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The text of the entry was: Did you know ... that the investigation into the murder of Celine Figard saw the UK's first national DNA screening programme in the hunt for a suspect?
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I'll be glad to take this review. I'll give this a close readthrough sometime in the next few days, noting any initial issues that I see, and then start the criteria checklist. Thanks in advance for your work on this one! -- Khazar2 (talk) 13:39, 7 January 2013 (UTC)[reply]
On a first pass, this looks like great work: well-written, well-referenced, and all around solid. I've noted just a few points below that appear to me to need clarity.
*Not a necessary action point under the GA criteria, but consider abbreviating United Kingdom to "UK" after its first use.
Done.
*"The case dominated news coverage in the United Kingdom around the Christmas and New Year period" -- is this statement supported in the body of the article? I'm not sure I saw it on first pass.
Changed to "The case received extensive news coverage". Happy to rethink it though if necessary.
*"Chieveley Services" -- this appears with capital letters in the sources, so I've changed it here; I note that Wikipedia's article has a lower-case "services", though, so I could be wrong. If you object, we can look it into it more.
That seems ok, although I've tweaked it to link directly to the article.
*"It is thought" -- can it be clarified who this was thought by?
Changed to "Police believe"
*" Morgan initially denied meeting her and then before claimed he and Figard had engaged in consensual sex, after he was picked out at an identity parade" -- the time indicators get a little tangled for me here. Is it a correct rewrite to say, "Morgan initially denied meeting her. After he was picked out at an identity parade, he claimed he and Figard had engaged in consensual sex."
Done.
*"Mr Justice Latham" --is it possible to give Latham's full name? (I'm assuming Justice is a title here and not a first name, unless this is one of those "name is destiny" cases.)
I think his name is David Latham, but I'm not entirely sure and the sources don't give a first name. British media sources tend to identify senior judges by title and surname only, unless there happens to be more than one with the same surname, in which case their forename is given. Check out Judicial titles in England and Wales for more info. Any more thoughts on what to do here?
I don't think it's a problem for the GA criteria if we only have the last name here, particularly as that's traditional and all that's given in the source.
*"His trial counsel was Nigel Jones QC" -- is the "his" here Morgan?
Done.
*"The trial heard"; " It was also said" --is it possible to be specific about who said these?
Done.
*" the Home Secretary informed him of the length of his sentence." --is the "him" here Morgan? I apologize that these are probably very stupid questions; I'm an American and don't have much knowledge of the British sentencing/appeals system. But it couldn't hurt to clear up the pronoun antecedent.
No worries. I've clarified that it was Morgan's sentence.
*"Mr Justice Openshaw" --I would suggest using the full name here instead of Mr. Title form.
Again the sources don't give his full name, but in this case I know it's Peter Openshaw because we have an article about him.
Thanks for taking a look at this. I've updated most things now, apart from the names of the judges as I'm not certain what to do there. Let me know what you think, or if anything else needs adjusting. Cheers and thanks once again. Paul MacDermott (talk) 23:15, 8 January 2013 (UTC)[reply]
2a. it contains a list of all references (sources of information), presented in accordance with the layout style guideline.
2b. reliable sources are cited inline. All content that could reasonably be challenged, except for plot summaries and that which summarizes cited content elsewhere in the article, must be cited no later than the end of the paragraph (or line if the content is not in prose).