’Get the others’ says press after Lawrence trial
Gary Dobson, 36, and David Norris, 35, had denied involvement in the brutal knife attack on 18-year-old Stephen Lawrence at a bus stop in Eltham, in April 1993, by a gang of white youths who had shouted racist abuse.
But on the third day of their deliberations following an emotionally-charged six-week trial, the jury at the Old Bailey found both men guilty on the basis of new forensic evidence.
The press said the painful fight for justice would not end until all the attackers are jailed.
Wednesday’s Sun ran with the headline "Now get the others", echoing the post-verdict remarks made by Lawrence’s father, Neville, while The Independent carried a quote from Neville Lawrence that he would "not be able to rest" until all members of the gang were brought to justice as its front-page headline.
The Times called the decision "a qualified victory for civilised values".
Neville Lawrence said in a statement read on his behalf that he was "full of joy and relief", but added: "There were five or six attackers that night. I do not think I will be able to rest until they are all brought to justice."
The pair will be sentenced Wednesday, with the starting point for jail terms around 12 years as they were under 18 at the time of the attack. However the judge may give higher sentences as the murder was racially motivated.
Lawrence’s parents wept with relief at the verdict, but his mother Doreen, who has campaigned tirelessly for justice for her son, hit out at police for taking so long to secure the convictions.
She added: "These verdicts will not bring my son back."
The Guardian said the case had been an "insufferable ordeal for Lawrence’s parents" and had "inflicted a generation of shame on the Metropolitan police".
However, the intense scrutiny had brought about positive changes in the force’s attitude to race, it contended.
The Telegraph expressed relief that "justice has been done", adding the only "bright light" to shine through the horrific case was "the courage and dignity of Stephen Lawrence’s parents, Doreen and Neville."
The Daily Mail, which ran a front-page headline in 1997 branding Dobson, Norris and three of their friends as murderers, claimed credit for the ruling.
"The Mail’s victory" it declared. "Stephen Lawrence’s killers were finally brought to justice years after our front page sensationally branded the evil pair murderers."
Scotland Yard’s Acting Deputy Commissioner Cressida Dick said the force would not give up its search for the other killers, although she admitted that there were currently no live lines of inquiry.
"If we get new evidence, if we have further opportunities, we will respond to that... We don’t see this as the end of the road," she said.
The Lawrence case has remained in the public eye both for its brutality and as one of the key moments in the modern history of British criminal justice.
A major judge-led inquiry into the handling of the case in 1999 found "institutional racism" within the police and led to significant changes in the way murders involving black victims are investigated.
Duwayne Brooks, Lawrence’s best friend who was with him on the night of the murder but managed to escape the gang, tweeted: "Some justice at last."
The prosecution’s case hinged on new forensic evidence unearthed by a cold case team using techniques unavailable to the original detectives, which linked the suspects to Lawrence through blood, hair and tiny fibres on their clothing.
Lawyers for Dobson and Norris had unsuccessfully argued that the evidence was the result of contamination by police because it had been badly stored.
The pair were among five men arrested in the weeks after the murder, but state prosecutors concluded that there was insufficient evidence to progress with murder charges for any of them.
In September 1994, Lawrence’s family began a private prosecution against Dobson and two others, but it collapsed in 1996 and the trio were acquitted.
Nine years later, the law was changed to allow suspects to be tried twice for the same crime when there is new evidence, clearing the way for a fresh prosecution of Dobson in 2011.
He was already in prison, having been jailed for five years in July 2010 for supplying and possessing drugs.
Cressida Dick said it was a "matter of huge regret" that it had taken 18 years to convict anyone for the murder, but insisted the police had overhauled the way they investigate homicide as a result of the case.
Prime Minister David Cameron said the verdict "cannot ease the pain of losing a son".
"But, for Doreen and Neville Lawrence, I hope that it brings at least some comfort after their years of struggle," he said.
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