On 17 Feb, Charles wrote:
I came across Bushel's Case, which established in 1670 that a judge can't really lock up a jury without food and drink indefinitely to get the required verdict from them. Quite a lot hangs on that.
What would be nice would be a photo of the plaque in the Old Bailey, commemorating William Penn and his "partner in crime" William Mead, who were in the dock in the relevant case.
I asked a friend of mine, a professional event photographer who works in London, if he could kindly help, and today he took these:
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:William_Penn_and_William_Mead_pl...
one of which I have added to four relevant articles.
Andy, that's great. Many thanks to you, and your obliging friend.
Charles
Andy I'm trying to arrange event at derby museum ...interested? I'm hoping you are. Best. R On 23 Apr 2016 11:30 pm, "Andy Mabbett" andy@pigsonthewing.org.uk wrote:
On 17 Feb, Charles wrote:
I came across Bushel's Case, which established in 1670 that a judge can't really lock up a jury without food and drink indefinitely to get the required verdict from them. Quite a lot hangs on that.
What would be nice would be a photo of the plaque in the Old Bailey, commemorating William Penn and his "partner in crime" William Mead, who were in the dock in the relevant case.
I asked a friend of mine, a professional event photographer who works in London, if he could kindly help, and today he took these:
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:William_Penn_and_William_Mead_pl...
one of which I have added to four relevant articles.
-- Andy Mabbett @pigsonthewing http://pigsonthewing.org.uk
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