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05 December 2025 / Dr Jon Robins
Issue: 8142 / Categories: Features , Criminal
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Freedom: the final act

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Dr Jon Robins reports on a murder conviction that was quashed—twice

In the end, the business of overturning the conviction of a man who spent more than 27 years in prison for a 1997 murder was completed in less than eight minutes of the Court of Appeal’s time. This final act of R v Plummer [2025] EWCA Crim 1036 was delivered in courtroom number nine at the end of July as part of the annual deck-clearing before the close of the legal year.

This was the second time in less than five years that the court had overturned the conviction of Justin Plummer. I first spoke to Mr Plummer in the wake of his successful appeal in the summer of 2021. He rang me up from HMP Belmarsh in the happy expectation of becoming a free man.

In the first of many brief phone calls over the intervening years, he explained how he had been sleeping on the floor of his cell for years protesting his innocence before the pips that

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NEWS
Talk of a reserved ‘Welsh seat’ on the Supreme Court is misplaced. In NLJ this week, Professor Graham Zellick KC explains that the Constitutional Reform Act treats ‘England and Wales’ as one jurisdiction, with no statutory Welsh slot
The government’s plan to curb jury trials has sparked ‘jury furore’. Writing in NLJ this week, David Locke, partner at Hill Dickinson, says the rationale is ‘grossly inadequate’
A year after the $1.5bn Bybit heist, crypto fraud is booming—but so is recovery. Writing in NLJ this week, Neil Holloway, founder and CEO of M2 Recovery, warns that scams hit at least $14bn in 2025, fuelled by ‘pig butchering’ cons and AI deepfakes
After Woodcock confirmed no general duty to warn, debate turns to the criminal law. Writing in NLJ this week, Charles Davey of The Barrister Group urges revival of misprision or a modern equivalent
Family courts are tightening control of expert evidence. Writing in NLJ this week, Dr Chris Pamplin says there is ‘no automatic right’ to call experts; attendance must be ‘necessary in the interests of justice’ under FPR Pt 25
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