![]() |
|||||||||||||
|
Sir John May |
The Right hon. Sir John May was a former Court of Appeal judge appointed by the British Government to investigate the miscarriages of justice related to the Maguire Seven and other miscarriages linked to IRA bombing offences1.
On 20 October 1989 following the quashing of the Guildford Four convictions, May was appointed to inquire into both that and the related case of the Maguire Seven.2 On 12 July 1990, the Home Secretary David Waddington published the interim report
The report criticised the trial judge John Donaldson. It unearthed improprieties in the handling of scientific evidence that were also relevant to the other cases and declared the convictions unsound and recommended referral back to the Court of Appeal.
The Inquiry found that RARDE scientists Walter Elliott and Douglas Higgs had lied and suppressed evidence at the trials of both Judith Ward and the Maguire Seven4. They knew but did not say that a positive result was not unique for nitroglycerine. They did not disclose, even to the prosecution, negative secondary tests.
The terms of reference of the initial inquiry were expanded, as a result, to include
On 14 March 1991, the inquiry became the Royal Commission on Criminal Justice covering the systemic problems uncovered earlier.The commission was chaired by Viscount Runciman of Doxford.