A day in court

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understandinguncertainty.org was produced by the Winton programme for the public understanding of risk based in the Statistical Laboratory in the University of Cambridge. The aim was to help improve the way that uncertainty and risk are discussed in society, and show how probability and statistics can be both useful and entertaining.

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In 1971 as a teenager, I fell in love and ran away with a man I had met at work in Birmingham -my but not his, hometown. We shacked up together in a miserable room in Bedford. It wasnt working out, and after a few months I went back home, understanding that M was also moving on - he was something of a hippy drifter. It became clear after a while that i was pregnant. My son was born in December 1971 and having no support I claimed state benefits. I was told in order to do this I had to co-operate in identifying the baby's father. At that time a voluntary organisation worked with single mothers in doing this. They had no luck in finding M, but we had to take forward a case for maintenance in the courts in his absence. On the due day, i turned up at Birmingham Crown Court to meet the ladies from this organisation. I was shocked and distressed to suddenly see M striding across the foyer of the court building. When he had passed, I saw the ladies and asked where they had found him and why they hadnt warned me. They looked blankly at me.....I explained that I had just seen him, and they talked to court officials who found a policeman to accompany me to various courtrooms looking for him. When I spotted M in the public gallery of a courtroom, the policeman beckoned him outside where I had to tell him that he was the father of a baby boy and I was attending court that day to claim maintenance! We ended up in court together with the magistrate/judge making an order. M explained to me that he was living in Liverpool (after having lived in a few places in the intervening year) and had come to Birmingham for the day for a job interview. As he was much too early he had decided to go to court and sit in on a case......
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Date submitted:Sat, 14 Jan 2012 10:04:36 +0000Coincidence ID:3778