Luke Mitchell
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Luke Muir Mitchell (born July 24th 1988) is a Scottish teenager convicted of murdering his girlfriend, Jodi Jones in June 2003.
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[edit] Investigation and trial
On June 30, 2003, fourteen-year-old Jodi Jones was found brutally murdered in Dalkeith, Scotland. Her body was along a path through some woods, and she had been subjected to what prosecutors would later describe in court as a "savage knife attack." Her mutilated body had been found by Mitchell and the Jones family who were leading a search for her after she had failed to return home. Jodi had set out to visit Luke Mitchell, her boyfriend, and Mitchell himself was one of many local people taking part in the search. The fact that Mitchell and his dog discovered the body very quickly and that the search was at night and in poor weather would later play a major part in the criminal investigation.
Eventually Mitchell was arrested and charged with the crime. At his trial at the High Court of Justiciary at Edinburgh he pleaded not guilty. During the 42-day trial which followed the jury heard evidence from both Mitchell's mother and brother as well as visiting the crime scene. The evidence of Shane Mitchell was crucial as it contradicted the alibi his brother gave as part of his defence as Luke Mitchell said that he was at home cooking dinner at the time of the murder. The trial is the longest of a single accused in Scottish legal history.
On January 21, 2005, the jury found him guilty after 5 hours of deliberation. Mitchell, aged sixteen at the time of his conviction, was condemned as being "truly wicked" by Judge Lord Nimmo Smith. He was also found guilty of a separate charge of supplying cannabis.
Mitchell's sentencing took place on February 11, 2005. Nimmo Smith told Mitchell that he would spend a minimum of 20 years in prison before being considered for parole.
Mitchell was supposedly a major fan of Marilyn Manson. The prosecution claimed that Luke had taken a keen interest in The Black Dahlia case of 1947, an unsolved homicide whereby an aspiring young actress was found murdered and mutilated in Los Angeles. Manson painted a picture of Elizabeth Short's injuries. The Crown suggested that there was a similarity between Jodi and Elizabeth's injuries. In fact a 2007 BBC documentary showed Mitchell only owned one CD by Manson, bought after the murder took place and there is no actual evidence that Mitchell knew of the Dahlia case till after the murder. [1]
Mitchell described himself as a Goth and scribbled Satanic symbols on his schoolbooks. As well as dealing in cannabis he was reportedly a heavy user of the drug. However, his supposed gothic outlook may well be questionable, considering the information provided by the media is of a nature that has resulted in many misconceptions in the past.[2]
It was stated during the trial that Mitchell's clothes may have been destroyed in a garden incinerator and neighbours noted a strange smell coming from the garden. Also during the trial, a mock up of the wall at the crime scene was made. Mitchell went through a distinctive "V"-shaped hole in one part of the wall to find the body, claiming that a family dog had alerted him to something suspicious. This was challenged by members of the 'search team' and the prosecution stated that only the killer could have known the exact location of Jodi's body. Along with the testimony of Shane Mitchell, these facts seemed to form the main basis of the prosecution.
The mock-up wall was erected in the Laigh Hall, below Parliament Hall within Parliament House, across the road from the High Court of Justiciary building in Edinburgh's Old Town, where the trial was being heard.
The lack of DNA evidence and alleged interest in Satanism and Marilyn Manson have led critics to believe that Luke was found guilty more so because of his taste in music and clothes, 'hardly abnormal in a rebellious teenager', than because there was hard evidence against him.
[edit] Appeal
In March 2006, Luke was granted leave to appeal against his conviction (and his length of sentence) at the High Court of Justiciary sitting as the Court of Criminal Appeal in Edinburgh, on the grounds of the trial judge's refusal to hear the original case outside of the city.
In November 2006, Luke Mitchell won the right to appeal against his conviction for murder. Mitchell's legal team had wanted a number of grounds for appeal to be heard but the judges said only one would be allowed. Scotland's senior judge, the Lord Justice General, Lord Hamilton said they would allow a ground of appeal claiming that the trial judge erred in refusing to move Mitchell's case out of Edinburgh following publicity ahead of the proceedings. Lord Hamilton, who was sitting with Lord Kingarth and Lord MacLean, said: "We have come, with some hesitation, to the view that this ground is arguable." "There is an argument that the trial judge failed adequately to take into account the circumstances that the publicity might have had an impact of particular strength not only in the immediate locality of the crime but in a somewhat wider area embracing the city of Edinburgh and other towns in the Lothians," he said. There was a huge media fanfare surrounding the trial and this may have affected the final outcome. The fact that the jury were not put into a hotel for the night of the decision has also been cited as a factor. The Court of Criminal Appeal in Edinburgh heard Mitchell's appeal in February 2008, but in May 2008 his original conviction was upheld.
[edit] Appeal Decision
On the 16th of May 2008 the judges' verdict was given. The Lord Justice General, Lord Hamilton delivered the decision. Also sitting over the appeal were Lord Osborne and Lord Kingarth. The verdict was filmed and later broadcast on television and radio.
The judges refused the appeal. They ruled that there was sufficient evidence in law that Luke Mitchell could be convicted on and rejected his other grounds of appeal.
Mitchell's appeal against his sentence has yet to be considered.
[edit] Frontline Scotland
In May 2007, a BBC Scotland Frontline Scotland documentary special was broadcast about the case on BBC One. It explored a theory - not followed up by police during the initial investigation - that the murder may have been committed not by Mitchell, but by a student and heavy drug user who was alleged to have handed in an essay about killing a girl in the woods a few weeks before the murder. A friend of this suspect saw him soon after the murder and observed he was heavily scratched about the face. The 'satanic scribblings' on his school book such as 'I have tasted the Devil's Green Blood', have been influenced by computer game monologues from the best selling video game Max Payne rather than being satanic verse as indicated to the jury. The documentary also covered the common misconception that Mitchell was an obsessive Marilyn Manson fan and had a keen interest in the Black Dahlia murder. Only one Marilyn Manson CD and a ripped up calendar was actually found in Mitchell's room. The CD was also found to have been purchased after the murder took place. It was also said by this documentary that after searching Mitchell's computer, there were absolutely no links to the Black Dahlia or the paintings done by Manson of the murder. The Jones family were reported in the Scottish Daily Record to be "outraged" at the programme, but the newspaper did also mention that none of them had actually watched it.[1].
[edit] References
- ^ a b "Luke Mitchell: The Devil's Own?" Samantha Poling, BBC Frontline Scotland
- ^ "I did not inspire Jodi's killer, says rock star Marilyn Manson" KEVIN HURLEY The Scotsman Mon 14 Feb 2005
This case inspired the book "No Smoke, The Shocking Truth about British Justice" by Sandra Lean, leading to an investigation of several other alleged wrongful convictions.