Ministers to review councils’ use of anti-terrorism surveillance powers – The Guardian

Posted April 17th, 2009 in investigatory powers, local government, news by sally

“The government tried yesterday to quell rising concern over the abuse of powers designed to fight terrorism and serious crime, which some councils were using to target people who put their bins out on the wrong day.”

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The Guardian, 17th April 2009

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Amazon bars controversial Phorm technology from its sites – OUT-LAW.com

Posted April 17th, 2009 in advertising, internet, news by sally

“Amazon has barred web monitoring advertising system Webwise from accessing its web sites. The online retailer, which is the UK’s second biggest shopping site behind eBay, will not allow the system to monitor people’s use of its site.”

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OUT-LAW.com, 16th April 2009

Source: www.out-law.com

Man jailed for £10 debt ear slice – BBC News

Posted April 17th, 2009 in assault, news, sentencing by sally

“A drug dealer convicted of cutting part of a woman’s ear off because she owed him £10 has been jailed.”

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BBC News, 16th April 2009

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Partners of lesbian mothers to get paternity leave – Daily Telegraph

Posted April 17th, 2009 in homosexuality, news, paternity leave by sally

“Both women in lesbian couples with children should be given compulsory paternity and maternity leave, under proposals tabled in the European Parliament.”

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Daily Telegraph, 17th April 2009

Source: www.telegraph.co.uk

Prince’s Trust Thatcher lunch broke charity laws – The Guardian

Posted April 17th, 2009 in charities, news, political parties by sally

“The Prince of Wales’ youth charity broke the law by running a joint fundraising event with an offshoot of the Conservative party, watchdog the Charity Commission ruled today.”

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The Guardian, 16th April 2009

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Abuse pictures councillor jailed – BBC News

Posted April 17th, 2009 in child abuse, news, pornography, sentencing by sally

“A former local councillor has been jailed for six years after police found an illegal gun and child abuse images at his Greater Manchester home.”

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BBC News, 16th April 2009

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Police delete London tourists’ photos ‘to prevent terrorism’ – The Guardian

Posted April 17th, 2009 in news, photography, police, terrorism by sally

“Like most visitors to London, Klaus Matzka and his teenage son Loris took several photographs of some of the city’s sights, including the famous red double-decker buses. More unusually perhaps, they also took pictures of the Vauxhall bus station, which Matzka regards as ‘modern sculpture’.”

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The Guardian, 16th April 2009

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Government stalls copyright reform as UK law deemed ‘abject failure’ – OUT-LAW.com

Posted April 17th, 2009 in copyright, news by sally

“Copyright reform in the UK has ‘stalled’ as the Government has caved in to the ‘vested interests’ of the content industry, the head of a digital rights activist group has said. The view comes as the UK ‘abjectly fails’ a test of its copyright laws.”

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OUT-LAW.com, 16th April 2009

Source: www.out-law.com

Drug offence case is landmark for Britons jailed abroad – The Guardian

Posted April 16th, 2009 in drug offences, extradition, news by sally

“A man serving 33 years in a British jail for a drug offence committed in Thailand is to challenge his sentence in what could become a precedent-setting case for Britons jailed abroad. The case is being watched by the growing number of Britons in overseas jails who want to serve their sentence in the UK.”

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The Guardian, 16th April 2009

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Britons facing execution in Pakistan seek Miliband’s help – The Guardian

Posted April 16th, 2009 in death penalty, news, Pakistan by sally

“Lawyers for two British nationals who face the death penalty in Pakistan, after allegedly being tortured to give confessions for murder they insist they did not commit, have asked the Foreign Office to intervene urgently in the case.”

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The Guardian, 16th April 2009

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Hajrudin Hasanovic stabbed wife to death after police refused help – The Times

Posted April 16th, 2009 in domestic violence, homicide, news by sally

“A woman was stabbed to death by her husband in front of their two children hours after police had refused to escort her to a women’s refuge, a jury was told yesterday.”

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The Times, 16th April 2009

Source: www.timesonline.co.uk

Couple defrauded Citizens Advice Bureau of £650,000 to fund a life of luxury, jury told – The Guardian

Posted April 16th, 2009 in citizens advice bureaux, fraud, news by sally

“A couple funded a luxury lifestyle of champagne and top-class hotels by siphoning off up to £650,000 from a Citizens Advice Bureau office, a jury was told yesterday.”

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The Guardian, 16th April 2009

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Can’t afford to sue? Who do you call? – The Times

Posted April 16th, 2009 in costs, news by sally

“Third parties bankrolling litigation used to be anathema. The credit crunch has brought a sea change.”

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The Times, 16th April 2009

Source: www.timesonline.co.uk

Court of Appeal widens rights to equal pay compensation – OUT-LAW.com

Posted April 16th, 2009 in equal pay, news by sally

“Workers who are employed under an unbroken succession of contracts can now claim equal pay compensation for that string of contracts and not just the latest one, the Court of Appeal has ruled.”

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OUT-LAW.com, 16th April 2009

Source: www.out-law.com

Met chief orders review of public order policing after G20 protest – The Guardian

Posted April 16th, 2009 in demonstrations, news, police by sally

“The Metropolitan police commissioner, Sir Paul Stephenson, has ordered a review of public order policing amid mounting concerns over the way his force and the City of London police handled the G20 protests this month.”

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The Guardian, 15th April 2009

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Woolf reforms and cost-cutting have led to acute shortages and a ‘deficient’ system – The Times

Posted April 16th, 2009 in legal aid, news by sally

“If recent headlines have been about judges’ concerns over sentencing criminals, District Judge David Oldham is determined to press the case for the other half of the justice system. The civil courts, he says, are woefully under-resourced — a problem ever more acute in times of hardship.”

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The Times, 16th April 2009

Source: www.timesonline.co.uk

Government faces legal action over online snooping – The Guardian

Posted April 16th, 2009 in data protection, news, privacy by sally

“The European commission yesterday called for the UK’s privacy laws to be tightened to protect internet surfers as it launched legal proceedings against the government for breaching data protection and so-called ePrivacy rules.”

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The Guardian, 15th April 2009

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

DNA founder criticises database – BBC News

Posted April 16th, 2009 in DNA, news by sally

“The inventor of the genetic technology behind the national DNA database says it risks losing support because it holds the records of innocent people.”

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BBC News, 15th April 2009

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Judges look to the lords over strict curb on sentencing powers – The Times

Posted April 16th, 2009 in judiciary, news, sentencing by sally

“The judges are up in arms over changes to the justice system, says Judge Isobel Plumstead, of the Council of Circuit Judges.”

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The Times, 16th April 2009

Source: www.timesonline.co.uk

Families of RAF Hercules victims issue negligence writ against MoD – The Guardian

Posted April 16th, 2009 in armed forces, negligence, news by sally

“The families of 10 British servicemen killed when their RAF Hercules was shot down in Iraq have issued a high court writ accusing the Ministry of Defence of negligence, breach of a duty of care and failing to comply with article two of the European convention on human rights, which enshrines the right to life.”

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The Guardian, 15th April 2009

Source: www.guardian.co.uk