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In page Capital punishment in the United Kingdom:

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Whilst the report recommended abolition from an ethical standpoint, it made no mention of possible miscarriages of justice.[citation needed] The public had by then expressed dissatisfaction with the verdict in the case of Timothy Evans, who was tried and hanged in 1950 for murdering his infant daughter. It later transpired in 1953 that John Christie had strangled at least six women in the same house; he also confessed to killing Timothy's wife. If the jury in Evans's trial had known this, Evans might have been acquitted. There were other cases in the same period where doubts arose over convictions and subsequent hangings, such as the notorious case of Derek Bentley.[citation needed]