My point was that the evidence gathering process is usually subject to a greater degree of rigour, challenge, checking and cross checking. In this case, what we may have is a system which has a veneer of a legal process but without a similar degree of efficiency or safeguard. Something that may be inadequate to the needs and context of the present instance. And yes, I do not (and did not) deny that Procter has a great deal of experience in cricket matters. The operative word, however, is cricket matters which as I outlined earlier is the usual run of the mill of umpiring decisions and bending the rules. But I doubt he has the relevant experience or skill to deal with a case such as this. Afaik, it is the first case where a player has been found guilty of racial abuse towards another player on the field of play. A damning and serious allegation which has only been supported by the unsubstantiated word of 5 individuals of the opposing team. It is even worse when you consider that the incidents seemed to happen on the pitch or close to, but neither of the two umpires (who ought to be well in range given the location) heard a thing.
AWTA. Don't think there's been a similar circumstance.
This brings me to another point. Your assumption that it is difficult to conceal lying. I dont see this as anything than what it is - an assumption that is unjustified and even sanguine.
DAWTA. Sorta.
One person lying their butt off about something might pass the bull**** test but co-ordinating several people and making sure they all lie consistently is a completely different story. In my investigative experience, the first few lies might be okay if they crooks had a bit of time to plan but as soon as the question start to diverge from the script, their stories quickly fell apart. I guess it depends on how deeply Proctor interviewed them which brings me to the next point;
Come to that, does Procter given his administrative experience really have the skill and the expertise to filter and sift through varying accounts of what went on during a tense passage of a test match? Especially considering that rarely, if ever, do eye witness acccounts of the same thing agree? I sincerely doubt it.
I know the decision was reached in an evening but I doubt Proctor waited until the end of play on day 5 to start looking into it. Still, it's possible he doesn't have the investigative experience to know what questions to ask and how but he might have. For example, he might not know exactly what a cognitive interview is but might do it by default. Who knows?
t depends on what the rules were originally devised to handle. Racial charges on the field of play seem to be a whole new kettle of fish (on the face of it, more seems to have been done to protect players from spectator taunts than from each other) and I would therefore not be surprised to see a whole new raft of procedures come into effect as a result of this.
That might be good or not. Depends. If the insistence is that there must be microphone evidence or something similar to sustain a charge and corroborative evidence isn't to be used, that would be knee-jerk, CSI effect and all that.
The corroboration of 5 biased witnessess is quite frankly suspect (and would most certainly be open to, at least, question in a legal proceeding) given the context of the situation (and dare I say it, the fact that Harbhajan is hardly a favourite of the Australians) as well as the ethos of team and mateship. And it opens up a flaw in the process that the verdict of the members of the opposing team is not open to contestation (something that will probably - I hope - be covered in the appeals process). Especially when we consider that when the incident first came to light, the first question everyone asked was "what do the umpires say?".
All decisions of this nature should be reviewed carefully. But, if it's referred to the ICC or a court of some sort and it's found that Proctor's decision was justified and that the corroboration was significant enough to sustain the charge, will you accept it? You might, many others won't.
The umpires did say something, though, "We didn't hear anything.". That's why there was the call for other evidence. And, as I said, corroboration may not prove something conclusively but it's far from worthless either. The witnesses may be biased but there would have to have be plenty of consistency in their stories for this charge to be upheld I reckon and it would have to be defensible. Proctor should know this and should also know that if he makes conclusions without enough evidence, well, he probably won't have his job for much longer, further decreasig the probability that the evidence he had was insufficient under ICC guidelines. If the BCCI is arguing that the guidelines need to be changed, whole different ball game and beyond Proctor's reach.
Let me say again, that if Harbhajan did do it - he deserves everything that comes his way. Ignorance is no excuse and he should know better. My point was that a dubious process has been followed and I see no two ways around this, and for this Procter (and the ICC, I suppose) are responsible.
You're assuming it's dubious. Many people more experienced than you or me came up with the guidelines so let's just see what happens from here before deriding the process, hmm?
And popular among South African rugby commentators when describing Polynesian players....
Isn't thart for a different reason, though?