It is odd, given the long history that civil disobedience has in the UK, that Hoffman’s Bargain has been given such short shrift with not so much as a sideward glance.
Criminal Damage Defence Guidance Handed Down by Court of Appeal
Attempting to link arguments of proximity to possessiveness in relation to ‘circumstances’ so that it may relate to the wording of the legislation is artificial, complicated, and unclear.
A Rare Case of Unreasonably Restricting Protest
It is also not only protesters or police who may struggle with this new definition – the factors that Judge Laws considered regarding disruption in this case were telling.
Are the mass arrests of Just Stop Oil Protesters lawful?
Entry into the road now appears to be a blanket cause for arrest in of itself. Repeating this day in and day out, regardless of the number of protesters actually charged, results in the protesters never actually protesting or causing any disruption at all – which is the outcome the police appear to be seeking.
Serious Disruption in Protest – Braverman’s Contradictory Logic
By claiming that the police cannot deal with these protests, the Home Secretary is impliedly admitting that they do not cause serious disruption.
Aintree Protest – Is it public nuisance?
118 protesters, led by the group ‘Animal Rising’, have so far been arrested at Aintree for actions that disrupted the races in support of animal welfare concerns.[1] It is reported that they were arrested for criminal damage and public nuisance. This post will not seek to question the morality of their acts, but rather the shaky legal grounds for arrest. […]
Environmental Protesters: Are courts afraid of climate change?
The judiciary appear to be completely at a loss in determining how to deal consistently with these cases.