Short answer: Barry George was acquitted of Jill Dando’s murder in 2008 after serving eight years in prison; he has not been convicted for her killing, and there is no widely accepted evidence that a different killer has been identified in a final, closed case. The Netflix docuseries and ongoing media coverage have renewed discussion, but legally the case remains that George was cleared and no new conviction for the murder has been secured as of now.
Latest context
- In 2001 Barry George was convicted based on a single particle of gunshot residue found on a coat; the conviction was overturned, and he was acquitted in a retrial in 2008. This is the central legal outcome of the case to date.
- Since his acquittal, various news pieces and documentaries have revisited the murder, exploring whether the true killer has ever been identified or whether new evidence could alter the conclusion, but as of the latest updates, no other person has been convicted for Dando’s murder. Netflix’s docuseries (Who Killed Jill Dando?) is a recent media iteration rather than a new judicial ruling.
What’s notable in recent coverage
- The Netflix docuseries presents Barry George as a former suspect and outlines the prosecution’s reliance on the forensic residue evidence that was later challenged, but it does not provide a new adjudicated perpetrator.
- Some outlets summarize that George’s conviction was overturned and that he remains a free man, though he has faced other legal challenges unrelated to Dando’s murder in later years.
If you’d like, I can pull in the latest updates from specific outlets or summarize what the Netflix series covers and how it frames the key pieces of evidence, with direct quotes and dates.