Zionists & Hacker (Lee) Harpin
vent their fury over an ‘institutionally anti‑Semitic’ justice system
Tony Greenstein speech outside Wolverhampton Court on 6 September 2023 before 4 of the defendants were sentenced
The first thing I want to do is to thank the
hundreds of people who stood in solidarity with the four of us who
were given between 9 and 12 months suspended sentences last Wednesday. Our ‘crime’ was trying to prevent the genocidal arms factory, Elbit, from continuing to operate.
The importance of solidarity when activists
are under attack from the State should never be under estimated. It emphasises
that we are not alone in our fight for justice and the struggle against the war
makers.
The demonstration outside the court and the
willingness of activists to turn up from as far away as Wales emphasised the
support we have. It is to the shame of Palestine Solidarity Campaign that at no stage, despite its 2021 conference
policy supporting Palestine Action, did they lift a finger in our support.
PSC Executive and its Director Ben Jamal are interested in only one thing – living off the back
of the Palestinian struggle in order to build yet another NGO.
The demonstration outside Wolverhampton Crown Court when 4 Palestine Actionists were sentenced and walked free on September 6th 2023
When I walked into the dock and listened to
HHJ Michael Chambers, a notoriously reactionary Tory judge, even by the
standards of his profession, I was prepared to be sent down and I had packed my
prison bag, as had my fellow Palestine Actionists.
Chambers had clearly prepared his speech well
before he entered the court. The mitigation speeches of our barristers I
suspect made little or no impression. His intention was to instil fear in us,
so it was a pleasant surprise when he gave us the ‘benefit’ of his doubt that
we ‘would no longer undertake violent
protests’.
Of course Palestine Action has never indulged
in violent protests. Noone has ever been injured by Palestine Action. Attacking
an arms company which specialises in the supply of lethal weaponry to some of
the most horrific regimes in the world is the opposite of violence. However these simple truths elude some of the brightest minds in the judicial system.
Nonetheless
we were happy to promise the probation service that we would not be involved in
similar protests in the next two years and we all intend to abide by that
promise. Of course we don’t intend to desist from participating in protests
against Elbit’s Death Factories.
A short resume of what led to my conviction
On 7 March 2021 I was rung up out of the blue
by someone from Palestine Action who asked me to drive a van to the Midlands
and to collect some ladders. Having hired a van I set off at about 9 pm. It was only when I phoned a number
from a service station on the M40 that I was given a phone number and the
address I was going to.
The disappointment of the Zionists is the best thing about the sentencing. Note that Zio Fascist Fiona Sharpe tells Brighton & Hove News editor Jo Wadsworth that she is doing 'a great job'
Arriving at an Airbnb just after 1 am I almost
immediately left with Jeremy Parker to see if we could buy lock-on gear. Whoever
had bought the other equipment had forgotten to buy anything to lock on. So much for the efficient
military-style operation that the Prosecution sought to portray the action as.
It more resembled Dads Army than the SAS.
When I arrived back at the flat all the bags were sealed and apart from the paint
tubs I had no idea what they contained. It was only later after we were stopped
on our way to Shenstone that I learnt that they contained sledge hammers and a
crow bar.
I have no principled objection to damaging an arms factory. None at all. However I don’t think that for the sake of
causing £¼m damage that activists should risk 2-3 years imprisonment unless
they make that decision collectively at the outset.
However that is water under the bridge.
The pontificating of Michael Chambers about damage to the factory – its CCTV,
air-conditioning units etc. is the purest of hypocrisy when compared to the damage that Elbit's drones cause to people's bodies.
Palestine Action in action at Manchester recruitment agency iO Associates - The demonstration was successful - all ads for Elbit's death factories were taken down
I envisage that Chambers could have sat in the
Nazi
Peoples Court denouncing individuals who had caused damage to IG Farben’s factories,
which manufactured the gas Zyklon B, used to murder an estimated 4 million people. When your only concern is for property not people then it
doesn’t matter what the factory produces.
Fiona Sharpe of Sussex Friends of Israel is a well known anti-Palestinian racist who describes opponents of a Factory of Death as 'thugs' - she finds Dr Iain Darcy's comments I should have been given a medal incomprehensible
I watched Chambers closely over the 7 weeks of the trial. Not once did it even occur to him to question the lawfulness Elbit’s operations at Shenstone, which manufactures drones that are used to murder innocent civilians. Prosecutor Rachel Gould, who I assume is Jewish, also displayed no concern but she is probably a Zionist.
British law prioritises concern for property over people. As Lord Denning, former Master of the Rolls explained in Southwark LBC v Williams
"... if hunger were once allowed to be an excuse for stealing, it would open a door through which all kinds of lawlessness and disorder would pass... if homelessness were once admitted as a defence to trespass, no one's house could be safe. Necessity would open a door which no man could shut. … So the courts must, for the sake of law and order, take a firm stand. They must refuse to admit the plea of necessity to the hungry and the homeless; "
Denning also intoned in respect of the Birmingham 6, who were wrongly convicted of the Birmingham pub bombings in 1974:
“We shouldn’t have all these campaigns to get the Birmingham Six released if they’d been hanged. They’d have been forgotten, and the whole community would be satisfied… It is better that some innocent men remain in jail than that the integrity of the English judicial system be impugned.”
I imagine that this is carved in stone in the Chambers home. At times he seemed to operate in tandem with the Prosecutor who has no doubt appeared before him for many years. It was on very rare occasions that they disagreed. 95% of the time he upheld her objections and 95% of the time he overruled the defence barristers’ objections. He even ruled that I had to disclose what I had said to my solicitor, which is a clear breach of legal privilege.
Good Law Project on right to defend yourself
One of the few occasions in which he overruled the
Prosecutor was on the question of
whether I had lied. Gould had originally asserted that when I was stopped by the
Police and asked where I was going I lied when I said ‘I’m going for a drive’. I successfully persuaded her that what I
said was factually true even though it wasn’t the answer the policeman wanted.
Chambers was having none of it. It was, as far
as he was concerned, a lie albeit he then issued what is called a Lucas direction.
Chambers is a man who operates in a moral
vacuum. He is certainly no philosopher and gave no indication that he is
capable of deep thought or reflection. That is not true of all judges and in
recent years there have been a number who were capable of both.
Lord Steyn - South African born Jewish judge who sat as a Law Lord
People such as Baroness Hale, former President of the Supreme Court, Law Lord Johan Steyn, Appeal Court Judge Stephen Sedley, who in Redmond-Hate
v DPP stated that
Free speech
included not only the inoffensive but also the irritating, the contentious, the
eccentric, the heretical, the unwelcome, and the provocative, as long as such
speech did not tend to provoke violence.
Other
notable judges included Thomas Bingham, described as the greatest judge of his generation, who formulated
8 principles of the Rule of Law, Lord Philips the first President of the Supreme Court and Lord Woolf.
Even some of the more right-wing judges such as Jonathan Sumption were capable of straying from black letter law. In his final diatribe Chambers quoted Sumption to the effect that the Suffragettes had set back the cause of women’s emancipation by 5 years. However he forgot to mention that Sumption, in the Reith lecture, had stated that there was ‘“no moral obligation to obey the law”. Sumption went on to say that there was no obligation to obey the COVID laws.
The one thing Chambers was good at was in his ability to be selective in who and what he quoted. During the case and in his summing up Chambers quoted what is clearly his favourite judge, Lord Hoffman. What he didn’t quote was Hoffman’s observation that
Civil
disobedience on conscientious grounds has a long and honourable history in this
country. People who break the law to affirm their belief in the injustice of a
law or government action are sometimes vindicated by history.
Mentioning
the suffragettes Hoffman went on to say that “It is the mark of a civilised community that it can accommodate
protests and demonstrations of this kind.” However most judges, Chambers
included, are incapable of understanding that the law can be an instrument of
tyranny.
As has often been pointed out, there was nothing illegal under German law in exterminating people because of their race. Demolishing peoples' homes in Israel and using torture is not illegal in Israel either.
Patrick Devlin, a former Law Lord said
of the jury system that
It is a
protection against tyranny. It is also an insurance that the criminal law will
conform to the ordinary man's idea of what is fair and just. If it does not the
jury will not be a party to its enforcement. They have in the past used their
power of acquittal to defeat the full operation of laws which they thought to
be too hard…. One way or another they
are prone to give effect to their repugnance to a law by refusing to convict
under it. The small body of men, who under modern conditions, constitute the
effective body of legislators have to bear this in mind. It affects the
character of the laws they make, for it is no use making laws which will not be
enforced.
Devlin pointed to the reality of laws. Most MPs never read what they vote for before it is passed into law. They are written by parliamentary draughtsmen.
Dame Heather Hallett, a member of the Court of
Appeal from 2005 to 2019 and who is now chairing the COVID Inquiry, said in her
2017 Blackstone lecture on
the Role of the Jury that
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.
Yet when I put the same sentiments in a blog
Chambers stated
that
“He’s also been calling on
jurors to return outcomes according to conscience. That’s a serious matter of
contempt.
“It’s a
serious contempt to invite jurors to return outcomes which are not in
accordance with the facts, but in accordance with their conscience
If it is a serious contempt of court to point out what is a part of the Common Law, then why is there a plaque on the walls of the Old Bailey which refers to the Bushel case of 1670, that says exactly this?
Chambers, whatever his other sins might be, cannot be accused
of originality. He is incapable
of comprehending any social or political analysis that challenges his conventional conservative upbringing.
Chambers favourite comparison when challenged on police malpractice was of the police uncovering a gang plying drugs on the motorway. This was in connection to the Public Immunity Certificate that Chambers granted before the swearing in of the jury, thus preventing any discussion on what information the police possessed. Chambers had difficulty comprehending the difference between a gang of drug smugglers and human rights activists.
It is clear that the Police had
intelligence on our action even before it occurred yet when they stopped the
van they told us that it was because the van was not registered in the area. A
clear lie. When they opened the van and saw the Palestinian flags they asked ‘are they Israeli?’ In other words the
Police were given a license to lie on oath.
Chambers
was fond of quoting the reactionary new Lady Chief Justice, Sue Carr who succeeded the even more reactionary Ian Burnett, distinguished only by
the umbrella that others held for him. Carr’s only claim to fame is that
she is the first woman to take the post. Like Thatcher the only acceptable
woman for the most senior judicial post is a deeply reactionary one.
Carr
demonstrated her mettle at the end of July when she refused to grant a right of appeal to Morgan
Trowland and Marcus Decker who had scaled Dartford Bridge as part of a Just
Stop Oil protest. I say this despite disagreeing with their method of protest.
It is oil refineries not people who should be blockaded. However the sentences
were grossly disproportionate and intended to chill the right to protest.
Amongst
the more stupid of Chambers statements
were that “It was clear from the evidence
you gave to the jury that you were unrepentant.” Were we seriously expected
to ‘repent’ for having targeted an
Israeli arms factory?
Other
equally stupid statements
were that “You each demonstrated an
unswerving, blinkered commitment to your cause.’ Blinkered? Talk about the pot calling the kettle black.
Elbit
doesn’t just supply Israel with 85% of its drones. It supplies every genocidal state in the world. There is no conflict –
from Yemen to Kashmir to Myanmar – in which Elbit doesn’t help murderous
regimes kill their own citizens. The case of Myanmar is particularly egregious since
the Burmese Generals have massacred and expelled the Rohinga people in their thousands. Even the
UK government has sanctioned this regime but as far as Elbit is concerned no regime is out of
bounds.
For
Chambers the real evil is not the children whose lives are snuffed out by Elbit weapons but the
daubing of the company's walls with red paint. The immorality of our judges, and Chambers is
just an example, has a long tradition. The International
Criminal Court Act 2001 has become a dead letter.
Other idiotic
observations of Chambers were that:
“It’s apparent to everyone
that … public attitudes have hardened towards tolerance for extreme actions or
minorities choosing disruption or criminal damage rather than using the main
routes that are open to protest in a democratic society.
“That has also
been reflected by recent decisions of the court of appeal.”
Leaving aside whether we are an 'extreme minority' it is
true that the recent
decision of the Court of Appeal on Colston was hostile to direct action and
follows the move to the right of the Supreme Court. But there is
no evidence that public attitudes have hardened. On the contrary. The Colston decision which provoked the Court of Appeal into reinterpreting the law occurred precisely because a jury had acquitted the protesters.
What is
true is that the Courts have bowed to the desire of Tory Ministers to outlaw direct action and the right to protest.
Throughout the trial Chambers displayed his
political bias, referring to the Israeli-Palestinian ‘conflict’. Would he have termed
the occupation of France by Nazi Germany a ‘conflict’ or an occupation?
Israel pours concrete into
water wells to deprive Palestinians of water
Whenever there is a coup e'etat, such as in the case
of Rhodesia in 1964, when it declared UDI (Unilateral Declaration of Independence) the courts are quick to fall into line.
I quoted in my book the decision of the Dutch Supreme
Court in November 1940 by 12-5 that there were no grounds to
refuse to sign the Aryan Declaration. This meant
the Nazis were given the legal go ahead to dismiss all Jewish government
employees. In the process they betrayed fellow Supreme Court Judge Lodewijk
Visser who was Jewish. The decision
was a recognition of who held power. There was no basis in Dutch law for such a
decision.
The decision
to prosecute Palestine Action activists was itself a political act
I
mentioned the eight
principles of the Rule of Law as set out by Thomas Bingham. The third of these rules was that:
The laws of the land should
apply equally to all, save to the extent that objective differences justify
differentiation
The fifth rule was that
The law must afford adequate
protection of fundamental human rights.
The eighth rule was that
The rule of law requires
compliance by the state with its obligations in international law as in
national law.
Suffice
to say all three of these rules were broken when this prosecution was brought.
According
to the Good
Law Project some £10 billion of the £12.5 billion spent on PPE during the
COVID crisis was written off. The government set up a VIP lane, subsequently declared
unlawful, in order that it could hand contracts to its friends and cronies who
then recycled some of it back to the Tory Party.
The
most infamous case was that of Tory peer Lady
Michelle Mone who trousered £200m and made a £100m profit on PPE that was
unfit for use. Matt Hancock’s pub landlord Alex Bourne got
away with £30m for a PPE contract that never delivered anything. Has there
even been a whisper of an investigation still less a prosecution? Of course not. The rule of law in today’s
Britain applies almost exclusively to those without means.
We
saw that in the refusal
of the Met to prosecute Boris Johnson for his violations of COVID regulations. It
was only the threat of judicial review which forced them to do so. When they
did reverse their position they chose
to investigate just 1 of the 10+ parties Johnson had attended.
As the Good Law Project, which had brought the judicial review said of the Met's reasons for not investigating:
It
points to a Met that does not want to investigate potential criminality in
Government, or to a police force that is excessively deferential to those in
power. It is a policy which dramatically undermines the rule of law.
The
Court of Appeal ruling that
those acquitted in the Colston case should
not have been able to rely on human rights defences is a continuation of a
long tradition of judicial racism that ignored the plunder and genocide of the
British Empire. That Ian Burnett and fellows should oppose the toppling of a statue
celebrating a mass murderer should be no surprise.
Liar Lee Harpin, or as I call him, Hacker Harpin, described me as a prison escapee!
The
decision to bring our prosecution is a clear contradiction of Bingham’s rule
no. 8, compliance with international law. Elbit’s factories manufacture drones,
not for civil but military use. It supplies these drones knowing full well that
they will be used against civilians, be it in Gaza, Myanmar or Sudan.
As the New York Times reported
after the 2021 military coup in Myanmar:
The generals, who staged a coup a month ago, are now back in charge with a far more
sophisticated arsenal at their disposal: Israeli-made surveillance drones,
European iPhone cracking devices and American software that can hack into
computers and vacuum up their contents.
Chamber’s only concern was the £30,000 loss that might have
been caused to Elbit Systems. The man is morally bankrupt yet he sits in
judgement on others.
The
real question is the lawfulness of Elbit operations at Shenstone not minor and petty criminal damage.
Fellow racist Gaynor Bond expresses her sympathy to Jonathan Hoffman - 'so sorry JH. X'
It
is no wonder that Chambers repeatedly called Britain a ‘mature democracy’ when the word kleptocracy
would be more apposite. Clearly
the word ‘democracy’ means something different to judges, even those as
elevated as the Recorder of Wolverhampton and ordinary people.
Today
there is an attempt by the Tory government, backed up by Starmer, to
criminalise all effective public protest. The courts are making it clear that
they will not place any obstacles in their way. That is why there is an urgent
need for greater collaboration between climate action and Palestine solidarity
groups such as in Oldham where Elbit’s factory was shut down.
The Zionists were not happy with Hoffman's fellow criminal Damon Lenzner accusing the justice system of 'institutional antisemitism'
But
this is the week when we can rejoice at the discomfort of the Zionists. There
was Damon Lenzner, the crooked crony of Jonathan Hoffman telling his coterie
of Zionist fascists that the justice system was ‘institutionally anti-Semitic’ for not gaoling someone who is
Jewish! And there was Hacker Harpin, arrested for eavesdropping on other
peoples’ phones (including the parents of a dead child) with his usual
quota of mistakes in the Jewish News – I counted 4 (see letter).
My letter to the Jewish News pointing out their mistakes - it was sent last Friday - has still not been corrected
But when it came
to it, HHJ Chambers proved that his bark was worse than his bite as he
recognised that gaoling those who oppose a genocidal company is not a good look
– even for the judiciary.
There is just one part of the sentence - 20 days of rehabilitation - that might prove problematic. We have no need of 'rehabilitation'. This sounds very much like a Chinese or North Korean re-education camp which teaches protestors to love their government.
Tony Greenstein
I have reinstated all the blogs I was forced to take down
I was forced, at the end of the trial on May 16, to take down all my blogs written during the trial because of the threat of being immediately gaoled for Contempt of Court. Now the trial is over, a jury can't be prejudiced and they can be put back, which is what I have done. They are:
Fascinating commentary, Tony. Such clear analysis, so informative, linking in historical judgements, contexts… thank you once again for your insights.
ReplyDeleteVery glad that you do not have to serve a custodial sentence. Your actions have certainly succeeded in more widely publicising Elbit's presence in the UK and its role in providing lethal support for the suppression of dissent by repressive regimes around the world.
ReplyDeleteNice one Tony. Apropos Sumption, if you do get banged up later, his history of the 100 Years' War is rather better than his rulings. He's finished the last volume "The Hundred Years War Vol 5: Triumph and Illusion". Squeeth (AKA Advocatus Diaboli)
ReplyDeleteSolidarity Tony. People like Lenzner are reaching when they try to compare what PA did with his hypothetical situation involving Britain First attacking a Muslim owned business. An arms factory and a Muslim owned business are the same thing according to him.
ReplyDeleteAnyway, in other news, the SWP are doing a talk on women, race, and class - because who else could be better placed to talk about womens issues !
yes indeed. I can think of no one better than the SWP to talk about women, race and class. They are a text book example of what not to do!
DeleteYes - want to know what not to do when it comes to womens issues ? Heres the swp's 10 commandments of respecting women !
DeleteMain UK news outlets have so far failed to cover the vitally important threat to our legal system by some Judges who are engaged in Jury tampering. 'Newsnight' for example, which is supposed to be one of the BBC's flagship news programmes, often pads out their content with articles on such things as art exhibitions, or some London play, which although they may of interest to a few, are certainly not important news stories.
ReplyDeleteWe all know, whether it's here or abroad, just because an action has been deemed to be 'against the law' it does not mean that a) the law in question is just, or b) the average person would consider breaking that law to be a crime. This is why independent juries are so important, they must be allowed to hear all of the evidence and reach their conclusion without interference, whether judges like it or not.
This isn't the best outcome, but less worse than a custodial for sure.
ReplyDeleteAny thoughts on the TUC Congress 2023 Fringe 'Why We Must Side With Ukraine' event ? I think its taking place on 12th September.
Musa