Prisoners have a right to communicate with the media about their cases. Yet after 41 years in jail, Bamber has been bannedA few weeks ago I wrote a lengthy email to Jeremy Bamber, who has been in prison for nearly 41...
See morePrisoners have a right to communicate with the media about their cases. Yet after 41 years in jail, Bamber has been banned
A few weeks ago I wrote a lengthy email to Jeremy Bamber, who has been in prison for nearly 41 years after being convicted of murdering five family members. Bamber has always protested his innocence, and the late Guardian prison correspondent Eric Allison and I have frequently written about Bamber and the White House Farm murders in the Guardian over the years.
In the email, I asked about aspects of his case as I often do, chatted about a football match I’d been to with my younger daughter at the weekend, told him my older daughter was pregnant, mentioned that I’d been out for lunch with a forensics expert, and said we had an amazing blossom tree across the road that had just come into full bloom. I also emailed a photo of the blossom tree.
Simon Hattenstone is a features writer for the Guardian
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Prisoners have a right to communicate with the media about their cases. Yet after 41 years in jail, Bamber has been bannedA few weeks ago I wrote a lengthy email to Jeremy Bamber, who has been in prison for nearly 41...
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