Binman jailed for life for Hertfordshire murder – BBC News

Posted October 26th, 2010 in murder, news, sentencing by sally

“A binman has been jailed for life for luring a work colleague to a Hertfordshire country park and then battering him to death.”

Full story

BBC News, 26th October 2010

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Court setback for Catholic child welfare society – The Independent

Posted October 26th, 2010 in child abuse, clergy, news, vicarious liability by sally

“A Catholic child welfare society which may face a multi-million damages claim over abuse at a school failed today to offload some of the liability.”

Full story

The Independent, 26th October 2010

Source: www.independent.co.uk

Tony Blair summoned back to Chilcot inquiry into Iraq war – The Guardian

Posted October 26th, 2010 in inquiries, Iraq, news, war by sally

“Members of panel are believed to be concerned about damaging and conflicting evidence revealed since former PM’s last appearance.”

Full story

The Guardian, 26th October 2010

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Man in 50s ordered to behave in parents’ home – Daily Telegraph

Posted October 26th, 2010 in domestic violence, injunctions, news by sally

“The High Court yesterday issued the order protecting the elderly couple from their son, but allowing him to stay with them, providing he doesn’t behave unlawfully towards them.”

Full story

Daily Telegraph, 26th October 2010

Source: www.telegraph.co.uk

Child detention in immigration centres faces legal challenge – The Guardian

Posted October 26th, 2010 in children, detention, news by sally

“A high court challenge to bring to an immediate end the detention of children in immigration removal centres was launched today.”

Full story

The Guardian, 26th October 2010

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Nursery nurses sentenced for child cruelty – BBC News

Posted October 26th, 2010 in child cruelty, news, sentencing by sally

“Two nursery nurses have been sentenced to 16-weeks in jail suspended for 12 months for cruelty to a two-year-old boy at a Hertfordshire nursery.”

Full story

BBC News, 26th October 2010

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Animal rights activists jailed for terrorising suppliers to Huntingdon Life Sciences – The Guardian

Posted October 26th, 2010 in blackmail, conspiracy, news by sally

“Five animal rights activists who waged a relentless campaign of “violence and terror” against companies and individuals linked to Huntingdon Life Sciences were jailed today.”

Full story

The Guardian, 25th October 2010

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Multi-millionaire couple lose court battle over sea view – Daily Telegraph

Posted October 26th, 2010 in covenants, news by sally

“The only field separating them from the waterside was protected from development by a covenant stating it could be ‘used only for the grazing of animals’.”

Full story

Daily Telegraph, 26th October 2010

Source: www.telegraph.co.uk

Dyfed-Powys Police acted correctly before girl’s murder – BBC News

Posted October 26th, 2010 in inquiries, missing persons, murder, news, police by sally

“Police acted correctly when searching for a missing girl later murdered by her father, an inquiry has found.”

Full story

BBC News, 25th October 2010

Spource: www.bbc.co.uk

Public bodies face compliance dilemma with Equality Act’s demands – OUT-LAW.com

Posted October 26th, 2010 in employment, equality, news by sally

“Most of the Equality Act came into force earlier this month. One key part, though, will not take effect until April. The trouble is that it could impose a huge obligation on organisations and give them almost no time to meet its demands.”

Full story

OUT-LAW.com, 26th October 2010

Source: www.out-law.com

Google investigated over household data privacy breaches – The Guardian

Posted October 26th, 2010 in internet, news, privacy by sally

“The UK privacy watchdog has launched an investigation into Google after it admitted copying household computer passwords and emails from unsecured wireless networks, when taking photographs for its Street View mapping service.”

Full story

The Guardian, 24th October 2010

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

High Court confirms ‘initial confusion’ as principle of EU trade mark law – OUT-LAW.com

Posted October 26th, 2010 in news, trade marks by sally

“Trade mark infringement can take place even if a buyer is only confused about one company appearing to be another at the very start of the purchasing process, the High Court has ruled.”

Full story

OUT-LAW.com, 26th October 2010

Source: www.out-law.com

New rights to protect Britons abroad – Ministry of Justice

Posted October 26th, 2010 in cautions, EC law, news by sally

“New rules which make sure that Britons arrested abroad are informed of their rights in a language they understand are being negotiated in Brussels. The UK has announced its intention to participate in these negotiations.”

Full story

Ministry of Justice, 25th October 2010

Source: www.justice.gov.uk

Has Equity Had Its Day? Hong Kong University Common Law Lecture 2010 – Lord Neuberger of Abbotsbury

Posted October 26th, 2010 in equity, lectures by sally

“This evening, I should like to focus on the role of equity – at first sight, an unusual subject for a common law lecture. But as one of my predecessors as Master of the Rolls, in fact the last Chancery Master of the Rolls before me, Lord Evershed, put it, ‘The function of equity was . . . to fulfil the common law: not so much to correct it as to perfect it’…”

Full text of lecture (pdf)

Judiciary of England and Wales, 25th October 2010 (Lecture delivered 12th October)

Source: www.judiciary.gov.uk

Regina (Windsor and Maidenhead Royal Borough Council) v East Berkshire Magistrates’ Court – WLR Daily

Posted October 26th, 2010 in law reports, magistrates, offensive weapons, prosecutions by sally

Regina (Windsor and Maidenhead Royal Borough Council) v East Berkshire Magistrates’ Court [2010] WLR(D) 264

“Whether an article was a ‘knife’ within the meaning of s 141A(2)(a) of the Criminal Justice Act 1988 was not a pure question of fact, but a question of mixed fact and law; and the justices had erred in law in finding that s 141A did not apply to a grapefruit knife, notwithstanding that it was a cutting instrument consisting of a blade with a handle.”

WLR Daily, 25th October 2010

Source: www.lawreports.co.uk

Please note once a case has been fully reported in one of the ICLR series the corresponding WLR Daily summary is removed.

Och-Ziff Management Europe Ltd and another v OCH Capital LLP and others – WLR Daily

Posted October 26th, 2010 in law reports, trade marks by sally

Och-Ziff Management Europe Ltd and another v OCH Capital LLP and others [2010] EWHC 2599 (Ch) ; [2010] WLR(D) 265

“Purely internal use of a trade mark by its proprietor was not ‘genuine use’ of that mark and that internal use was not ‘use’ of a mark as a trade mark at all. It was not use as part (or even preparatory to) a commercial communication with a third party.”

WLR Daily, 25th October 2010

Source: www.lawreports.co.uk

Please note once a case has been fully reported in one of the ICLR series the corresponding WLR Daily summary is removed.

Regina v M(L) and Others; Regina v Tabot; Regina v Tijani – WLR Daily

Posted October 26th, 2010 in law reports, prosecutions, public interest, trafficking in human beings by sally

Regina v M(L) and Others; Regina v Tabot; Regina v Tijani [2010] EWCA Crim 2327 ; [2010] WLR(D) 266

“Where a person was a victim of human trafficking, for the purposes of the Council of Europe Convention on Action against Trafficking in Human Beings (CETS No 197), and whilst retaining some nexus with the trafficking committed an offence which arguably called, in the public interest, for prosecution, the decision whether to prosecute depended on whether the offence committed was serious enough to call for prosecution, which in turn depended on all the circumstances of the case, the gravity of the offence alleged, the degree of continuing compulsion, and the alternatives reasonably available to the defendant. The prosecution was not obliged by art 10 of the Convention to advise a defendant’s solicitors of the availability of human trafficking referral agencies or to refer a represented defendant to those agencies, unless there were something unusual about the defendant’s case, but were obliged to remind the defendant’s solicitors of the existence of those agencies.”

WLR Daily, 25th October 2010

Source: www.lawreports.co.uk

Please note once a case has been fully reported in one of the ICLR series the corresponding WLR Daily summary is removed.

Regina (Oakes) v Secretary of State for Justice and others – WLR Daily

Posted October 26th, 2010 in law reports, release on licence by sally

Regina (Oakes) v Secretary of State for Justice and others [2010] EWCA Civ 1169; [2010] WLR(D) 267

“The different wording of the tests to be applied when considering the suitability for automatic release of a prisoner who had been recalled to prison for breaching the terms of his licence, under ss 255A(5) and 255C(3) of the Criminal Justice Act 2003 (as inserted by section 29(2) of the Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008) was deliberate. The test under s 255C(3), that of  ‘the protection of the public’ was broader than, and included, the test under s 255A(5), that of ‘risk of serious harm to members of the public’, in that it included the risk of re-offending upon release.”

WLR Daily, 25th October 2010

Source: www.lawreports.co.uk

Please note once a case has been fully reported in one of the ICLR series the corresponding WLR Daily summary is removed.