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Outrage as High Court permits secrecy over undercover policing

BABC | 18.01.2013 18:55

Readers of Bristol Indymedia, and activists in the area, will be well aware of the exposures of undercover cops in recent years. Two of these cops, Mark Jacobs (undercover in Cardiff) & Mark Kennedy/Stone (undercover in Notts, but everywhere), were well known to activists in the south west and Wales, until they were exposed. What is perhaps less well known is that they and other undercovers coerced female activists into close relationships with them. Well for a while now some of these women have got together and are trying to sue the Metropolitan Police in a public court and hold them to account for the misbehavious of their undercovers, and gain some sense of justice for the abuse they suffered. As is so often the case when cops break their own rules, and their laws, the last thing the Met wants to do is face a public court case - the statement below shows that, for now at least, they are being successful in avoiding any public accountability.

Recently the Bristol Bookfair collective contacted a London based activist, via a trusted intermediary, to ask if she'd be interested in talking about their case at the upcoming Bristol bookfair - but we were told that if even one wman involved in the case went public, all the women faced having their names & lives dragged through the gutter press. So for now the best we can do is offer them our solidarity & support, in this case by helping publicise the shameful & secretive misbehaviours of the Met Police and their undercovers.

The following statement was released by the support group for the women taking legal action against the undercover cops on 17/1/13:

OUTRAGE AS HIGH COURT PERMITS SECRECY OVER UNDERCOVER POLICING
The High Court has today granted an application by the Metropolitan Police for a secret hearing over the claims brought against them under the Human Rights Act, arising from undercover officers engaging in intimate long term relationships with women whilst undercover. The Claimants, who were involved in protest movements, were deceived into intimate sexual relationships by officers, including Mark Kennedy. One relationship lasted six years and all the Claimants suffered significant psychological damage as a consequence of those officers intruding deeply into their private lives. Lawyers for the women said that their clients are “outraged” at the High Court’s decision today that the claims should be heard in the secret Investigatory Powers Tribunal.

The Investigatory Powers Tribunal (IPT) is a little known tribunal set up under section 65 of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act (RIPA, 2000) to deal with claims brought under the Human Rights Act against the police and other security services.

Mr Justice Tugenhadt rejected the police submissions that the IPT was the appropriate tribunal for hearing common law claims also brought by the women (including for deceit and misfeasance in public office). However, the common law claims can be heard in the open jurisdiction of the High Court, but will be put on hold pending the verdict of the IPT.

In his judgment, Mr Justice Tugenhadt states that the actions of these officers must have been contemplated by legislators on the basis that:
“James Bond is the most famous fictional example of a member of the intelligence services who used relationships with women… fictional accounts (and there are others) lend credence to the view that the intelligence and police services have for many years deployed both men and women officers to form personal relationships of an intimate sexual nature (whether or not they were physical relationships) in order to obtain information or access.”

He did, however, say that if the allegations are true they are very serious. He went on to say that physical sexual relationships, that are covertly maintained, may amount to inhumane and degrading treatment depending on the degree and nature of the concealment. This is an important concession because by implication, these relationships could not be authorised under RIPA and would be unlawful.

The rules of the IPT permit the case to proceed with the women denied access to and unable to challenge police evidence, and being powerless to appeal the tribunal’s decisions. Eight women, who are bringing a case together, were deceived into long term intimate relationships with undercover officers, who as part of the National Public Order Intelligence Unit (NPIOU) and its predecessor the Special Demonstration Squad, seemingly had no other brief than to gather information on political groups. So far, this has meant that unlike a criminal investigation, the actions of the officers and their undercover command structure have never been subject to court scrutiny or public hearing, despite serious concerns over human rights violations.

Harriet Wistrich of Birnberg Peirce said: “This decision prevents both the claimants and the public from seeing the extent of the violations of human rights and abuses of public office perpetrated by these undercover units. The claimants have already suffered a gross violation of their privacy and abuse of trust by the police, if the case is dealt with by the IPT they will be denied access to justice and may never discover why they were thus violated by the state.”

She read a short statement on behalf of the claimants:
“We brought this case because we want to see an end to sexual and psychological abuse of campaigners for social justice and others by undercover police officers. We are outraged that the High Court has allowed the police to use the IPT to preserve the secrecy of their abusive and manipulative operations in order to prevent public scrutiny and challenge. In comparison, the privacy of citizens spied on by secret police is being given no such protection, which is contrary to the principles we would expect in a democratic society. It is unacceptable that state agents can cultivate intimate and long lasting relationships with political activists in order to gain so called intelligence on political movements. We intend to continue this fight.” (Ends)

There was also a report on the BBC website.
Solidarity to the sisters in their struggle for justice! Stop the institutionalised sexual abuse of women campaigners across the world!

Related Link:  http://policespiesoutoflives.org.uk

BABC
- Original article on IMC Bristol: http://bristol.indymedia.org/article/712513

Comments

Hide the following 3 comments

undercover ops

18.01.2013 22:40

I don't thin undercover ops would work very well if everything was made public.

During the war, spy operations had to be kept secret so that the enemy didn't know who the spies were.

tried and tested


Who exactly is 'The Enemy'?

19.01.2013 11:20


People who campaign to protect the environment and animals?
Students who want better education and a future?
Old and disabled people who would like decent healthcare?
All those who demonstrate against war crimes and want peace?

OR... A government that claims to represent 'The People' that spends hundreds of billions of pounds every year, not just on wars of aggression but also on 'internal security' to persecute ordinary people who want and deserve a better stanard of life?

The government and state technocrats can always find billions to bail out the bankers, for new weapons, surveillance equipment and all the other paraphanaila of oppression but never, it seems, for the ordinary people of this nation.

Klamber


@tried and tested

19.01.2013 15:59

I don't know which century you are living in, but during 'the war' we were dealing with Nazism, and of course spies operated in secret.

The women in this case were not Nazis or Fascists, they were people concerned about justice and democracy, who were prepared to do something about the injustice and undemocratic way the govrenment and their multi-national paymasters ride roughshod over peoples rights for a quick buck. If anything, you should be proud that these women and others stand up to tyrrany. It was for the freedom to so this that so many fought and died in 'the war'.

Now please go and read the atatement by Bimberg Pierce in the article, and stop making apologies for the Secret Police.

M