Focusing Expert Evidence and Controlling Costs – Fourth Lecture in the Implementation Programme – Speech by Lord Justice Jackson

Posted November 14th, 2011 in costs, evidence, expert witnesses, speeches by sally

Focusing Expert Evidence and Controlling Costs – Fourth Lecture in the Implementation Programme (PDF)

Speech by Lord Justice Jackson

The Bond Solon Annual Expert Witness Conference, 11th November 2011

Source: www.judiciary.gov.uk

Rape case woman wins appeal bid – BBC News

“A woman jailed for falsely retracting rape charges against her husband has won the right to appeal her conviction for perverting the course of justice.”

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BBC News, 2nd November 2011

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Phone hacking: NoW warned about ‘culture of illegal information access’ – The Guardian

Posted November 2nd, 2011 in evidence, interception, media, news, privacy by michael

“The legal opinion, only now made public, was prepared in June 2008 and referred to the activities of  ‘at least three’ journalists.”

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The Guardian, 2nd November 2011

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Met chief says officers’ use of fake identities in court was not illegal – The Guardian

Posted October 28th, 2011 in evidence, news, perjury, police by tracey

“Britain’s most senior police officer has defended the practice of undercover officers using fake identities in court, claiming there is no specific law forbidding it. Bernard Hogan-Howe, the Metropolitan police commissioner, made the comments as he announced that Scotland Yard has begun two new inquiries.”

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The Guardian, 27th October 2011

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Phone-hacking suspects ‘could use inquiry to sabotage cases’ – The Guardian

Posted October 27th, 2011 in evidence, inquiries, interception, news, telecommunications, trials by sally

“The Metropolitan police and the Crown Prosecution Service fear suspects in the phone-hacking criminal investigation could try to sabotage prosecutions, it has emerged.”

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The Guardian, 26th October 2011

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Times can use leaked Police documents in libel defence – UK Human Rights Blog

Posted October 26th, 2011 in defamation, disclosure, evidence, media, news, police, proportionality by sally

“Mr Justice Tugendhat has held that, with restrictions, The Times Newspapers Ltd (TNL) should be allowed to use information from leaked documents in its defence to a libel claim brought by the Metropolitan Police Service and the Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA). However, proportionality limited the reach of this judgment to the next stage in the libel claim, after which reassessment may be necessary.”

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UK Human Rights Blog, 25th October 2011

Source: www.ukhumanrightsblog.com

More secret justice on the horizon – UK Human Rights Blog

Posted October 21st, 2011 in courts, disclosure, evidence, intelligence services, news by sally

“The Cabinet Office has released its long awaited Justice and Security Green Paper, addressing the difficult question of to what extent the state must reveal secret information in court proceedings. A consultation has been launched on the proposals; responses can be sent via email by Friday 6 January 2012.”

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UK Human Rights Blog, 19th October 2011

Source: www.ukhumanrightsblog.com

Lawyers condemn police spies who ‘deceive’ justice system – The Guardian

Posted October 21st, 2011 in courts, demonstrations, evidence, investigatory powers, news, perjury, police by tracey

“Lawyers have condemned what appears to be deception of the courts by undercover police and have called for fundamental reforms of the legislation governing covert operations.”

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The Guardian, 20th October 2011

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

IPCC watchdog to probe undercover police officer case – BBC News

Posted October 21st, 2011 in courts, demonstrations, evidence, investigatory powers, news, perjury, police by tracey

“Scotland Yard has called in the police watchdog over claims an undercover officer underwent a criminal trial using his operational alias.”

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BBC News, 20th October 2011

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Leveson considers taking anonymous evidence from tabloid journalists – The Guardian

Posted October 21st, 2011 in anonymity, evidence, inquiries, media, news, privacy by tracey

“Journalists will be able to anonymously submit evidence under oath as part of proposals set to be introduced by Lord Justice Leveson’s inquiry into phone hacking and press ethics.”

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The Guardian, 21st October 2011

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Police chiefs ‘authorised undercover police officers to give false evidence in court’ – Daily Telegraph

Posted October 20th, 2011 in evidence, news, perjury, police by tracey

“Senior police chiefs authorised undercover police officers to give false evidence in court to protect their cover as environmental protesters, it was claimed last night.”

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Daily Telegraph, 20th October 2011

Source: www.telegraph.co.uk

HM Advocate v P – WLR Daily

HM Advocate v P [2011] UKSC 44; [2011] WLR (D) 290

“There was no absolute rule that evidence which had been obtained from an accused who had been questioned by police when he had not been given access to legal advice, but which existed independently of his answers, was inadmissible.”

WLR Daily, 6th October 2011

Source: www.iclr.co.uk

Lincolnshire PC’s flasher inquiry criticised by judge – BBC News

Posted October 11th, 2011 in evidence, inquiries, news, police by sally

“Lincolnshire police will conduct ‘inquiries’ after a judge criticised a police officer for handling her own case when she fell victim to a flasher.”

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BBC News, 10th October 2011

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Big Brother or crime fighting? DNA evidence under the microscope – UK Human Rights Blog

Posted October 10th, 2011 in data protection, DNA, evidence, human rights, news, police by sally

“A proposal to retain DNA samples taken from people who have been arrested but not charged with a crime for up to five years has come under criticism from the Joint Committee on Human Rights.”

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UK Human Rights Blog, 10th October 2011

Source: www.ukhumanrightsblog.com

Self-incrimination and the fruit of the poisonous tree: the Cadder rule – UK Human Rights Blog

Posted October 10th, 2011 in evidence, human rights, legal representation, news, police, self-incrimination by sally

“Reliance on evidence that emerged from questioning a person without access to a lawyer did not invariably breach the right to a fair trial under Article 6. The principle established by Salduz v Turkey (36391/02) (2009) 49 EHRR 19 did not apply to questioning outside a police station.”

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UK Human Rights Blog, 7th October 2011

Source: www.ukhumanrightsblog.com

Ambrose v Harris (Procurator Fiscal, Oban) ; HM Advocate v M; HM Advocate v G – WLR Daily

Ambrose v Harris (Procurator Fiscal, Oban); HM Advocate v M; HM Advocate v G [2011] UKSC 43; [2011] WLR (D) 288

“In principle the line as to when access to legal advice had to be provided before a person suspected of a criminal offence was questioned by police should be drawn as from the moment when he had been taken into police custody, or his freedom of action had been significantly curtailed.”

WLR Daily, 6th October 2011

Source: www.iclr.co.uk

Criminal proceedings against Gueye (X intervening); Criminal proceedings against Salmerón Sánchez (Y intervening) – WLR Daily

Posted October 10th, 2011 in domestic violence, EC law, evidence, injunctions, law reports by sally

Criminal proceedings against Gueye (X intervening); Criminal proceedings against Salmerón Sánchez (Y intervening) (Joined Cases C-483/09 and C-1/10); [2011] WLR (D) 285

“Council Framework Decision 2001/220/JHA of 15 March 2001 on the standing of victims in criminal proceedings (OJ 2001 L82, p 1) did not prevent member states from making provision in their criminal law for the mandatory imposition of an injunction to stay away for a minimum period on persons who committed crimes of violence within the family. This was so even when the victims of those crimes opposed the application of such a penalty. Member states could also exclude recourse to mediation in all criminal proceedings relating to a particular category of offences committed within the family.”

WLR Daily, 15th September 2011

Source: www.iclr.co.uk

Keynote address – EWI Annual Conference 2011 – Speech by Lord Neuberger of Abbotsbury, Master of the Rolls

Posted October 6th, 2011 in evidence, expert witnesses, immunity, speeches by sally

Keynote address – EWI Annual Conference 2011 (PDF)

Speech by Lord Neuberger of Abbotsbury, Master of the Rolls

EWI Annual Conference, 5th October 2011

Source: www.judiciary.gov.uk

‘Angel of Death’ Colin Norris could be cleared of insulin murders – The Guardian

Posted October 5th, 2011 in evidence, miscarriage of justice, murder, news, nurses by sally

“Fresh medical evidence in the case of the nurse called the ‘Angel of Death’ and jailed for life for the murders of four patients in a Leeds hospital eight years ago is to be passed to the Criminal Cases Review Commission. The case has similarities to that of Rebecca Leighton, the nurse arrested on suspicion of murdering patients in a Stockport hospital and released without charge last month.”

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The Guardian, 4th October 2011

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

A formula for justice – The Guardian

Posted October 3rd, 2011 in evidence, news, statistics by sally

“Bayes’ theorem is a mathematical equation used in court cases to analyse statistical evidence. But a judge has ruled it can no longer be used. Will it result in more miscarriages of justice?”

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The Guardian, 2nd October 2011

Source: www.guardian.co.uk