Sorry, Mike, but we are parting company here. The decisions of the courts are, as you say, not infallible and people have been hanged (not hung) in the past, one good reason why we don't have the death penalty of course.
However, the current state of play is that he was found guilty in a fair and open trial of the crime and must be treated as such unless and until the judicial process decides otherwise and, if all his appeals still find him guilty then he must be considered as such. I agree that the verdict may appear contrary where the two accused are concerned but that was the verdict reached by the jury on the evidence presented. Furthermore, Evans first appeal failed to overturn that verdict.
If the Criminal Courts Review Tribunal overturn the verdict then, yes, he must be considered innocent of the crime, although far from innocent of the unsavoury events of the evening. If they uphold the verdict then he is still guilty and any subsequent decisions made about his career mus

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