LeagueDweeb wrote:
Anything to support this being a fact in this case?
From the report: "The woman,
whose identity is protected by law, said: "I couldn't believe they'd closed my case. I felt let down again and totally trapped."
Now can you suggest, given the fact that it was her father that was convicted, could possibly have her identity protected by law, if her birth father's identity is published? His ethnicity and/or religion are immaterial to any public interest, save for the purposes of demonising a religion/ethnic group or satisfying some form of weird voyeurism.
I can't tell if you are being deliberately obtuse or are just plain thick