This isn't a project, its a judicial process.I get that it is complicated. I get that there is a plethora of documentation to be reviewed. I get that the panel want to get it right and be thorough. What I don’t get, is how this can all be done without even giving the key stakeholders (Premier League and City) a view on when this will come to a conclusion.
Back in the day when I was an IT Project Manager I never dreamt of estimating project timelines and duration on a ’it will be done when it's done and it will cost you what I bill you basis.’ If only that had been an option.
My point is the real world doesn’t work like that but the legal profession does. In virtually any other profession it would be deemed unacceptable and I see no reason why the legal profession is exempt from criticism just because that's the way it has always been done. So would it be acceptable if we are all sat here in 6 or 12 months time still living in an information vacuum (hopefully extreme example)This isn't a project, its a judicial process.
When you appoint an independent commission, don't be surprised if they're independent.
For the removal of all doubt, the answer is brown sauce.I wasn't having a go at the mods, it just makes me laugh how this thread has covered everything including what you should have with a bacon buttie.
I presume the Mods have given up trying to keep it to the actual subject.
Don't suffer quietly, you can get medication these days .....For the removal of all doubt, the answer is brown sauce.
Philistine...Don't suffer quietly, you can get medication these days .....
Is that you Bobby?One day I'll wake up in a shower and it will all have been a dream..
I don't know anymore.Is that you Bobby?
I agree with this. No point stating that time is somehow an indication of a damming outcome for either party.I put this very question to a friend of mine recently. She's a retired barrister, herself (albeit, she worked on criminal cases and and very quick to point out this sort of case wasn't her thing).
Her take on it was that the length of time taken in deliberation wasn't indicative of any particular outcome being more likely.
"They're not paid those sort of sums to be expedient, they're paid to be thorough".
Rather than considering either side being embarrassed by timings of announcememts, the learned minds involved would be far more concerned about they themselves being embarrassed by not having done their job correctly.
Her reckoning was the best we can take from the length of their deliberations is a comfort in knowing that - whether we like what they have to say or not - nothing in the final ruling will have been arrived at lightly.
Surely there is some sort of cost management process to protect the parties. There must at least be a broad informal timeline. This is not a criminal case.I get that it is complicated. I get that there is a plethora of documentation to be reviewed. I get that the panel want to get it right and be thorough. What I don’t get, is how this can all be done without even giving the key stakeholders (Premier League and City) a view on when this will come to a conclusion.
Back in the day when I was an IT Project Manager I never dreamt of estimating project timelines and duration on a ’it will be done when it's done and it will cost you what I bill you basis.’ If only that had been an option.
From memory I seem to recall that the IC that dealt with Everton first charge included one member who had a financial background as opposed to law as it were.While you are here, surely those in the legal profession must have a pretty good idea of who the panel members are? There are only twelve to choose from, probably only six when the "lightweights" are taken out, and it can't be that difficult to match hearings and other dates with other workload of the likely suspects?
I may be way off the mark, I frequently am, but surely there must be a pretty good idea of who is on the panel by now, so the possibility of an unknown panel member with a long-term illness must be pretty remote?
Isn’t Bobby dead ?Is that you Bobby?
FOCOne day I'll wake up in a shower and it will all have been a dream..
He could also mean "kerching" as we go through loads of appeals and punishment hearing with mitigation hearings on top!I rarely post so apologies if this has been raised before. Considering the absence of official comment, I wondered what people take from this brief comment made by Lord Pannick at the beginning of his speech in July here: https://parliamentlive.tv/event/index/5d6074ef-ff8e-40c5-9a63-3acaac1158ee?in=20:29:29
The standard is not “without doubt”. It is on a balance of probabilities. I wouldn’t jump to your conclusion
Yes it wouldMy point is the real world doesn’t work like that but the legal profession does. In virtually any other profession it would be deemed unacceptable and I see no reason why the legal profession is exempt from criticism just because that's the way it has always been done. So would it be acceptable if we are all sat here in 6 or 12 months time still living in an information vacuum (hopefully extreme example)