You questioned my use of singular words and assumed the use of those meant some underlying bias.
Would you like to ask me something?
QUESTION TO YOU - Are you a member of the "no smoke without fire" crowd?
Open justice isn’t actually due to the needs of the many. It’s on the principle that justice must be public so that it can be seen and a judge cannot hide. Anonymity brings the risk of bias entering into a judgement as a judge does not need to fear public scrutiny (e.g. you’ve been more lenient/harsh because of XYZ). Anonymity then becomes an exception for overriding public policy reasons, but overall anonymity should be avoided to ensure justice can be seen and not just assumed.
I think what I am suggesting is being misinterpreted so I will try and explain more as I am not talking about anonymous prosecutions.
In the UK, a mere allegation of a sexual crime is enough to send parts of the population into dusting off their pitchforks. Once a person is charged, this vigilantism is intensified and the accused faces potential assaults, loss of employment, loss of home etc. This level of personal "fallout" is not generally the same compared to other crimes. Allegations of sexual crimes are also affected by the "no smoke without fire" mentatility in that, if the accused is not convicted (charges dropped pre or during trial, found not guilty at trial etc), their life is still potentially ruined - they are still tarred by their neighbours, they can't gain any employment, potentially attacked or their property damaged and the news reports follow them for evermore thanks to the Internet.
The anonymity I am suggesting is simply restrictions on the reporting of info making them identifiable (name, photo, address etc). The press can still report on the case without this. What difference is there with the media reporting "30 year old man in court charged with rape" vs "David Smith, a 30 year old man from Abbots Way, Cheshire appears in court charged with rape <insert photo of accused here>"
During the trial, the media can still report on the facts of the case - the fact of him being "David Smith, a 30 year old man from Abbots Way, Cheshire" is irrelevant to what happens in the court until Verdict time.
If David Smith is found Not Guilty - Anonymity remains
If David SMith is found Guilty - Media can now release Name, address, photo etc
IF the police/prosecution deem that there may be more victims and naming him would encourage them to come forward then fine BUT - They should take this to the courts and, present their evidence to the Judge and have the Judge rule on removing the anonymity.
None of what I am suggesting hides the investigation nor the trial from the public domain.
I hope this clears things up a bit.