Hoxton man wrongly jailed for murder loses lengthy compensation battle
Sam Hallam, who spent seven years in prison before his conviction was quashed in 2012, left ‘very disappointed’ by Supreme Court ruling
Sam Hallam, who spent seven years in prison before his conviction was quashed in 2012, left ‘very disappointed’ by Supreme Court ruling
Sam Hallam’s murder conviction was quashed in 2012 after he had spent seven years in prison
Court will review whether earlier ruling breaches ECHR on presumption of innocence
Legal fight taken to highest court in the land as Court of Appeal dismisses Sam Hallam’s compensation claim for the seven years he spent in prison
High Court rules Sam Hallam will get nothing to make up for the seven years he spent in prison an innocent man
Court hears he was wrongly accused of assaulting officers who stopped a car he was travelling in with his brother and friends
Patrick Maguire speaks to the Hackney Citizen about what might lie ahead for Sam Hallam, recently freed after his murder conviction was quashed last month
Hackney South MP turns up uninvited at the home of miscarriage of justice victim Sam Hallam – and is turned away
An updated play based on documentary evidence from the Sam Hallam murder trial is now showing following the quashing of his conviction
Young man jailed over 2004 killing then released by court blames Met police for taking away eight years of his life
Decision to release 24-year-old after appeal over 2004 murder conviction follows long legal battle by family
Veteran justice campaigner Paul May was asked to help out by friends of Hallam following conviction in 2005
Hallam was jailed in 2005 for the murder of trainee chef Essayas Kassahun but has always protested his innocence
Prosecution says it will not oppose appeal of Hoxton man Sam Hallam, who was jailed for life in 2004
Campaigners call on Sam Hallam’s supporters to attend the appeal hearing on Wednesday 16 and Thursday 17 May at the Royal Courts of Justice
A new play based on documentary evidence from a murder trial reveals the harsh reality of the criminal justice system