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A mother who was wrongly convicted of killing two babies has launched a foundation to support other families who suffered miscarriages of justice.
Angela Cannings, who spent 18 months in prison before her life sentence was quashed, said she was outraged that the British courts were still convicting innocent people of harming their children.
The Angela Cannings Foundation was launched by Justice for Families, a lobby group that is calling on the Government to reform the way medical experts are used in court and for greater openness in family court proceedings.
The launch began with a minute’s silence for Sally Clark , who was cleared by the Court of Appeal in 2003 of killing her two sons after spending three years in prison, but who died less than two weeks ago.
Mrs Cannings, originally from Wiltshire, said that while in prison she felt as if she was the only person in the country who had gone through her ordeal, and wanted to help other people wronged by the justice system.
Mrs Cannings said the foundation would provide financial support to low income families who could not afford to appeal against their sentences.
Ian and Angela Gay, a couple from Worcestershire who were eventually cleared of poisoning a three-year-old boy they hoped to adopt, were also present at today’s launch.
Mr Gay called for changes in the law on the way expert evidence is given to juries and for the people who have been wrongly accused to be listened to.
“In our case, there were many, many experts involved and they all had different opinions. They can’t all be right and they aren’t all right all the time, but people don’t know that,” he said.
Marianne Williams, who was cleared last year of the murder and manslaughter of her 15-month-old son by poisoning him with salt, was also present.
Justice for Families, chaired by John Hemming MP, will be lobbying Parliament on miscarriages of justice as well as issues surrounding children in care, social work, adoption and the role of grandparents as well as parents and children in family life.
The campaign’s legal adviser, Bill Bache, called for new legislation, including a change to the way in which complaints against doctors are dealt with to make them more effective.
Mrs Cannings - along with Sally Clark - was convicted of her sons’ deaths following evidence from paediatric expert Professor Sir Roy Meadow.
Sir Roy was later found guilty of serious professional misconduct in relation to his evidence at the Sally Clark trial and was struck off the medical register, but later won a High Court appeal against the ruling.
The High Court judge also ruled that expert witnesses should be immune from disciplinary action, but this was later overturned by the Court of Appeal.
Mrs Cannings, a shop assistant, was convicted in April 2002 of smothering her sons Jason and Matthew. She always maintained her sons’ deaths were cot deaths, like that of her first child Gemma in 1989.
She won her freedom in 2003 after taking her case to the Court of Appeal.
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Dear Angela,
My heart goes out to you and to the other ladies that was wrongfully treated as harshly as you. I hope the government adequately compensates you all, and that Roy Meadows himself should end up in jail.
You were treated in an apalling, disgusting way, but hopefully in time the bad memories may fade.
The laws in this country are archaeic,outdated, and long overdue for review.
Yours very sincerely
Martin Chambers, Shanklin, Isle of Wight
Can you please tell me the address of your web site, and also could you let me know if the elderley guy with a peak cap ( who was standing behind you in the various TV shots outside of court) was Terry Cannings, an ex naval man that served on HMS Blake during 1961-1963?. I would be very interested to know.
Many thanks,
Yours sincerely
Martin Chambers, Shanklin, Isle of Wight
The new foundation is so important and has my full support. Angela Cannings was freed only because of the work by the Clark family.
The pressure by myself to persuade the UK government to look at 100 or more cases falls on deaf ears.
Michelle Dickinson has spent 4 years not for murder, not for manslaughter but because of a diagnosis of MSBP to dangerous to be free.
Condemned directly or indirectly by the same people that put Angela, Donna and Sally behind bars.
She is one example only.
John Fryer, Dinan, France