Kingston Crown Court Sentences, Nov 4th Report
Defend the Right to Protest | 06.11.2011 10:44 | Education | Policing | Social Struggles
But defendants are not allowed to invoke context: only the police and the judge get to do that. So, according to them, what were the protests like? We repeatedly heard that the police had been ‘grossly outnumbered’, that there was a ‘herd mentality’ among the protesters, and the Judge repeatedly invoked the ruling in the (failed) recent Charlie Gilmour appeal where Lord Justice Hughes said: “It is an unavoidable feature of mass disorder that each individual act, whatever might be its character taken on its own, inflames and encourages others to behave similarly, and that the harm done to the public stems from the combined effect of what is done en masse.”
So we saw Omar Ibrahim get 18 months for violent disorder for throwing a spent toy smoke bomb in the direction of Top Shop, hitting nothing and hurting no one; a 19 year old get 18 months in a young offenders institute for pushing against a metal fences and throwing a couple of placard sticks; a 19 year old woman get 10 months in Holloway prison (because the “nicer” women’s prison is already full) for prodding a police officer with a stick; 12 months for another young man for daring to fight back during arrest and 15 months for a Sussex student who chucked a couple of balsa wood banner sticks, again hitting and hurting no one and nothing.
There were a couple of positive results, despite the overall misery of the day – Bryan Simpson, who ran a high profile defence campaign got a four month suspended sentence for affray, two then-17-year olds were given a suspended sentence and community service (or “payback” as it is now known). One 19-year old got 8 months suspended sentence for violent disorder in an extremely rare turn of events.
If the failed Gilmour appeal and the riots ruling have set the template for assessing and punishing public order offences, we are in for a potentially depressing few months: the political nature of this sentencing and the hypocrisy of the police and courts in attacking those who have themselves been attacked by the police should never be far from our minds. As we enter a new era of occupy movements, more street protests and increasing dissatisfaction with the government, growing public awareness of the punishment of protesters must be in the central of the struggle. Defend protesters, defend occupiers and defend those and their families whom the state decides to punish.
Prisoner addresses to follow.
Defend the Right to Protest
Homepage:
http://defendtherighttoprotest.org/kingston-crown-court-sentences-nov-4th-report/701/
Additions
Couple of minor corrections/additions, none joyful.
06.11.2011 10:53
LDMG