trying to represent other people's points in your own way like with me and Cameron Dewe, as I don't think it helps your argument as it just appears like you are twisting what we've said. MeltingDistrict (talk) 10:30, 28 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
"Stone's case = a very uniquely visible campaign for freedom that's ended (as of 2023) on an unsuccessful note years later. The Hall and Barrie cases? The same." Although I have no real opinion on the non-Weir entries in the section, I have to point out that this justification doesn't really work. Stone's case is actually still ongoing, as the CCRC is conducting a fresh review of his conviction that may or may not result in a different conclusion. It's also inaccurate to say that attempts to overturn Barrie's conviction ended in failure. Rather, Barrie's conviction was successfully quashed only for him to be convicted of another unrelated offence. Truecrimefan22 (talk) 12:16, 30 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
Indeed. The cases are pretty distinct: Stone's case is currently being reviewed and he continues to maintain his innocence, Hall's conviction was upheld and he later admitted his guilt, and Barrie's conviction was overturned when it was concluded that the CCTV evidence showed someone else committing the crime! Hall's appeal was based on alleged weaknesses of the forensic evidence; Barrie's was based on exculpatory CCTV evidence; Stone's is based on claims that key witnesses lied, and on Bellfield's subsequent confession. Barrie and Hall both had support from miscarriage of justice campaigners; Stone doesn't seem to have.
There are plenty of other murder cases in category:Overturned convictions in the United Kingdom and it's not clear to me why these particular ones have been chosen unless the intent is to encourage a particular viewpoint about people who appeal their convictions. Caeciliusinhorto-public (talk) 15:26, 3 November 2023 (UTC)Reply
  • Comment - This see also section was added by a sockpuppet and repeatedly defended by sockpuppets of the same sockmaster and blocks have now been issued. I have thus requested this RfC be closed. However, I believe there is useful guidance here from editors who have commented in good faith about what should or shouldn't be in a see also, and would thank all who offered that. I'll leave it for an uninvolved editor to sum that up as they see fit. Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 08:18, 3 November 2023 (UTC)Reply
  • Close the discussion, per sockpuppetry above.--Ortizesp (talk) 06:29, 8 November 2023 (UTC)Reply
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.