The State's Attempt to Prevent the Accused Explaining Why They Have Taken Direct Action Demonstrates the Ethical & Moral Hole at the Heart of Britain’s Judiciary
UPDATE
The Jury has just sent a note to the judge indicating they are deadlocked.
It is not known what the numbers are. The Judge has indicated that he will give
a majority verdict direction tomorrow, where a 10-2 majority is required. It is
likely that the verdicts will be tomorrow (Tuesday)
Finally,
after 8 weeks, the jury in our trial was sent out at the end of Wednesday to
reach a verdict on the 5 defendants. The charge against us is Section 3
of the Criminal Damage Act 1971 which states that:
A person who has anything in his
custody or under his control intending without
lawful excuse to use it or cause or permit another to use it—
(a)
to destroy or damage any property
belonging to some other person;
is
guilty. You might be forgiven for thinking that a defence of preventing the
commission of war crimes under the International Criminal Court Act 2001
would be well founded. Sections 51
and 52 of
this Act state that:
51
Genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes
(1)
It is an offence against the law
of England and Wales for a person to commit genocide, a crime against humanity
or a war crime.
(2) This section applies to acts committed—
(a) in England or Wales, or
(b) outside the United Kingdom by a United Kingdom national, a United
Kingdom resident or a person subject to UK service jurisdiction.
52 Conduct ancillary to genocide, etc. committed outside
jurisdiction
(1) It is an offence against the law of England
and Wales for a person to engage in conduct ancillary to an act to which this
section applies.
(2) This section applies to an act that if
committed in England or Wales would constitute—
(a) an offence under section 51 (genocide, crime
against humanity or war crime), or
(b) an
offence under this section,
but which, being committed (or
intended to be committed) outside England and Wales, does not constitute such
an offence.
(3) The reference in subsection (1) to conduct
ancillary to such an act is to conduct that would constitute an ancillary
offence in relation to that act if the act were committed in England or Wales.
(4) This section applies where the conduct in
question consists of or includes an act committed—
(a) in
England or Wales, or
(b)
outside the United Kingdom by a
United Kingdom national, a United Kingdom resident or a person subject to UK
service jurisdiction.
In
other words it is an offence, not only to commit genocide, crimes against
humanity and war crimes in the UK but it is an offence to be an ancillary to
such crimes. Further that committing or being ancillary to such crimes outside
the UK is to be taken as being committed in the UK by a UK national or
resident.
Boris
Johnson lying about parties in Downing Street
The Rule of Law
Britain
is, in theory governed by the Rule of Law but it is clear that this is, in
reality a legal fiction which acts to disguise who it is that holds power.
In
recent years this concept has become more threadbare and honoured in the breach.
It was particularly marked under Boris Johnson, who as Prime Minister openly
flouted and disregarded the very COVID lockdown laws that he had laid such
emphasis on. He is alleged to have attended at least 10 parties but the
Metropolitan Police, who had initially refused to investigate
any breach by Johnson of the COVID regulations, only investigated half of them
and only sent Johnson a questionnaire related to one of them.
The
pathetic
excuse of the Met was that it did not normally investigate breaches of
coronavirus regulations “long after they
are said to have taken place”. The Met presumably only investigates crime
before the are committed! Which is probably why they arrested
protesters against the Coronation before they even got to the
demonstrations! It was only after the Public Law Project threatened
to judicially review the Met’s refusal to investigate Johnson that they reversed
their decision.
Nor
was this the only instance of the Met turning a blind eye to Johnson and his
cronies breaking the law. Johnson, when Mayor of London, secured
for his mistress, Jennifer Arcuri, a £100,000 grant from the Greater London
Authority for her business, Hacker’s House, which was based in California not
London, whilst failing to declare an interest. Unsurprisingly the Met has not
investigated this fraud on public funds and Whitehall’s internal audit agency
conducted a whitewash inquiry.
The
massive
fraud, estimated at £16 billion, in COVID grants to cronies and friends of
the Government is well documented. The
government's use of a "VIP lane" to award contracts for personal
protective equipment (PPE) to cronies and friends was ruled unlawful by the High Court. Yet despite this there
have been no consequences for the fraudsters.
Health Secretary Matt Hancock secured a £30 million deal to supply test tubes for
COVID tests for his friend and local pub landlord Alex Bourne’s company Hinpack
Limited. The company had no
experience of supplying medical equipment but who cares? Certainly not the
Metropolitan or other police forces.
Tory
peer, Lady Michelle Mone and her husband, Douglas
Barrowman, were beneficiaries of the fraudulent VIP lane. Mone,
Barrowman and their company, PPE Medpro and three other intermediary companies made
in excess of £100m in profits from government contracts worth £203m. Little or
nothing appears to have been done to prosecute Mone and Barrowman. Her company
PPE Medpro stated
that its principal business activity was international trading in coffee,
consumables, edible nuts and fruits. In other words nothing to do with the
supply of PPE. Suffice to say what they did supply proved useless.
It
seems that powerful politicians and those in government effectively have
immunity from criminal prosecution whereas those who threaten Israeli arms
company with ‘criminal damage’ feel the full force of the law. Are these
decisions political? According to judges
like Ian Burnett and Michael Chambers the answer is no but to most people the
answer is obvious. There is one law for the rich and one for the poor.
In the United Kingdom, the rule of law, has been closely associated with
Tory constitutionalist A.V. Dicey and his book Introduction to the Study of
the Law of the Constitution. According to Dicey, along with the concept of
Parliamentary Sovereignty, the rule of law is one of the twin pillars of the
British Constitution.
There were 3 aspects of the rule of law that Dicey highlighted. The first
was that no man is punishable or can be lawfully be made to suffer or be deprived
of their goods unless they have violated the law. There is also an absolute
supremacy or predominance of regular law over arbitrary power and the state cannot
act in an arbitrary manner which is unlawful.
Again all of these have been honoured in the breach by the current
government with the connivance of both the Police and the Judiciary.
The second aspect of Dicey’s concept of the rule of law was equality
before the law. Noone is above the law. Theoretically whatever an individual’s
rank s/he is subject to the ordinary law of the land. In theory if someone breaches
the same law, they would be treated in the same way. State officials were not to
be given any special privileges or protections from the law. “Be you ever so high, the law is above you.”
The third aspect denotes that the principles of the constitution are the
result of the ordinary law of the land. Dicey stated that Britain had a
court-based constitution (in effect, a common law constitution), in the sense
that decisions made by the judges directly resulted in the principles of the
constitution concerning the rights of private persons. Yet all of these fine
principles have never been observed.
In theory the selling of honours is a criminal offence under the Honours (Prevention
of Abuses) Act 1925. The only problem is that no one has ever been
prosecuted under it because those who have breached it have been Prime Ministers
and powerful officials. We had the Cash for Honours
scandal under Tony Blair, when those who loaned large sums to New Labour were given
seats in the House of Lords. Blair was interviewed by the Met but not under
caution.
There has been a similar cash
for honours scandal under Boris Johnson but again the Met has done nothing
because attacking direct action activists rather than ruling class crooks is their
priority.
Dicey’s
concept of the Rule of Law was updated by Thomas Bingham, a former Lord Chief
Justice and Senior Law Lord, who was described
as “the most significant judicial figure
… in the history of the Anglo-Saxon legal systems.".
Bingham
formulated Eight
Principles of the Rules of Law. The
third rule being that ‘The laws of the
land should apply equally to all, save to the extent that objective differences
justify differentiation.’ As the above clearly demonstrates, defrauding the
public exchequer of billions of pounds is ignored when it concerns friends and
cronies of government cabinet ministers whereas someone who shoplifts to feed
their kids in the local Tesco faces going to gaol and a lecture by judges such
as Michael Chambers.
The
eighth rule of Bingham was that ‘The rule
of law requires compliance by the state with its obligations in international
law as in national law. Given the absence of any such compliance or
enforcement by the British state, human rights and political activists have filled
the gap. But to British judges such as Lord Hoffman, a former law lord, this
has been called
by ‘taking the law into one’s own hands’. Hoffman raised the spectre of
‘anarchy’ on the streets. But when the law is selectively applied what else can
people do but apply it themselves?
For
reasons of political and legal expediency, the current Lord Chief Justice Ian Burnett
and legal apparatchiks like our very own Judge Chambers have sought to ensure
that this obligation by the British State is rendered null and void. In the
process they have erased the phrase ‘without
lawful excuse’ from the Criminal Damage Act 1971.
You
might therefore believe, if the rule of law meant anything that the Police
would have investigated Elbit concerning the use of their drones in respect of
war crimes in Gaza, Kashmir and Burma among other places. Instead they have
turned a blind eye.
Elbit
provides Israel with 85% of its drones
and 80% of its munitions including White Phosphorous
which Israel has used
against UN schools.
However
you would be failing to account for the ingenuity of the British ‘Justice’
System and in particular the evil genius of Ian Burnett. Burnett presided over
the trial of Julian Assange whose ‘crime’ was disclosing US war crimes in Iraq.
He revealed how US pilots had deliberately murdered
innocent civilians, including two Reuters journalists, mowing them down with
machine gun fire from a helicopter.
You
have to hand it to Burnett. It takes a certain genius whereby those who reveal
the secrets of war crimes are imprisoned at the behest of the war criminals.
The Nuremberg Trials
of 1946 in respect of the Nazi war criminals have been turned on their head. If
Nazi Germany had won the war then the Nazi equivalents of Burnett would have
prosecuted those who revealed the secrets of Auschwitz. After all, under Nazi
law, Auschwitz and the extermination camps were also state secrets.
This
is the irony of the decision
of the Court of Appeal in the Colston case which was referred to it. The
British Establishment – from Cruella Braverman to Keir ‘liar’ Starmer - was
outraged that those who toppled the statue of a mass murderer and slave trader,
Edward Colston, from his plinth and which was thrown into Bristol harbor were acquitted.
Julian
Assange has been living in Belmarsh, Britain’s equivalent of Guantanamo, whilst
the war criminals he exposed are free to commit further crimes. Such is British
and US justice.
In
the past week a new case came on for trial at Wolverhampton. Four more people were
charged with criminal damage at Elbit’s Shenstone factory. Judge Chambers, the
Tory judge presiding over our trial, has stated that he intends to try this
case. He is determined to ensure that the trial doesn’t go on for another 8
weeks and has already said he will guillotine cross-examination.
Chambers
did his best to put pressure on all 4 defendants to plead guilty making it
clear that they had no defences, since he had already ruled out ‘lawful excuse’
in our trial. He told the defendants that as the offences they are charged with
crossed the ‘custody threshold’ their interests would be best served by getting
credit for pleading guilty!
Nonetheless
all four resisted this pressure and pleaded not guilty to the annoyance of
Chambers and the trial is set down for February 2024. Our task in the meantime
is to ensure that there is a strong and determined campaign which will thwart
the efforts of the police and judiciary to outlaw effective protests and keep
juries in the dark.
At
the same time as the jury in our case was deliberating, Israel was bombing
Gaza again. In order to take out three leaders of Islamic Jihad Israel murdered
10 civilians, including 4 children.
This is a war crime but British judges are like the 3 wise monkeys – they neither hear,
see or say anything about this because it is ‘political’ and we are mere
criminals.
Exactly
the same was said about all mass movements for democracy in the past, whether
it was the Chartists, the Suffragettes or before them Oliver Cromwell and the
Roundheads who defied the existing constitution and its judges to assert the
supremacy of parliament. As the Prosecutor told the jury in the trial of Emmeline
Pankhurst in 1912:
Suffrage is not the issue, it is the criminal behaviour of the
suffragettes and their incitement to partake in militant activity at which 54
windows were broken
Ian
Burnett and Michael Chambers are nothing if not unoriginal.
As
Craig Murray, the former British Ambassador to Uzbekistan, writes in his
current blog Protest Is a Moral Duty. Just as the
Police are doing their best to prevent any and all rights of protest – from the
Coronation to Palestine – so the Judges are doing their best to criminalise and
lock away demonstrators. Article 6 of the European Convention
of Human Rights guaranteeing a fair trial has gone out of
the window.
Of course when this
happens in Hong Kong then
the BBC and the Tory press wax lyrical about freedom of speech and democracy
but when it happens in Britain these same hypocrites fall silent.
3 Protesters Who Informed Juries of Their Rights are Accused of Perverting the of justice
Trudy Warner, who held a
placard telling jurors that they had an absolute right to acquit a Defendant
according to their conscience, has been reported to the Attorney
General for possible prosecution for perverting the course of justice.
Perverting the Course of Justice now means informing juries of their rights.
Ironically, on the
very walls of the Old Bailey, there is a plaque celebrating the case of Edward Bushell, when a Judge
imprisoned a jury for 2 days and nights without food, water or chamber pot for
refusing to find the Defendants William Penn and William Mead guilty according
to the law. The hypocrisy of British Judges knows no bounds.
The British
Establishment and their judicial wing realise that the weak link in the
persecution of climate, Palestine and other direct action activists is the
Jury, the only independent element in the British constitution.
That is why,
despite the fact that juries have an absolute right to disregard the directions
and advice of judges, they have decided that the mere act of informing jurors
of their right to decide cases according to their conscience is ‘perverting the course of justice’ whereas
in reality it is those who seek to keep jurors in the dark as to their rights
who are guilty of this offence. But then, as the old saying goes, who judges
the judges, unelected and unaccountable as they are. What they object to is
what they call ‘perverse verdicts’.
The constitutional
and legal position was outlined by
Patrick Devlin, one of the most famous law lords who stated that ‘perverse
acquittals’:
gives protection against laws which the
ordinary man regards as harsh and oppressive . . . an insurance that the
criminal law will conform to the ordinary man's ideas of what is fair and just.
If it does not, the jury will not be a party to its enforcement."
It has been more
recently restated by Baroness Heather Hallett, a member of the Court of Appeal from 2005-2019, who in the 2017
Blackstone Lecture on the Role of the Jury said:
A jury may refuse to convict in spite of the law and the evidence
because it concludes that the law is an unjust law. The jury passes its verdict
on the law. Secondly, it ensures that the prosecution and the judge are on
trial.
These trials [Ponting and Leonard Arthur] all took place in the
full glare of publicity. Here we see a specific application of the principle of
open justice: the public can attend court and scrutinise what is going on. They
can see the jury make its protest as to what they see as an unjust law or
unjust application of the law. There is a check against arbitrary or oppressive
conduct by the court…. We see as Professor [Michael] Zander has properly
pointed out the jury can set aside ‘unjust laws, oppressive prosecutions and
harsh sentences.’
This is on
the official site of the British Judiciary but nonetheless it is forbidden to
mention these issues to a jury! And if you try to inform them you will be
arrested and charged with perverting the course of justice.
Defences of
proportionality under the Human Rights Act, Justification and Necessity, as
well as acting to prevent war crimes, have all been ruled out by the Court of
Appeal in its efforts to defend the arms industry and Elbit in particular.
We had the absurdity
in our trial of the Prosecutor and Judge Chambers (who worked together in
unison) arguing that it was necessary to prove that a particular engine had
powered a particular drone which had killed a specific individual for the
defence of necessity to be made out.
It’s like
suggesting that in order to find IG Farben guilty of crimes against humanity for
producing Zyklon B that murdered millions of people in Nazi Germany’s
extermination camps, one had to find the particular pellet that killed a
particular person. When it comes to excusing war crimes our judges will go to
any lengths to distort and twist the law. All in the interests of justice of
course!
Tony Greenstein
Now Protest Is a Moral Duty
Craig Murray
The torrential rain was shed from the policeman’s flat
hat via its curved plastic peak, forming a curtain of water that flowed down in
front of him, obscuring his face.
His name was Martin. A female colleague stood in
solidarity beside him. Two other female policemen were filming with a large
video camera from three metres away. Thirty yards down the road were large
groups of burly policemen in fluorescent jackets, and beyond them the Tactical
Support Group sat behind the dark windows of their mesh covered minibuses,
fingering their shields and batons.
Facing Martin were the protestors. There were six of
us, average age about 70. We were all absolutely sodden through, but still
clutched umbrellas and tried to find angles from which to reduce the wind driven
assault of cold water. As the rain was extremely noisy, and probably we don’t
hear quite as well as we used to, we kept shuffling towards Martin and leaning
forward to try to catch his words, before they were blown away or drowned.
Martin was reading the riot act. Or, to be precise, he
was reading an order made under the Public Order Act 1986. With no sense that
he understood the absurdity of his words, he intoned:
“I
reasonably believe that this assembly has been organised with criminal intent.
I reasonably believe that this assembly may result in violence to persons and
to property. I reasonably believe that this assembly may cause disruption to
the life of the community”.
Some of my top teeth are no longer natural and I get
dizzy after climbing a flight of stairs or getting out the bath. I was cold and
wet and longing for a nice hot cup of tea. I felt perhaps proud, but rather
puzzled, to be taken for a serious criminal danger to the city of Leicester.
Behind Martin stood the paramilitary security guards
of the Israeli weapons factory. They did not look really nice. I wondered if
Martin was facing in the right direction.
I sneaked this photo of one of them from the taxi as I
was leaving. Not entirely what you expect to find down a wooded lane outside Leicester.
Overhead a red police drone buzzed. What it could see,
that the scores of police eyes on us could not see, remains a mystery. It was
possibly on the lookout for subversive messages on the top of umbrellas.
I found the police operator round the corner who, to
be fair, was probably sheltering from the downpour under a tree rather than
deliberately hiding behind the hedge.
The factory makes, among other things, components for the kind of drones that kill women and children in Gaza on a regular basis.
This is one of the 'terrorists' Liane Mdoukh killed by an Israeli missile in Gaza - no Western state has condemned these killings but if it were Russia....
I would like you to meet Liane. One of the Palestinian
children killed this week in Gaza by weaponry of the Elbit weapons company we
were picketing. Whether her death involved any components made in this precise
Leicester Elbit factory I do not know. It is probable.
Look into Liane’s eyes, then tell me you do not wish
you had been with me, standing in the rain.
When Martin had finished speaking I replied, rather to
his, and everybody else’s, surprise. He had started moving away but returned to
listen.
I said that I was not an organiser of the protest,
just a supporter. But the Order he had read out did not apply. We were just six
people – that is not enough people to constitute an “assembly” under Part 2 of
the 1986 Public Order Act.
I then went to the police camera team and said the
same thing to them. As they were filming for evidence purposes to show the
Order had been made, I asked them to maintain the tape for evidence that the
police had been told we were not an assembly in terms of the act.
They were really not very happy about this. You could
see the cogs whirring as they wondered whether they could arrest me. I presume
all these police had arrived after an operational briefing that they were
dealing with violent Middle Eastern terrorists, and they were having a brief
bout of cognitive dissonance.
There are of course people who resolve cognitive
dissonance by an immediate resort to violence, and rather a higher proportion
of such people than you might expect, find their way into the police force, so
I then wandered off with some friendly remarks about the weather.
I reported
yesterday on the incredibly heavy handed policing of this protest. The Chief
Constable of Leicestershire, Robert Nixon, has instructed the protest must be
“stamped out”, according to one police officer I spoke with.
About sixty protestors have been arrested, and some 50 released on bail on condition they leave the county of Leicestershire completely.
Some have even been arrested hundreds of miles away,
for the new crime of planning to attend a demonstration.
Earlier that day I had witnessed the police harass a
mother in hijab. Two male officers, not accompanied by a female officer,
arriving to quiz her on why three children present at the protest were not at
school.
Truancy is not in general a police matter, and if an
intervention was deemed necessary it should have been carried out by a
qualified local authority officer. The cultural insensitivity on display was
remarkable, and it underlined the fact that every single police officer I saw
over two days was white.
This picture, from a few days earlier at the same protest,
illustrates it well. Leicester is a very multi-cultural city, but these are the
county police.
Each time I arrived at the protest, I went walking
around to count the number of police and see what they were doing. Generally I
chatted with whoever was in charge, and made plain I thought they were far more
heavy handed than was compatible with the right to protest.
I received a message from Palestine Action to the
effect that friendly chats with the police are not really how they roll. I
respect their position and its cause, but my own view is that if you treat the
police officers personally as the enemy, it makes it hard to complain when they
do the same to you.
On this final visit I noted, in addition to the
ordinary and tactical support group minibuses; the drone squad, at least four
marked police cars, the same number of unmarked cars with uniformed officers
inside, and five cars parked up with occupants in civilian clothes sitting
there for hours ostensibly doing nothing at all.
I called an Uber to leave. I then said my farewells,
and my phone beeped saying the Uber had arrived, indicating the pick up point.
I walked to the car and opened the back door – and there behind the dark
windows were some burly policemen in plain clothes and a directional
microphone.
The bearded driver was furious. He yelled at me “Why did you open that door?”
I replied “Well,
if you will go around in disguise, people will mistake you for an Uber”.
The car doors were pulled shut again in anger and the
car drove off. Three different groups of policemen approached, all yelling out
“Why did you open that door?” “What were
you doing with that car?”
Laughing, I replied “I am sorry, I thought it was my Uber”. Fortunately that very second
my Uber pulled up next to me. I got in and left, giggling away.
The action at Elbit is continuous. I shall definitely
be back at some stage. Please do get yourselves there. I regard it as a moral
duty. We were just a few gentle souls in the rain, but I am proud to have been
there.
I’m with you Tony. Your actions are brave and proper and your discourse on the law is excellent. Maybe there will be enough jury members who listened to at least prevent a guilty verdict. Then Starmer’s like thinking successor as DPP will have to decide whether to go for a second trial or let more rapists and fraudsters go free.
ReplyDeleteHi Tony. Best of luck for tomorrow.
ReplyDeleteYou state near the end: "Defences of proportionality under the Human Rights Act, Justification and Necessity, as well as acting to prevent war crimes, have all been ruled out by the Court of Appeal in its efforts to defend the arms industry and Elbit in particular." Would you mind passing on a link to that Court of Appeal ruling? Thanks.