Can you outlaw the oldest profession? – BBC News
“Steve Wright’s conviction for the Suffolk murders comes in the midst of a major government review into how it deals with prostitution.”
BBC News, 24th February 2008
Source: www.bbc.co.uk
“Steve Wright’s conviction for the Suffolk murders comes in the midst of a major government review into how it deals with prostitution.”
BBC News, 24th February 2008
Source: www.bbc.co.uk
“Britain’s overfilled jails are at ‘panic stations’ as they lurch from crisis to crisis, the chief inspector of prisons warns in an Observer interview today that will make uncomfortable reading for the government.”
The Guardian, 24th February 2008
Source: www.guardian.co.uk
“Stereotypical media representations of rape are damaging conviction rates when cases come to court, according to a Home Office funded study.”
The Independent, 24th February 2008
Source: www.independent.co.uk
“How many of us pay for work in cash, knowing we’ll get a cheaper deal – and that the worker won’t be paying VAT? David Harrison reports on a white-collar crime that costs the Treasury millions.”
Daily Telegraph, 24th February 2008
Source: www.telegraph.co.uk
“The prison population in England and Wales has exceeded its highest normal level for the first time.”
BBC News, 22nd February 2008
Source: www.bbc.co.uk
“The High Court today quashed a control order restricting the movements of a British convert to Islam on the grounds there was ‘no reasonable suspicion’ that he was planning to travel abroad to engage in terrorist activity.”
The Guardian, 22nd February 2008
Source: www.guardian.co.uk
“The government is to consult on legislation to punish internet service providers if they fail to take action against the illegal downloading of music, films and TV programmes.”
The Guardian, 22nd February 2008
Source: www.guardian.co.uk
“British troops may have executed up to 20 captives in southern Iraq in 2004, human rights lawyers claimed today.”
The Guardian, 22nd February 2008
Source: www.guardian.co.uk
“Steve Wright will spend the rest of his life in jail for killing five women in Suffolk in what prosecutors described as a six-week ‘campaign of murder’. Judge Mr Justice Gross, at Ipswich crown court, ruled that Wright, a 49-year-old former forklift truck driver, should serve a whole life term and never be released.”
The Guardian, 22nd February 2008
Source: www.guardian.co.uk
“A pub chef obsessed with violent sex has been jailed for life for the brutal murder of an aspiring model who was found in a pool of blood outside her South London home in September 2005.”
The Times, 22nd February 2008
Source: www.timesonline.co.uk
“Two London law firms must pay £815 each after the Information Commissioner sued them for not fulfilling thier duties under the Data Protection Act.”
OUT-LAW.com, 21st February 2008
Source: www.out-law.com
“BSkyB will begin an appeal today against John Hutton and the Competition Commission’s ruling that it must sell more than half of its 17.9 per cent stake in its rival ITV.”
The Times, 22nd February 2008
Source: www.timesonline.co.uk
“Many people do not think twice about trampling over a spider or beetle while walking on grass. But insects have rights, too, and today in the High Court a charity is to defend the right for the creepy-crawlies to live undisturbed on the West Thurrock marshes along the Thames in Essex.”
The Times, 22nd February 2008
Source: www.timesonline.co.uk
“Steve Wright, the Suffolk Strangler, faces spending the rest of his life in prison when he is sentenced today for murdering five Ipswich prostitutes during a six-week killing spree. His conviction, on forensic evidence, last night reignited the debate on the rapid expansion of the national DNA database, which holds the profiles of at least four million people in Britain.”
The Times, 22nd February 2008
Source: www.timesonline.co.uk
“A couple murdered on the orders of a gangland boss were offered inadequate protection by the police, a report to be published today will conclude.”
The Guardian, 22nd February 2008
Source: www.guardian.co.uk
“Campaigners with widely diverging beliefs last night called on the government to re-examine the law on prostitution following the murder convictions of Steve Wright.”
The Guardian, 22nd February 2008
Source: www.guardian.co.uk
“For three and a half years, Rebecca Ames helped British Telecom customers to connect up to broadband services. She sat alongside BT staff doing the same job but received, she claims, barely half their pay.
Ames, 34, was one of an estimated 1.4 million workers in the United Kingdom on agency contracts. Their terms and conditions could be transformed if a backbench protest by Labour MPs succeeds today in forcing a private member’s bill through to committee stage.”
The Guardian, 22nd February 2008
Source: www.guardian.co.uk
“Police officers knew they were covertly bugging conversations between a terror suspect and his MP, but were not breaking any rules when they did so, an official report said yesterday.”
The Guardian, 22nd February 2008
Source: www.guardian.co.uk
“Jack Straw, the Justice Secretary, last night made an urgent appeal to magistrates to send fewer people to jail as the prison population in England and Wales soared past 82,000 to an all-time high.”
The Guardian, 22nd February 2008
Source: www.guardian.co.uk
“A home owner is being threatened with legal action after a woman claimed she trapped her hand in his letterbox while delivering unwanted junk mail.”
Daily Telegraph, 22nd February 2008
Source: www.telegraph.co.uk