Randomly Selected Article or Link

...but I didn't speak up because I was not in jail.

(with apologies to Pastor Martin Niemoller)

Now it seems "mens rea" is at risk in the British legal system. In a case highlighted in the British Journal of Photography an academic at Sheffield University who ran a legitimate business in his spare time creating artsy photographs of models and children to make them look like fairies by superimposing images on each other (I know, I can't quite imagine it either, but presumably to make them look ethereal - and he has exhibited such work in local art shows and so on) has been convicted of making indecent photographs of children and sentenced to 150 hours' community service.

Parents of two girls commissioned the work and were in the studio with them most of the time, and were happy with the work, but he was shopped by staff at the film processing company, his home raided and his computer confiscated. Even the judge told Dr Marcus Phillips that he had 'always acted perfectly properly', adding that it was clear Phillips 'had no base motive, no sexual motive and there was not any question of deriving sexual gratification' from the work. The Judge also commented that the parents of the children were 'perfectly law-abiding, sensible people who cared for their children'.

You can read the rest of the story at the BJP website.

Now, apart from being a stark reminder of the over-hyped panic over photographing children that has meant people are scared even to take photos of their own kids' important moments such as school plays and sports, I always thought that there was a test called "mens rea" in English Law in which the intent of the perpetrator of an action was taken into account - you have to intend to commit a crime as well as actually carry out the criminal act. Also, I thought we had a sentence available called an "absolute discharge" which it seems to me from the judge's comments would have been more appropriate in this case. Have both of these concepts gone? Where? And when?

It seems you no longer have to intend to commit a crime, let alone know that your actions could be criminal, to be convicted and sentenced, and no doubt with a case like this involving children, have your reputation and possibly career torn to shreds. Which seems to me to be a pretty serious erosion of our legal rights.

Earlier this evening I found a quotation by Clement Atlee about Habeas Corpus on the Total Politics political quotations database:

"The real test of one's belief in the doctrine of Habeas Corpus is not when one demands its application on behalf of one's friends but of one's enemies."

It must be even more important to preserve our right to be judged by our intentions; there are all sorts of situations in which people could be committing a crime unknowingly and harming nobody in the process.

Hat Tip to the Libertarian Alliance Yahoo Groups mailing list.

Trackback URL for this post:

http://www.jockcoats.org.uk/trackback/932

Over at The 1909 Group, a critique of the Olympic Games financing.

Trackback URL for this post:

http://www.jockcoats.org.uk/trackback/377

Norwich City Council to pursue hairdressers with undercover agents to check they're not giving their customers a glass of complimentary mulled wine while they wait:

You couldn't make it up!

All this rumpus (quite rightly I might add) about the UK->US->? extradition treaty puts me in mind of something an American acquaintance said way back when cartoonists favourite image of our Tone was as Dubbya's pussy, oops, puppy, no, try again....poodle, that was it - remember all that?

I don't remember whether he was in favour of the Iraq war or not (I suspect so - he was of the US libertarian right persuasion) but when he saw George and Tony doing their "shoulder to shoulder" tango he thought that Tony had rescued George. The "coalition of the willing" was, for a while it seemed, a partnership of two. And he felt Britain should deserve some reward, indeed that the British government should press for some reward.

His suggestion was that Britain should push, in the spirit of free trade/movement in goods and people, that Tony should press for British citizens to be given special status to come and go much more freely to America, to work there without green cards and so on.

I don't suppose he for one minute thought that Tony would do the selection of who would get special free flights and all-expenses paid accommodation personally. I always think that if you are going to lobby someone for something, you should make a positive alternative suggestion to go with it - so, when you do as young Nick here says, perhaps you should suggest more freedom of movement for British folks into and around the US too.

Trackback URL for this post:

http://www.jockcoats.org.uk/trackback/202