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Anthony Nolan |
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Anthony Nolan died in HMP Kingston on 22 December 2009, aged 49. The Ministry of Justice stated: "HMP Kingston prisoner Anthony Patrick Nolan (DOB 23/08/1960) was discovered in his cell at 8.15am on Tuesday 22 December. Prison staff tried to resuscitate Mr Nolan, but he was pronounced dead at 11.14am. The cause of death is not yet known." MOJUK commented: "The press release from the *Ministry of Justice is bland and does not tally with the phone calls MOJUK has had from prisoners in HMP Kingston, who more than suspect that prison negligence contributed to Anthony's death." He was convicted of murder in 1998 and always maintained his innocence. In 2003 he issued the following statement: Statement of Anthony Patrick Nolan
I am Anthony Nolan aged 42. On the 4 July 1998, I was arrested and subsequently charged with murder. I was alleged to have shot and killed a Patrick Delaney in Kentish Town, London.Mr Delaney was shot and killed in broad daylight which was witnessed by several people.
At police interviews, I responded to all questions with "no comment." and made no statement. At the time of the murder, I was with my mother in her house which was close to the killing of Delaney. Following my arrest, I later agreed to attend an identification parade, I had nothing to hide and didn't believe that it was me who could be selected as the person responsible. Whilst I knew Mr Delaney, I also knew the person whom Mr Delaney was with at the time. This other person a Gideon Tsagne was to tell the police that it was me who was responsible for the murder. However, at the time of my arrest, I didn't know those details. At the identification parade, two witnesses who saw the whole series of events did not select me as the person responsible. Another person, an elderly woman aged 70 having walked along the parade, approached the officer in charge and said "the best I could say is near number seven" which was the position I was stood in. The officer did not ask her to clarify that but merely turned and said, "the witness has made a positive identification of number seven." I was dumfounded. Mr Tasagne did not attend the parade. Later, whilst I was on remand in Belmarsh prison, Mr Tsagne was himself shot and killed. Police evidence was that it was with the same gun that had been used to shoot and kill Mr Delaney. At my trial, Mr Tsagne's statement was read out in court although my defence team sought to have it excluded. The elderly woman who was called to give evidence had difficulty in as much as seeing me in the dock, never mind seeing the lawyers closest to her but went on to point me out as the person she allegedly saw shoot and kill Mr Delaney. Things might have seemed to have improved when evidence was given that this woman had originally told police that she had only seen the back of the gunman as he made his escape, that she hadn't seen his face. What on earth were the police thinking in allowing such a person, given what she had told them to allow her to attend an identification parade unless she was to try and identify the face of the alleged killer on the basis of the killer's back which is illogical and nonsense.
A fuller account of this case can be seen at http://www.mojuk.org.uk/nolan.html |
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