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£14 DERISORY DAMAGES IN FIRST OF BOOKSHOP LIBEL CASES

titm | 05.07.2002 09:08

PRESS RELEASE - Wednesday 3 July
£14 DERISORY DAMAGES IN FIRST OF BOOKSHOP LIBEL CASES
MORAL VICTORY - LEGAL IMPASSE - FINANCIAL PREDICAMENT

BOOKSHOP LIBEL FUND
c/o Housmans Bookshop, 5 Caledonian Road, London N1 9DX (tel
020-7278 4474);
c/o Bookmarks Bookshop, 1 Bloomsbury Street, London WC1B 3QE (tel
020-7637 1848).


PRESS RELEASE - Wednesday 3 July

£14 DERISORY DAMAGES IN FIRST OF BOOKSHOP LIBEL CASES

MORAL VICTORY - LEGAL IMPASSE - FINANCIAL PREDICAMENT


A High Court verdict on Tuesday 2 July could be a short-term
deterrent to right-wingers using libel writs to attack small radical
bookshops; but it still leaves two of London's last such shops with
potentially crippling legal bills, and it exposes a major gap in
defamation law which needs plugging.

The two-day High Court case was the culmination of an action brought
nearly 2 years ago against Housmans Bookshop in Kings Cross, London,
by someone currently using the name Alexander Baron. The right-wing
anti-gay litigant had been referred to as a plagiarist in one
sentence in a 136-page pamphlet stocked in the shop. He had chosen
to sue only the shop, not the author or publisher concerned, because
of his distaste for the sort of material made available in radical
bookshops.

Although he had at one stage demanded that the shop pay him £50,000
to drop the case, the jury awarded him just £14. Because he had
already rejected a settlement offer higher than that, he was also
ordered to pay most of the shop's legal costs; however, there is no
expectation that he has the resources to do so.

Despite the jury's apparent sympathy with the defendants, they
clearly felt virtually compelled by the judge's legal rulings to
find against the shop. Following this test case - the first occasion
on which a bookshop has tried to use the "innocent dissemination"
defence introduced in the 1996 Defamation Act - it seems that if
anyone suggests to a shop or library that an item on their shelves
is defamatory, and they fail to remove it immediately, then they
cannot use this defence in any proceedings later brought against
them, irrespective of whether it was reasonable to take the
suggestion seriously.

This action against Housmans was one of a series, dating back to
1996, brought against Housmans, Bookmarks (also in London) and
others by people criticised in anti-fascist magazines. This was the
first to end up in court, but one of the earlier cases - against
Bookmarks and Housmans, and involving the magazine Searchlight - is
still extant. It is due in court this autumn unless a settlement is
reached first - either course is legally costly.

The Bookshop Libel Fund is calling for urgent financial support for
the shops to cover their costs in these cases, and for a change in
the law to stop bookshops being targeted in this way.

See the appended earlier release for the background to these cases.
For further details about this week's case, contact Albert Beale,
tel 020-7278 4474.


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BOOKSHOP LIBEL FUND
c/o Housmans Bookshop, 5 Caledonian Road, London N1 9DX (tel
020-7278 4474);
c/o Bookmarks Bookshop, 1 Bloomsbury Street, London WC1B 3QE (tel
020-7637 1848).


PRESS RELEASE for immediate release June 2002


Bookshops fight libel threat - defence campaign relaunched

Six years down the line, two small independent bookshops are still
facing a potentially ruinous libel case for stocking the respected
anti-fascist magazine Searchlight. The case was brought by someone
criticised in Searchlight.

The shops involved in this continuing case are Housmans, at Kings
Cross in London, linked to the 65-year-old pacifist paper Peace
News; and Bookmarks, also in London, a socialist bookshop
established for 30 years and the appointed bookseller for the TUC.

"Astoundingly, British law allows anyone who claims they have been
libelled to sue a shop, distributor or library handling the
allegedly libellous publication, as well as or instead of suing the
author, editor and publisher," said Albert Beale of Housmans.

This case has still not reached a conclusion although it relates to
an article in a 1993 issue of Searchlight and the case was first
brought in 1996. This action is one of several initiated then by
people criticised in Searchlight, in what could be seen as
politically motivated attacks on progressive bookshops.

Housmans and Bookmarks have been fighting the case with a defence of
"innocent dissemination", in effect arguing that it is impossible
for bookshops, particularly small independents, to check - and take
responsibility for - the content of the thousands of publications in
stock at any one time. The shops feel that it is important to try to
take a stand, otherwise there might be no end to this sort of "legal
intimidation".

The shops are facing a new round of legal bills as the case moves
towards a conclusion, and so are relaunching the appeal fund for
this important case.

One of the shops - Housmans - has recently been targeted with a
further libel writ from one of the group who sued over Searchlight.
This case, relating to criticism in another publication, similarly
threatens the free circulation of radical material.

"At a time when Le Pen has come second in the French presidential
elections, and the BNP has won three council seats in Britain, it is
more important than ever that independent bookshops are free to
stock anti-fascist and anti-racist literature without fear of legal
proceedings," said Judith Orr, Bookmarks manager.

For further details, contact Judith Orr from Bookmarks, 020-7637
1848 or  judith@bookmarks.uk.com; or contact Albert Beale from
Housmans, 020-7278 4474.

Donations can be made to "Bookshop Libel Fund", c/o Bookmarks or
Housmans, addresses above.


NOTES:

The long-running case involving the two bookshops is the last
remaining of several libel actions which all date from the same era;
the cases were all initiated by a related group of people who had
been criticised in Searchlight.

The case is finally set down to come to court later this year,
unless a settlement is reached first. Either course will run up
significant legal costs.

The vagaries of British libel law give an opportunity for
politically-motivated litigants to seriously threaten the existence
of progressive bookshops, as a by-product of the litigants'
(well-founded or otherwise) complaints against publications which
have criticised them.

The Bookshop Libel Fund was originally set up in 1996 to support
small shops caught up in cases like this one - the related cases at
that time included action against other bookshops too. The fund has
had enough left, after the initial appeal, to cover the trickle of
continuing legal costs in this unresolved case - until now.

Even if any award of damages against a minor defendant like a
bookshop was minimal - or indeed even if the libel accusation was
thrown out altogether - the legal costs could still be sufficient to
bankrupt a struggling, non-commercial bookshop. (There is no
expectation that a person bringing such a case would be able to pay
the defendants' costs if their action failed; anyone launching such
an action doesn't have to first show that they could pay the defence
costs if they lost.)

With the current cases expected to come to a head very soon, support
is urgently needed now to replenish the Bookshop Libel Fund and
ensure that small progressive bookshops can survive assaults like
this.

Founding sponsors of the Bookshop Libel Fund appeal included:

John Monks, General Secretary TUC
Roger Bolton, General Secretary BECTU
George Brumwell, General Secretary UCATT
Ken Cameron
Tony Dubbins, General Secretary GPMU
John Edmonds, General Secretary GMB
Roger Lyons, General Secretary MSF
Bill Morris, General Secretary TGWU
Arthur Scargill, General Secretary NUM
Diane Abbott MP
Jeremy Corbyn MP
Peter Hain MP
Alice Mahon MP
Dennis MacShane MP
Chris Smith MP
Glyn Ford MEP
Tony Benn
Hugh Kerr
Prof Steven Rose
Steve Bell
Prof Alex Callinicos
Francis D'Souza
Tim Gopsill
Paul Foot
Jeremy Hardy
Prof Christopher Hill
Miriam Karlin
Bruce Kent
Ken Loach
Michael Mansfield QC
Seamus Milne
Harold Pinter
Iain Banks
Michael Rosen
Prof Brian Manning

Other supporters included the Booksellers Association as well as
many local branches of Unison, Aslef, GMB, MSF, NUJ, NUT, and the
T&G, regional TUCs, local Labour Parties, peace groups and
bookshops, plus hundreds of other individuals.


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titm

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