This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It will not be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/england/manchester/6383307.stm
The article has changed 6 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 3 | Version 4 |
---|---|
Bogus forensic expert faces jail | |
(about 1 hour later) | |
A bogus forensic psychologist who supplied evidence in hundreds of court cases over almost 30 years has been convicted on 20 charges. | |
Gene Morrison, 48, who left school with no qualifications, was described in court as a charlatan who had tricked judges, lawyers and police. | |
About 700 cases he worked on will now have to be re-assessed, Manchester's Minshull Street Crown Court was told. | About 700 cases he worked on will now have to be re-assessed, Manchester's Minshull Street Crown Court was told. |
Morrison, of Martin Street, Hyde, was told a jail sentence was inevitable. | |
The court heard he was paid at least £250,000 in taxpayers' money for giving apparently expert advice. | |
Morrison's firm, Criminal and Forensic Investigations Bureau (CFIB), was hired to give evidence in court. | Morrison's firm, Criminal and Forensic Investigations Bureau (CFIB), was hired to give evidence in court. |
I think he's a delusional character - the depths to which he sunk are unbelievable Det Supt Martin Bottomley | |
His firm's website - bearing the motto Exposing unrighteousness for the sake of righteousness - claimed he had more than 20 years experience. | |
Morrison admitted to police he began working as a forensic investigator in 1977 after buying certificates by post for a BSc in Forensic Science, a Masters with excellence in Forensic Investigation and a Doctorate in Criminology. | |
Despite this, during his trial he insisted on being called Dr Morrison. | |
He also told police he learned his skills from a retired West Yorkshire detective and a mysterious Mr X, a member of the Czech Republic's defence ministry. | |
Morrison worked out of an office in Hyde | |
Morrison told police he started an Open University (OU) degree, but in court revealed he only actually phoned for a brochure and recorded OU programmes from BBC2 in the 1970s. | |
In the beginning, Morrison hired real forensic scientists to carry out handwriting and fingerprint analysis which he would pass of as his own and charge clients double. | |
But later he simply cut and pasted old reports together and changed details, the court heard. | |
Morrison's clients included legal firms, insurance companies, private businesses and individuals. | |
He gave evidence in cases involving armed robbery, rape, death by dangerous driving, unexplained death and drugs offences. | |
'Walter Mitty' | |
Greater Manchester Police is sending a report to the attorney general on Morrison's work to examine any possible miscarriages of justice. | |
The force is also investigating hundreds of cases. | |
Det Supt Martin Bottomley, speaking outside court, described Morrison as a Walter Mitty-type character. | |
"His professional life has been based on a web of deceit and lies and he's fleeced many victims out of hundreds of thousands of pounds," said the detective. | |
"I think he's a delusional character. The depths to which he sunk are unbelievable, really." | |
Morrison was found guilty of 20 offences including obtaining a money transfer by deception, obtaining property by deception, perverting the course of justice and perjury. | |
He admitted a further two charges. | |
He was cleared of one count of obtaining a money transfer by deception. | He was cleared of one count of obtaining a money transfer by deception. |
The guilty verdicts followed two days of deliberation by the jury. | |
Judge Jeffrey Lewis remanded Morrison in custody and told him a custodial sentence was inevitable. | |
Morrison will be sentenced on Thursday. | Morrison will be sentenced on Thursday. |