Media win legal bid on Tabak porn – The Independent

Posted October 31st, 2011 in contempt of court, disclosure, freedom of expression, media, news, pornography, trials by sally

“The media won an important victory for press freedom following an attempt to block the publication of Vincent Tabak’s sordid sex life and interest in violent pornography, it can be disclosed today (28 October).”

Full story

The Independent, 28th October 2011

Source: www.independent.co.uk

Carter-Ruck’s take on the Trafigura story: who guards the Guardian? – Legal Week

“In the last three years The Guardian has published over 200 articles relating to Trafigura, the vast majority of which have referred to the ‘super-injunction’ which the company obtained against the newspaper and to Carter-Ruck’s apparent attempts to gag the reporting of Parliament. Despite this saturation coverage, some questions remain unanswered.”

Full story

Legal Week, 17th October 2011

Source: www.legalweek.com

Levi Bellfield case: Contempt of court move – BBC News

Posted October 18th, 2011 in attorney general, contempt of court, juries, media, news by sally

“The attorney general has begun contempt of court proceedings against the Daily Mail and Daily Mirror over coverage of the conviction of Levi Bellfield.

Full story

BBC News, 17th October 2011

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

#WithoutPrejudice 12: Riots, sentencing appeals – Troy Davis execution – Legal Aid cutbacks and Clause 12 – Charon QC

“Criminal Law Special: Sentencing in the wake of the riots and the forthcoming appeals, Contempt of Court, Troy Davis execution, Legal Aid and Clause 12 re-visited.”

Podcast

Charon QC, 30th September 2011

Source: www.charonqc.wordpress.com

“Charon QC” is the blogging pseudonym of Mike Semple Piggot, editor of insitelaw newswire.

A picture is worth a thousand words… or two months – Halsbury’s Law Exchange

Posted October 3rd, 2011 in contempt of court, news, photography, sentencing by sally

“Hot on the heels of announcements regarding the television broadcast of sentencing decisions, technology raises another controversy. This time a teenager, Paul Thomson, was convicted for contempt in Luton Crown Court and given a two month sentence. The offence was taking a photo inside court on his Blackberry mobile phone.”

Full story

Halsbury’s Law Exchange, 29th September 2011

Source: www.halsburyslawexchange.co.uk

Teenager jailed for taking photo at Luton Crown Court – BBC News

Posted September 26th, 2011 in contempt of court, news, photography, sentencing by sally

“A teenager has been jailed for two months for taking a photograph of a court room from the public gallery during proceedings.”

Full story

BBC News, 26th September 2011

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Pensioner jailed for recording court proceedings is released – The Guardian

Posted September 9th, 2011 in contempt of court, news, sentencing by tracey

“An 85-year-old man who was jailed for six months for recording court proceedings was freed by the court of appeal on Friday. Three judges in London quashed the sentence imposed on Norman Scarth in July for contempt of court and substituted one of 12 weeks, resulting in his immediate release from Armley prison in Leeds.”

Full story

The Guardian, 9th September 2011

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

In re W (A Child) (Abduction: Contempt) – WLR Daily

Posted August 23rd, 2011 in appeals, child abduction, contempt of court, detention, law reports by sally

In re W (A Child) (Abduction: Contempt) [2011] WLR (D) 277

“Where a father repeatedly flouted court orders that he disclose the whereabouts of his child, who had been abducted and was believed to be abroad, it was open to the court to impose repeated terms of imprisonment for contempt the cumulative duration of which ostensibly exceeded the two-year term identified in section 14(1) of the Contempt of Court Act 1981.”

WLR Daily, 17th August 2011

Source: www.iclr.co.uk

JSC BTA Bank v Solodchenko and others – WLR Daily

Posted August 11th, 2011 in contempt of court, disclosure, law reports by sally

JSC BTA Bank v Solodchenko and others [2011] EWHC 2163 (Ch); [2011] WLR (D) 273

“The court had jurisdiction to order a solicitor to disclose his client’s contact details if satisfied it was just and convenient to do so to ensure the effectiveness of an earlier order.”

WLR Daily, 5th August 2011

Source: www.iclr.co.uk

Will alleged rioters get a fair trial? – The Guardian

Posted August 11th, 2011 in contempt of court, media, news, trials, violent disorder by sally

“In the coming weeks and months we will see a succession of alleged rioters face justice. Already 1,000 people are being put through courts that have been been sitting through the night to cope with the numbers. Police and emergency services have been tested to their limits, and we can expect the laws of contempt to be similarly tested in the aftermath of these extraordinary events.”

Full story

The Guardian, 10th August 2011

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Christopher Jefferies case delivers wake-up call to tabloids – The Guardian

Posted August 5th, 2011 in contempt of court, media, news by sally

“How bad does press coverage at the time of an individual’s arrest have to get for it to be regarded as a contempt of court? This interesting question was at the heart of the recent case concerning coverage of my client Christopher Jefferies’s arrest by police investigating the murder of the landscape architect Joanna Yeates. The contempt action was brought by the attorney general under section 2(2) of the Contempt of Court Act 1981, which applies to any publication that creates a risk that the course of justice will be seriously impeded or prejudiced, whether or not they intended to do so.”

Full story

The Guardian, 4th August 2011

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Newspapers guilty of contempt during murder investigation – Attorney General’s Office

Posted August 1st, 2011 in contempt of court, media, press releases by tracey

“Mirror Group Newspapers Ltd and News Group Newspapers Ltd have been found guilty of contempt of court for publishing potentially prejudicial coverage of a former suspect in the Joanna Yeates murder investigation at the start of this year which had the potential to impede the course of justice.”

Full press release

Attorney General’s Office, 29th July 2011

Source: www.attorneygeneral.gov.uk

Masri v Consolidated Contractors International Company SAL and others – WLR daily

Posted July 28th, 2011 in appeals, contempt of court, enforcement, law reports by tracey

Masri v Consolidated Contractors International Company SAL and others [2011] EWCA Civ 898;  [2011] WLR (D)  258

“A company found in contempt of court could not appeal the findings of contempt as of right but required the permission of the judge or the Court of Appeal.”

WLR Daily, 27th July 2011

Source: www.iclr.co.uk

Facebook could threaten jury trials in UK, attorney general warns – Daily Telegraph

Posted July 28th, 2011 in attorney general, contempt of court, internet, juries, news by tracey

“Social networking websites such as Facebook could threaten the existence of jury trials in the UK, the attorney general has warned.”

Full story

Daily Telegraph, 28th July 2011

Source: www.telegraph.co.uk

B v Secretary of State for the Home Department – WLR Daily

Posted July 25th, 2011 in appeals, contempt of court, law reports by tracey

B v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2011] EWCA Civ 828;  [2011] WLR (D)  243

“The question for the Court of Appeal exercising its appellate jurisdiction under section 13 of the Administration of Justice Act 1960 in respect of a sentence imposed for contempt of court was whether the sentence was manifestly excessive.”

WLR Daily, 21st July 2011

Source: www.iclr.co.uk

Newspapers pay high price for ‘accidental’ contempt of court – The Guardian

Posted July 21st, 2011 in contempt of court, fines, media, news by sally

“How much does it cost a newspaper to commit an ‘accidental’ contempt of court on its website? The answer from the high court on Tuesday – a good day to bury bad media news, one might think – is £15,000, plus nearly the same again in prosecution legal fees.”

Full story

The Guardian, 20th July 2011

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

What if Rebekah Brooks stays silent? – The Guardian

“As reporters wait, tweet-fingers poised, for such nuggets of information as Rebekah Brooks may dangle before MPs this afternoon, constitutional lawyers will be much more interested in any excuses she may give for not answering questions.”

Full story

The Guardian, 19th July 2011

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Sun and Daily Mirror articles ‘could have impeded trial’ in Yeates case – The Guardian

Posted July 6th, 2011 in contempt of court, media, murder, news, trials by sally

“The Sun and Daily Mirror published three stories after the arrest of a suspect in the hunt for the killer of Joanna Yeates that could have ‘prejudiced’ and ‘impeded’ a trial, the attorney general, Dominic Grieve QC, told the high court on Tuesday.”

Full story

The Guardian, 5th July 2011

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Contempt of court rules are designed to avoid trial by media – The Guardian

“The arrest of Christopher Jefferies on 30 December automatically obliged the media to restrict reporting of legal proceedings against the retired Bristol schoolteacher.”

Full story

The Guardian, 5th July 2011

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Can jurors in the internet age avoid being in contempt of court? – The Guardian

Posted July 5th, 2011 in contempt of court, internet, juries, media, news by sally

“Omnipresent nature of news online makes it increasingly difficult for jurors not to stumble across court case details.”

Full story

The Guardian, 5th July 2011

Source: www.guardian.co.uk