Nottingham 114 Update
Some of the defendants | 05.03.2010 15:02
Of the 114 people arrested last Easter during the police raid on the Iona school, Nottingham, 26 have been charged with conspiracy to commit aggravated trespass at Ratcliffe on Soar power station. Over 10 months after their arrest, all 26 entered a plea of NOT GUILTY at Nottingham crown court on February 19th.
It had been hoped that trial dates would finally be set at this hearing. However, this has now been deferred until after one or more pre-trial hearings. The first hearing will happen on 20th May, and it looks as if the trial will be held in the autumn and may last for several weeks.
We will keep you posted over the coming months. If you think you can offer support, then contact 114defence@gmail.com. Offers of help during the trial particularly welcomed!
We will keep you posted over the coming months. If you think you can offer support, then contact 114defence@gmail.com. Offers of help during the trial particularly welcomed!
Some of the defendants
Comments
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No jury, no justice.
05.03.2010 18:41
A Lever
Jury trial
05.03.2010 20:04
@
Are you running the Necessity defence?
06.03.2010 08:06
Solidarity but you need to consider your defence.
Drax
All eyes on the courts
06.03.2010 15:32
Now what is the point of a jury if the judge is permitted to censor the evidence.
There must be a jury and the jury must consider all the evidence that the defense and prosecution want to be considered, otherwise a fair trial will not have taken place.
All eyes need to be on the courts, they get away with far to much.
The justice industry is profit led and politically funded.
A Leveler
It was ruled out because it dosn't exist for stopping a train
06.03.2010 17:23
People can pontificate about what should happen but if you ignore the basic rules you will inevitably be convicted - unless that is what you want you need to think carefully and take good advice when considering a defence.
Crossing you finger and making speeches about how unjust the process is doesn't count.
Drax
Defences
08.03.2010 16:40
Since necessity is a civil law defence, it is surely available in principle for all offences, and will depend whether the judge decides to permit it? It can't just exist for some offences and not others. If judges decide to rule it out in a particular case this is pretty much arbitrary. There are cases where necessity defence for aggravated trespass has been permitted in court, e.g. a Greenpeace case in 2004 - so it is not simply impermissible in principle.
However, in this case I suspect the whole thing will come down to whether 'conspiracy' can be used in this kind of broad and clearly repressive way. It has been used a few times in animal rights cases with more serious charges, and used a lot historically, BUT it has quite often failed in court for various reasons, either for lack of evidence that the defendants were 'beyond reasonable doubt' planning to do something illegal and were all in on it, or because the offence is deemed to be of a kind which conspiracy can't be applied to, usually because it is already a 'group' offence. Various EDO charges for conspiracy to cause criminal damage were either dropped or found not guilty, and the Gandalf case also ultimately failed; in addition, Sean Kirtley was acquitted on appeal.
'Necessity defence' implies admitting that one has done something which would otherwise be a crime. Hence it would rule out challenging the indirect inferences of intent to commit a crime which will be key to the prosecution case.
Also note that there are times when loudly protesting the injustice of the options permitted and persistently trying to introduce options or defences which the judge rules out is sometimes an effective strategy for giving juries a sense of the injustice of a prosecution, raising costs of the trial, making political persecution visible and drawing media attention to a case. This effectively led to acquittals in the Yippie cases after the 1968 Democratic Convention in America, and has regularly been done in Black Nationalist related cases.
This case needs to be watched carefully - if the state manages to convict, the effect will be to give the green light to routine use of pre-emptive raids and charging of protesters who are arrested before anything happens. We would also be likely to see Italian-style prosecutions for alleged conspiracies by organisations which don't exist to carry out acts which would probably never have happened, on the basis that people have certain political views. If the state fails to convict, it could roll-back the use of pre-emptive arrests.
pigkicker
Yes - they wull be consulting lawyers
09.03.2010 08:33
No Doubt
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