Man wrongly jailed for 17 years over rape says apology is ‘too little, too late’

Andrew Malkinson was wrongfully convicted of a 2003 rape in Salford (Picture: Jordan Pettitt/PA)

A man who spent 17 years in jail for a rape he did not commit says an ‘unreserved apology’ he has now received is ‘too little, to late’.

The Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC) has admitted failing Andrew Malkinson, who was convicted of raping a woman while working as a security guard in Salford, Greater Manchester, in 2003.

Mr Malkinson was finally released in July last year after his conviction was quashed by the Court of Appeal after years of protesting his innocence.

The 58-year-old could have been released after six-and-a-half years if he had given a false confession – but he refused to plead guilty for something he didn’t do.

He had applied for his case to be reviewed by the CCRC in 2009, but at the conclusion of its review in 2012 the commission refused to order further forensic testing or refer the case for appeal, amid concerns over costs.

A second application was rejected in 2020.

Crucial DNA evidence had been available since 2007, but no match was found on the police database at the time.

Mr Malkinson, pictured at the Royal Courts of Justice in London last July (Picture: PA)

The CCRC’s chairwoman, Helen Pitcher, said an independent review of the case carried out by Chris Henley KC made it clear the ‘commission failed’ Mr Malkinson, adding: ‘For this, I am deeply sorry.’

But Mr Malkinson called the apology ‘too little, too late’ as he questioned her sincerity and called on Justice Secretary Alex Chalk to bring in ‘new leadership’ at the CCRC.

In a statement on Thursday, Ms Pitcher said: ‘Mr Henley’s report makes sobering reading, and it is clear from his findings that the commission failed Andrew Malkinson. For this, I am deeply sorry. I have written to Mr Malkinson to offer him my sincere regret and an unreserved apology on behalf of the commission.

‘There may have been a belief that I have been unwilling ever to apologise to Mr Malkinson, and I want to clarify that this is not the case. For me, offering a genuine apology required a clear understanding of the circumstances in which the commission failed Mr Malkinson. We now have that.

‘Nobody can ever begin to imagine the devastating impact that Mr Malkinson’s wrongful conviction has had on his life, and I can only apologise for the additional harm caused to him by our handling of his case.’

He branded the CCRC’s apology as ‘too little too late’ (Picture: Appeal)

Mr Malkinson, who previously called for Ms Pitcher to be sacked and stripped of her OBE said the CCRC’s failings had caused him a ‘world of pain’.

He accused Ms Pitcher of apologising now because ‘the CCRC has been found out, and the last escape hatch has now closed on them’.

In a statement issued on his behalf by legal charity Appeal, Mr Malkinson said: ‘The time for Helen Pitcher to apologise was last summer when I was exonerated.

‘It was already crystal clear that the CCRC had completely failed me. Yet she’s held off on apologising until a report spelled this out for her in black and white. It is hard for me to see sincerity in an apology after all this time.

‘The CCRC’s delay in apologising to me added significantly to the mental turmoil I am experiencing as I continue to fight for accountability for what was done to me.’

He claimed Ms Pitcher disputed criticisms of the CCRC’s handling of his case when they were put to her by his lawyer in September last year and refused a direct request for an apology at the time.

The 58-year-old said others like him have been wrongfully imprisoned (Picture: PA)

‘That smacks to me of someone who is in denial and not fit to lead a body which is meant to be dedicated to rooting out failings in our justice system”, he said, adding: ‘I hope the Justice Secretary Alex Chalk will bring in new leadership at the CCRC.

‘I am innocent and I am not the only one. Others must not be let down as I was. The CCRC should be led by people with empathy, humility and a track record of fighting injustice.’

Mr Malkinson’s legal team previously discovered significant similarities between his ordeal and the earlier CCRC case of Victor Nealon, whose 1997 conviction was overturned by the Court of Appeal in December 2013 after new DNA evidence was unearthed.

An inquiry ordered by the government into Mr Malkinson’s case is also being carried out.

In October last year, Mr Malkinson was living in a tent on a campsite in Seville, Spain after travelling through Europe in a friend’s van.

He said living in a tent allowed him to enjoy ‘the anonymity and nature’, adding that he ‘cannot bear’ to be in Britain.

Mr Malkinson explained at the time that he was due compensation, but was ‘broke’ until it came through.

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