Thanks for posting that link, Brucey. I found those four pages of text to be very sombre reading.
This unusual case has clearly raised emotions among many commentators, and I'd like to thank our members here for their restraint in posting on this forum. Some things I've read elsewhere on the internet have been really inappropriate in the tragic circumstances of this case.
Whatever our personal views on the circumstances may be, the facts of this case are clear.
The trial at Liverpool Crown Court ran over two weeks, from 5 November to 14 November: during that hearing, the jury of 11 lay people heard all of the evidence presented to them in open court. They took over two hours in deliberation before reaching a unanimous verdict of guilty on the more serious charge manslaughter by gross negligence - they were then discharged from having to reach a verdict on the alternative, lesser, charge under the Health and Safety at Work Act.
While many of us will have our own views on the case, we need to bear that in mind: this conviction was not decided on a mere whim, but on the solid basis of all the facts being presented in court. Mr Justice Holroyde's explanation of the sentence he imposed is crystal clear.
My personal view is that of Georgia's father, Paul Varley: "There are no winners here."
Chris.