After a trial of seven days, the jury took nearly four hours to reach its decision. Seven of the defendants were acquitted, but eight students were convicted, including the six arrested in February and two others seen pushing in the crowd. All were aged between 19 and 25. Judge
Melford Stevenson controversially gave harsh sentences to those involved. Six of the convicted students were sentenced to between 9 months and 18 months in prison, and two aged under 21 were sentenced to periods in
borstal. One student from Brazil and a second from South Africa were also recommended for deportation. The sentences were criticised as heavy-handed, as was the judge's comment that he would have passed heavier sentences but for the "evil influence of some senior members of the university". All eight made appeals to the
Court of Appeal against their sentences, and three against their convictions. The appeals were heard by
Lord Justice Eric Sachs, Mr Justice
Maurice Lyell and
Ralph Cusack on 18 August. Only one appeal – the South African student, found with a mole fuse (a small
smoke bomb for smoking out
moles) in his pocket, and convicted for possessing an offensive weapon – was allowed, but the recommendation for deportation of the Brazilian student was also cancelled. The case remains a precedent for the legal principles that holding strong political views is no excuse for violent acts, that prosecuting only a few out of a number of potential defendants is permitted, that a defendant's individual acts should not be considered in isolation but must take their share of blame from the broader context of the disorder, and that encouraging or promoting disorder by words or actions is as culpable as participating in it. The case also continues to be cited in deportation cases, for the principle that a decision to recommend deportation following a conviction must be justified by the potential detriment to the UK if the person is allowed to stay. The president of the
National Union of Students,
Jack Straw (who was
Home Secretary from 1997 to 2001), accused the court of discriminating against students. Several of the defendants returned to their degrees after serving their sentences; others had already completed their studies. The incident led to a reform of the powers of the Cambridge University proctors. The Garden House Hotel was destroyed by a fire on 23 April 1972 in which two guests died. It was rebuilt the following year. Later the hotel became the
DoubleTree by Hilton, Cambridge, then, at the start of 2020, the Cambridge Hotel. In 2021, it became
Graduate Cambridge, after a complete interior renovation; the refurbished 148-room hotel has a restaurant called Garden House. ==References==