Lowson
The barristers revisit a fascinating case from 1884 in County Durham where three men stood trial for the murder of a policeman, yet only one man faced the death sentence.
Leading criminal barristers Sasha Wass QC and Jeremy Dein QC revisit their investigation into the brutal murder of a policeman. Three men were tried for the crime, but only one was hanged.
Butterknowle, County Durham, 1884. On a dark and rainy Saturday night, following a pigeon-shooting competition, Police Sergeant William Smith was out doing his rounds at pub closing time. Suddenly, a group of three men emerged from the darkness and brutally attacked him. The assault was so severe that his skull was fractured, and he was left for dead in the road. Two passing doctors went to the wounded sergeant鈥檚 aid, and he was carried to his house. But a couple of hours later, Sergeant Smith died from his horrific injuries.
Suspicion fell on three local miners who had been drinking in Butterknowle that evening. Among them was 25-year-old Joseph Lowson. Lowson鈥檚 brother-in-law William Siddle had previously been charged with assaulting Sergeant Smith, and the two of them were arrested along with friend Joseph Hodgson.
The three men stood trial together at the Durham Assizes, all desperately protesting their innocence. The two doctors gave identification evidence against the three miners, and Lowson was linked to the crime by a button found at the scene that was missing from his shirt.
Hodgson was acquitted by the jury, but Lowson and Siddle were both found guilty and sentenced to death. At the last minute, Siddle was reprieved and on 27 May 1884, Joseph Lowson, alone, was hanged.
Over 100 years later, Joseph Lowson鈥檚 great-great-nephew Peter and his wife Diane enlisted the help of the barristers to explore the case. Jeremy and Sasha met an identification expert and forensic scientist to re-evaluate the evidence against Lowson that proved so damning at trial. In a case where three men stood trial and only one was executed, could they find anything to question the original verdict?
Now, a year on from their initial investigation, the barristers learn how Diane and Peter responded to the judge's verdict. Do revelations about what happened to Joseph Hodgson's co-defendants after the trial throw new doubt on his conviction?
Last on
More episodes
Previous
Next
You are at the last episode
Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Presenter | Sasha Wass |
Presenter | Jeremy Dein |
Executive Producer | Mike Benson |
Production Department | Michael Klokkos |
Producer | Simon Cooper |
Producer | James Pearson |
Producer | Emily Wallis |
Producer | Clare Wales |
Director | James Pearson |
Production Company | Chalkboard TV |