Climate activist's 'Kafkaesque' trial

The accusation that a retired social worker was guilty of contempt of court for holding a sign is ruled 'fanciful' by High Court judge.

In my worst nightmares, I couldn’t have imagined that my hand-written sign would lead to a case of this gravity with such severe penalties.

The High Court has dismissed a case bought by government lawyers against a retired social worker holding a sign displaying the principle of jury equity, saying the case against her was “fanciful” and “not even arguably close” to meeting the criteria needed to proceed the case.

The case was bought by Robert Courts MP, the solicitor general, and could have resulted in Trudi Warner, a 69 year-old retired social worker, being imprisoned for holding a sign outside court ahead of a case involving Insulate Britain protestors. 

Her sign displayed the long-established principle of jury equity, under which a jury has the right to acquit a defendant as a matter of conscience, whatever the directions of the judge. 

Democratic

She took the action in response to an order by Judge Silas Reid for banning defendants in climate cases from explaining their actions, and specifically from mentioning climate change or fuel poverty in court. At least three people have since been imprisoned for breaking this ban.

The solicitor general claimed that Warner deliberately targeted jurors with her sign, including in one case "hurrying to catch up with a juror so as to draw attention to the sign and, in another case, walking alongside the juror while showing the sign”. He argued that such action was harassment of jury members, and in contempt of court. 

However, in his ruling, Mr Justice Saini said that Warner had done no such thing, and to say otherwise was to “significantly mischaracterise the evidence”. Having watched Ms Warner’s actual behaviour, all of which was captured on CCTV, he noted that she held her placard “passively,” and in “a strikingly unobtrusive manner”.

The text on the placard was informative, stating the same as a placard on the wall inside the Old Bailey itself, and did not implore jurors to act or give an instruction. She was “in essence, a human billboard”, he said. 

He added that, even if Ms Warner’s actions had been lawfully wrong and inappropriate, a criminal prosecution was “a disproportionate approach to this situation in a democratic society”. 

Wonderful

Ms Warner said after the verdict: “In my worst nightmares, I couldn’t have imagined that my hand-written sign would lead to a case of this gravity with such severe penalties.” 

But she added that she had no regrets as the case had helped ensure that the principle of jury equity was more widely understood. Hundreds of people have held placards with the same wording outside courts around the UK in solidarity. Support from the public had been “moving and wonderful”, Warner said. 

Speaking at a Lawyers are Responsible event held ahead of the hearing, Warner explained that she decided to act after realising that many people did not know about jury equity, and that posters she had seen alerting people to it had been deliberately obliterated.

In my worst nightmares, I couldn’t have imagined that my hand-written sign would lead to a case of this gravity with such severe penalties.

She called her treatment “Kafkaesque”. “Jurors are not there to follow the judge. Judges are happy to say that they’re courts of law, not courts of morality, but I don’t accept that.”

Regressive 

The government’s increasing crackdown on peaceful protest has been flagged as “extremely worrying” by the UN special rapporteur for environmental defenders, Michel Forst. 

Legislation being used to convict peaceful protestors under the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act 2022, and the Public Order Act 2023 are “regressive”, he said. Prior to these laws, it had been almost unheard of for members of the public to be imprisoned for peaceful protest in the UK since the 1930s, he noted. 

“As the UN Human Rights Committee has made clear, states have a duty to facilitate the right to protest, and private entities and broader society may be expected to accept some level of disruption as a result of the exercise of this right,” he said. 

In a video update to the LAR conference, Forst said that he was more concerned about the crackdown in the UK than those he had seen in many other countries. “

“Since then, the situation does not seem to have improved. On the contrary, there are various developments that were brought to my attention… that added to my initial concerns,” he said, pointing to the fact that several medical doctors are facing the risk of losing their license for participating in peaceful protests. 

Misconduct

Raj Chada, head of the criminal defence, financial crime and regulatory department at law firm Hodge Jones & Allen said: "Until two or three years ago, no-one went to jail for peaceful protest. 

"We came close a couple of times but that has now been shot through. It’s almost become a real norm that for disruption, they will go to prison. It creates a different dynamic – the risks are different, the emotional strains on defendents are different."

One of these is Dr Sarah Benn, a retired GP and NHS doctor. This week, she was found guilty of professional misconduct by the General Medical Council (GMC), and her registration as a doctor suspended for five months. 

The professional body took the action following Benn’s imprisonment for holding a sign saying ‘Stop New Oil”, in breach of an injunction against all forms of protest obtained by the US based fossil fuel giant, Valero.

Punishment

A spokesperson for the GMC said that it had referred Dr Benn for breaking the law, not for taking part in a peaceful protest against climate change. “Patients and the public rightly have a high degree of trust in doctors and that trust can be eroded if doctors repeatedly fail to comply with the law,” they said.

However, the British Medical Association said that the decision sent a worrying message for doctors about the regulation of matters not related to patient care or clinical skills. 

Dr Latifa Patel, BMA representative body chair and workforce lead, said: “Whilst the GMC has a duty to refer doctors to a medical tribunal when they receive a custodial sentence, in some cases, such as this one, the doctor’s actions will have no bearing on their ability to practise medicine and will not pose a risk to patients, past or future.” 

The GMC and medical profession should review the basis on which it bought Dr Benn to a medical tribunal, she said, adding: “We need urgent consideration on the rules as to why a doctor has been suspended for the punishment they already received for taking part in a legitimately peaceful protest, especially as the climate crisis is also a health crisis.”

This Author

Catherine Early is a freelance environmental journalist and chief reporter for The Ecologist. She tweets at @Cat_Early76.

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