Wednesday, May 24, 2017

David Harold Eastman: Australia; Bulletin: Second trial over murder of former Canberra Police Chief Colin Winchester pushed back more than six months...Reporter Megan Gorrey; Canberra Times. May 24, 2017..." Eastman, 71, was set to face a jury for the second time from July to fight allegations he gunned down Mr Winchester, in a fresh trial estimated at six months and with more than 300 witnesses. That trial has now been vacated and the case has been delayed until February next year. Eastman was charged with murdering Mr Winchester, who was AFP assistant commissioner at the time, in the driveway of his south Canberra home in 1989. He was convicted and sentenced to life behind bars in 1995 and has since launched a series of long-running legal battles in the ACT's courts. His conviction was eventually quashed in 2014 after a court found he did not get a fair trial and he was released from prison after serving more than 19 years in jail."


"David Eastman's planned mammoth retrial for the shooting death of former Canberra police chief Colin Winchester has been pushed back and will not start until 2018, more than six months after the case was expected to begin in the ACT Supreme Court. Eastman, 71, was set to face a jury for the second time from July to fight allegations he gunned down Mr Winchester, in a fresh trial estimated at six months and with more than 300 witnesses. That trial has now been vacated and the case has been delayed until February next year. Eastman was charged with murdering Mr Winchester, who was AFP assistant commissioner at the time, in the driveway of his south Canberra home in 1989. He was convicted and sentenced to life behind bars in 1995 and has since launched a series of long-running legal battles in the ACT's courts. His conviction was eventually quashed in 2014 after a court found he did not get a fair trial and he was released from prison after serving more than 19 years in jail. Prosecutors vowed to push ahead with a fresh trial, prompting Mr Eastman to launch an application for a permanent stay of proceedings. His lawyers argued a retrial would not be fair and extensive media coverage, as well as Eastman's age, mental health and time already served weighed against a second trial going ahead.........Acting Justice David Ashley last year threw out that application. Eastman strongly affirmed his innocence after the failed court bid and vowed he would continue to fight the allegations.........Eastman is on bail. The ACT government set aside more than $3.3 million for the DPP and court system, as well as $1.7 million for Legal Aid, for the Eastman case in the 2015-16 budget. "