Our Argument in Court Today: Full Text of Our Submission 54


My appeal against imprisonment for contempt of court is to be held in Edinburgh High Court at 10.30am today. The gallery will be closed and the public excluded. Here however is the full text of the written arguments we have submitted as the basis for today’s hearing.

I promise you that they are less dull than that sounds. It is to me astonishing that these arguments have to be made. It is also significant that the appeal hearing is expected to take a full day, whereas my original trial was rushed through in under an hour. How and why it was rushed through becomes obvious if you read the arguments below.

Here is the full text of the submission for my appeal, lodged with the court:

IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY, EDINBURGH
UNTO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE LORD JUSTICE GENERAL, THE LORD
JUSTICE CLERK, AND LORDS COMMISSIONERS OF JUSTICIARY
HCA/2021/000014/XM
WRITTEN SUBMISSIONS
IN RESPECT OF THE
PETITION TO THE NOBILE OFFICIUM
BY
CRAIG MURRAY
PETITIONER

INTRODUCTION

1. The petitioner invites the court:
(i) To find and declare that the decision of the High Court of Justiciary of
25 March 2021 to find the petitioner in contempt of court was wrong,
unjust and contrary to law; and
(ii) To find and declare that the sentence of eight months’ imprisonment
imposed on 11 May 2021 was, in all circumstances, excessive and
contrary to law.

2. These submissions will firstly address the five grounds on which the petitioner
appeals against the finding of contempt. They will then consider the two
grounds on which the petitioner appeals against sentence.

PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

3. The facts are set out in §4-12 of the petition and the petitioner does not seek to
rehearse them again in these submissions. The focus of this petition is: (i) the
court’s decision on 25 March 2021 to find the petitioner in contempt of court;
and (ii) its decision 11 May 2021 to impose a sentence of eight months’
imprisonment.

4. The court’s decision of 25 March 2021 was limited in its findings of contempt,
as compared to the terms of the petition which was presented by the Crown. In
particular:
a. The court did not find that the petitioner had breached the order made
in terms of s. 4 (2) of the Contempt of Court Act 1981 on 23 March 2020
(§28-31 of the court’s Opinion); and
b. The court did not find that the petitioner had breached ss. 1 and 2 of the
Contempt of Court Act 1981 (§32-42 of the court’s Opinion).

5. Accordingly, the court’s finding was limited to a finding that certain articles
published by the petitioner amounted to a contempt of court, in that they
breached the terms of the order made in terms of s. 11 of the Contempt of Court
Act 1981 on 10 March 2020. That order was in the following terms:
“The court, on the motion of the advocate depute, there being no objection, made
an order at common law and in terms of Section 11 of the Contempt of Court
Act 1981, preventing the publication of the names and identity and any
information likely to disclose the identity of the complainers in the case of HMA
v Alexander Elliot Anderson Salmond.”

6. The court found that articles published on the following dates breached the
terms of the s. 11 order: (i) 18 January 2020, (ii) 11 March 2020, (iii) 18 March
2020, (iv) 19 March 2020 and (v) 3 April 2020. It accepted that other articles
referred to in the Crown’s petition did not breach the order. In doing so, the
court applied the following test (set out at §59 of its Opinion):
“whether the material is such that, judged objectively, it was likely to lead to
identification of the individuals concerned as complainers in the case.”

THE PETITIONER’S ROLE AS A JOURNALIST
7. At the outset, is important to understand the role being exercised by the
petitioner. The petitioner is a journalist. He has published work in The Guardian,
The Independent, The Daily Mail, The Mail on Sunday and other outlets. He also
operates his own website, which hosts the majority of his most recent
publications. In that sense, he is not a journalist for the mainstream press but a
journalist in “new media”. He has authored a number of non-fiction books. His
journalistic work includes reporting on matters relating to Scottish and UK
politics, providing analysis which is informed by his former work as a
diplomat. He reports on matters which are undeniably in the public interest,
such as the trial of former First Minister Alex Salmond and the extradition
proceedings in relation to Julian Assange.

8. The petitioner made significant attempts to be accredited as a member of the
press for the purposes of reporting on the Salmond trial but was unable to gain
accreditation, for reasons that are unclear, notwithstanding his compliance
with various requests from the SCTS press office.

9. The contempt of court proceedings raised against the petitioner relate to a
number of articles which he published in relation to the prosecution of Alex
Salmond. The petitioner’s view was that Mr Salmond had been the subject of a
conspiracy which had colluded to see him prosecuted for charges he did not
commit. That was the petitioner’s genuinely held belief. Not only was it
genuinely held, but it was reasonably held; the petitioner having seen a number
of written communications which he concluded demonstrated the involvement
of various parties in such a conspiracy. Reference is made to §31-33 of the
petitioner’s affidavit of 26 January 2021. Of note, copies of those
communications are understood to be in the hands of the Crown and an
application for disclosure of those documents was made but refused by the
court on 19 January 2019. The petitioner has accordingly been denied the
possibility of vouching the reasonableness of his belief before the court.

10. Notwithstanding the petitioner’s credentials and the importance of his subject
matter, the court appears to have drawn a distinction between the petitioner
and those in the mainstream press. At §4 of its Statement of Reasons refusing
permission to appeal to the Supreme Court, the court said:
“The applicant describes himself as a “journalist in new media”. Whatever that
may involve, it is relevant to distinguish his position from that of the
mainstream press, which is regulated, and subject to codes of practice and ethics
in a way in which those writing as the applicant does are not. To the extent that
the submissions for the applicant make comparisons with other press contempts,
and the role of mainstream journalists, this is a factor which should be
recognised.”

11. Such a distinction cannot be justified. As a preliminary point, it is not an issue
which was put to the petitioner or on which any substantive submissions were
made. It was not a distinction drawn by the Crown. Had the court considered
it to be a material issue, the petitioner ought to have been afforded an
opportunity to lead evidence with regards to his journalistic credentials and
make submissions with regards to the alleged distinction.

12. More fundamentally, the distinction is wrong in principle. It is an outdated
one which fails to take account of the current media landscape. It is also entirely
inconsistent with the approach taken by the Strasbourg court in relation to the
protections afforded to journalists by Art. 10 ECHR. That assessment is a
functional one. It does not depend upon accreditation or registration with
specific media platforms. It is a protection to all those who exercise the function
of a “public watchdog”. That much is clear from the Strasbourg court’s decision
in Magywa Helsinki Bizottság v Hungary [GC], no. 18030/11, 8 November 2016, at
§168:
“Thus, the Court considers that an important consideration is whether the
person seeking access to the information in question does so with a view to
informing the public in the capacity of a public “watchdog”. This does not
mean, however, that a right of access to information ought to apply
exclusively to NGOs and the press. It reiterates that a high level of
protection also extends to academic researchers (see Başkaya and Okçuoğlu v.
Turkey [GC], nos. 23536/94 and 24408/94, §§ 61-67, ECHR 1999-IV; Kenedi,
cited above, § 42; and Gillberg, cited above, § 93) and authors of literature on
matters of public concern (see Chauvy and Others v. France, no. 64915/01, §
68, ECHR 2004-VI, and Lindon, Otchakovsky-Laurens and July v. France
[GC], nos. 21279/02 and 36448/02, § 48, ECHR 2007-IV). The Court would
also note that given the important role played by the Internet in enhancing the
public’s access to news and facilitating the dissemination of information (see
Delfi AS v. Estonia [GC], no. 64569/09, § 133, ECHR 2015), the function of
bloggers and popular users of the social media may be also assimilated
to that of “public watchdogs” in so far as the protection afforded by
Article 10 is concerned.”

13. It is respectfully submitted that the petitioner’s role and intentions are a key to
the context in which the present appeal must be considered. There is no
evidence that the petitioner sought deliberately to identify complainers for any
vindictive purpose. He was not publishing gossip. The complainers were not
the focus of his articles. The central purpose of his articles cannot fairly be
described as the identification of any complainers. The petitioner was
publishing information in relation to a genuinely held belief that there had been
very serious misconduct at high levels of public and political office. He sought
to use his platform to act as a public watchdog and report on those concerns.
The fact that his views do not accord with the analysis shared by much of the
mainstream press does not mean that he is not entitled to the full protection of
Art. 10 afforded to any other journalist. The petitioner does not challenge the
fact that the complainers’ Art. 8 rights warrant respect but to the extent that
there is any conflict between those rights and the petitioner’s Art. 10 rights, it
is important to bear in mind the purpose of the petitioner’s journalistic work.

14. Having set out that context, these submissions now consider each of the
grounds of appeal.

APPEAL AGAINST FINDING

Ground 1: the court erred in applying a rule of strict liability

15. That the court applied a rule of strict liability with regards to contempt arising
from breach of the s. 11 order is clear from the terms of §59 of its Opinion:
“Amongst submissions made for the respondent was a submission that any
breach of the order was unintentional, and as a result he should not be found in
contempt. We reject the suggestion implicit in that submission that
intent to breach the order is a requisite of a finding of contempt for
having done so. The respondent’s intent in publishing is beside the point.
The question is whether the material is such that, judged objectively, it was
likely to lead to identification of the individuals concerned as complainers in the
case.”

16. In doing so, the court erred in law. Certain breaches of the Contempt of Court
Act 1981 are subject to the strict liability rule, as defined in s. 1 of the Act.
However, the Act provides a closed list of conditions which must be satisfied
in order for the strict liability rule to apply. Of relevance to the present
proceedings, s. 2 (2) provides:
(2) The strict liability rule applies only to a publication which creates a
substantial risk that the course of justice in the proceedings in question will be
seriously impeded or prejudiced.

17. The court did not consider that the articles which were found to breach the s.
11 order created a substantial risk that the course of justice in the proceedings
would be seriously impeded or prejudiced. The court considered and rejected
the Crown’s submissions on this very issue from §32-42 of its Opinion.
Accordingly, the test in s. 2 (2) of the 1981 Act was not met; strict liability did
not attach to any publication.

18. There is no basis to import a test of strict liability into parts of the Act in which
no such test is imposed by the text. To do so offends against the intention of
Parliament; had it sought to apply a test of strict liability in relation to s. 11, it
would have done so. It also offends against the common law presumption of a
mental element in relation to statutory offences, recently reaffirmed in Pwr v
Director of Public Prosecutions [2022] UKSC 2. Given the penal consequences of
a breach of s. 11, the same presumption ought to apply as to those that create
criminal offences. The terms of s. 2 are clear: strict liability only attaches if the
conditions in s. 2 are met. The natural consequence of that language is that it
does not attach in any other situation. Of note, Gordon on Criminal Law Volume
2 (4th edn) (2017) does not refer to s. 11 in its discussion of the strict liability test
under the 1981 Act: §58.16-58.20. For all these reasons, the court erred in
applying a strict liability test, which is not justified by the terms of the statute.

19. In the absence of a strict liability test, this court must consider what the
appropriate mens rea is in order to justify a finding of contempt of court in
relation to breach of a s. 11 order. The mens rea is clearly understood in relation
to contempts arising from breach of interdict. The court ought to find beyond
reasonable doubt that the contemnor’s actions were in wilful disobedience of
the court order: McMillan v Carmichael 1994 SLT 510. A party may therefore be
in breach of the terms of a court order but nonetheless not in contempt of court:
Sapphire 16 S.A.R.L v Marks and Spencer plc [2021] CSOH 103. Breach of the order
is only the first of a two-stage test.

20. The same test ought to apply to alleged breaches of a s. 11 order. A s. 11 order
is, in effect, a statutory form of interdict. It is a court order which prevents a
party from doing something, in this case publishing certain information.
Breach of a s. 11 order is accordingly very closely analogous to a breach of a
common law interdict. The mens rea of wilful disobedience protects the same
interests as in breach of interdict proceedings: to preserve the dignity of the
court and to punish those who disrespect the court’s authority. Without wilful
disobedience, it is hard to see how disrespect has been shown to the court. The
approach set out above is all the more necessary in an era of online news and
social media, where the risk of inadvertently causing a jigsaw identification is
higher than in the past.

21. The court’s error in applying a test of strict liability is a material one in
circumstances such as these, where significant, unchallenged evidence was
placed before the court that the petitioner did not intend to breach the s. 11
order: on the contrary, he was striving not to do so.

Ground 2: the court erred in making findings contrary to the petitioner’s
affidavit when he had not been cross-examined

22. The petitioner’s position before the court was that he had never intended to
breach the terms of the s. 11 order and had, on the contrary, taken particular
care to avoid doing so. In support of this evidence, the petitioner produced two
affidavits. The petitioner’s stated intention is clear on the face of the affidavit
dated 25 August 2020:

I. §44 – “There was a period of several months when I was fully aware of
the names of the accusers and also fully aware that there was no general
law or court order in place preventing me simply from publishing. That,
however, would not have been responsible journalism.”
II. §54 – “It was, however, a challenge to work out how to tell them without
being in contempt of court given the charges against Alex Salmond. I
therefore very carefully used a number of strategies not to be in contempt
of court. Not to evade contempt of court charges; actually not to be in
contempt of court.”
III. §58 – “At the time I wrote this article there was no order in force against
publication of names. I nevertheless decided not to do that.”
IV. §64 – “I did not consider it to be in contempt of court – I had written it
carefully not to be – so I did not take it down.”
V. §70 – “I had clearly at the forefront of my mind the desire to avoid
identification of [Woman H]”
VI. §72 – “On 18 and 19 March, when I finally gained access to the court,
I continued this policy of taking great care. In writing up that evening,
I google searched on two particular pieces of evidence to check I was not
giving away identities… I was satisfied it could not, and published my
account with good conscience.”
VII. §73 – “I therefore amended my draft to delete reference to her presence
at that meeting.”
VIII. §79 – “In publishing all of my accounts of the trial, I was extremely
mindful of both the law of contempt of court and of my desire not to
identify witnesses.”
IX. §103 – “I actually drafted all that, but then did not publish it as it would
have been in contempt of court. I decided again to give no details.”

23. The Crown did not cross-examine the petitioner in relation to the contents of
his affidavit. Neither did it lead any of its own evidence; choosing simply to
rely upon the agreed facts. Neither did the court put any questions to the
petitioner, notwithstanding his senior counsel having made clear that the
petitioner would be willing to answer any questions arising. The court was
accordingly faced with a detailed account by the petitioner, sworn on oath, that
he had: (i) not intended to breach the s. 11 order; and (ii) taken various steps to
avoid breaching the order.

24. Notwithstanding this, the court rejected the petitioner’s account. At §67 of its
Opinion, the court rejected the petitioner’s explanation of his intention.
Quantum valeat, it is notable that the court chose to do so in circumstances
where it had already held that a test of strict liability applied. Such an approach
continued in the court’s Sentencing Remarks, in which it is noted that it
appeared that the petitioner was “relishing the task he set himself which was
essentially to allow the identities of complainers to be discerned…” This is, again,
contrary to the unchallenged evidence of the petitioner. The petitioner makes
three points regarding the course of action adopted by the court:

25. Firstly, in circumstances where the petitioner faced significant penal
consequences, the court ought not to have disbelieved the petitioner’s account
of his subjective intention without having given him an opportunity to explain
any matters causing doubt, either by way of cross-examination or questioning
by the court. Where a decision-maker has doubts about the honesty of a party,
as a matter of fairness, those doubts ought to be put to the party in question: R
(Balajigari) v Home Secretary [2019] 1 WLR 4647 at §55. Such a principle of
natural justice ought to apply consistently across administrative and judicial
decision-making processes. If anything, the onus is greater when a party faces
potential imprisonment. The comments of the Lord Justice-Clerk (Cooper) in
McKenzie v McKenzie 1943 SC 108 at 109 bear repetition:
“On the other hand, the most obvious principles of fairplay dictate that, if it is
intended later to contradict a witness upon a specific and important issue to
which that witness has deponed, or to prove some critical fact to which that
witness ought to have a chance of tendering an explanation or denial, the point
ought normally to be put to the witness in cross-examination.”
Such a role would ordinarily be fulfilled by the Crown but, in sui generis
proceedings such as this, if the court intends to criticise a contemnor’s account,
it ought to put the questions itself. Accordingly, it was unfair not to give the
petitioner an opportunity to answer any questions in relation to his subjective
intention.

26. Secondly, the court heard no submissions as to whether it could disbelieve the
petitioner’s affidavit, absent any contradiction. That is a matter on which it
should have allowed submissions to be made: Robertson v Gough 2008 JC 146 at
§94.

27. Thirdly, the court’s reasoning with regards to the petitioner’s intention draws
too broad an inference from conclusions it drew about specific articles. At §67
of its Opinion, the court rejects the suggestion that the petitioner had “never at
any time had the intention of publishing the names of complainers in the Salmond
trial”. In contradiction, the court points to three matters (at §70 of its Opinion):
(i) the petitioner’s supposed intention in writing the Yes Minister article; (ii) a
tweet of 19 January 2020 in relation to the Yes Minister article; and (iii) a
comment made by the petitioner in his 12 March article. It is respectfully
submitted that these three adminicles are not sufficient to justify an inference
(to the criminal standard of proof) that the petitioner intended to identify the
complainers in the other articles to which the court’s finding of contempt
relates. Intention in relation to one incident does not imply intention on any
other occasion. Of note, the Yes Minister article predated the s. 11 order. The
court did not direct its mind as to whether the existence of the s. 11 order might
have affected his intention with regards to the March articles.

28. Accordingly, the court erred in law in the way it handled the petitioner’s
unchallenged affidavit evidence.

Ground 3: the court erred in applying a test of a “particular section of the
public”

29. The court considered the issue of whether potential identification by a
particular section of the public was sufficient to make a finding that the s. 11
order had been breached at §54-58 of its Opinion. The court concluded:
“The question which must be asked is whether in its context the material was
such as was likely, objectively speaking, to lead to identification of the
complainers. If the material would be likely to enable a particular section of the
public to do so that would be sufficient.”

30. In doing so, it erred in law. The error is material. The court has, in effect,
imposed a significantly lower threshold to satisfy it that a s. 11 order has been
breached than is created by the terms of the Act. It is much more
straightforward to demonstrate that a piece of information may assist a
particular section of the public in identifying a complainer than the public as a
whole. The court has not found that, if the higher threshold of the public as a
whole was applied, the articles would still have been in breach of s. 11.

31. The court appears to have subsequently disavowed the test it set out in its
Opinion, in its Statement of Reasons refusing permission to appeal to the
Supreme Court. At §8 it notes that it did not limit any findings to the extent
that the complainers were in fact only identifiable by a particular section of the
public. This disavowal is unusual. The court devotes five paragraphs of its
Opinion to this issue. It concludes that the test is whether “a particular section
of the public” could identify the complainers. There is nothing to suggest that
a broader factual conclusion was reached, such as that any member of the
public could have identified the complainers from the articles. Accordingly, the
court’s comments at §8 of the Statement of Reasons are entirely inconsistent
with the scheme of its previous Opinion. There is no objective basis for
concluding that, having identified a specific test in §57 of its Opinion, the court
then applied a different one.

32. The terms of s. 11 are clear:
In any case where a court (having power to do so) allows a name or other matter
to be withheld from the public in proceedings before the court, the court may
give such directions prohibiting the publication of that name or matter in
connection with the proceedings as appear to the court to be necessary for the
purpose for which it was so withheld.

33. A s. 11 order is accordingly only competent in circumstances where the court
has made an order to withhold a name or other matter from “the public”. A
s.11 order is ancillary to the court’s primary power to withhold the name or
other matter from the public during proceedings: A v Procurator Fiscal, Dundee
2018 JC 93 at §27. The s.11 order accordingly cannot be stricter in its terms than
the common law order which is to exclude matters “from the public”. The s.11
order must be made “for the purpose for which” the common law order is
made. That purpose was to prevent identification by the public at large. Any
s.11 order must therefore be read as preventing the publication of information
which may give rise to the identification of complainers to the public at large.
There is no basis within s.11 of the Act (limited as it is in its terms) to suggest
that a s.11 order may restrict the publication of any matter which may identify
a complainer to a particular, potentially very small, section of the public.

34. The approach of the court also renders the reporting of any proceedings in
relation to sexual offences entirely unworkable. A journalist or editor cannot
know what information is already available to particular subsets of the public.
In almost all cases it is likely that some members of the public (particularly
those who are close to the complainers) will already hold a nearly complete set
of jigsaw pieces. For those members of the public, any further piece of
information may form the final piece of the jigsaw, which reveals the full
picture to that member of the public. Publishing any information in relation to
the trial accordingly puts a journalist at risk of a finding for contempt, simply
because some members of the public have been able to join the dots. The court’s
interpretation of the breadth of a s.11 order is accordingly likely to have a
stifling effect on the public-interest reporting of court proceedings. Only by
rendering the account unintelligible to any person who may hold relevant
background information from another source, can the media be safe that it has
not committed a contempt. Such an approach is of particular concern when its
effect is to prevent the reporting of matters of very significant interest relating
to the trial, as the petitioner sought to do.

35. The reference to O’Riordan v Director of Public Prosecutions [2005] EWHC 1240
(Admin), at §58 of the court’s Opinion, takes the point no further. That simply
assists in understanding how one should interpret the phrase “likely to lead to
identification”. It does not inform the issue as to the scope of the group the
information must be likely to inform.

36. Accordingly, the court erred in formulating too low a threshold for conduct
amounting to a breach of the s.11 order.

Ground 4: the test applied was incompatible with Art. 10 ECHR

37. The finding of contempt of court is an interference with the petitioner’s Art. 10
right to freedom of expression. That is not understood to be in dispute. Given
the importance of the matters reported on by the petitioner and the plain public
interest in reporting those matters, it is a very significant interference with that
right. It is a more serious interference than if the petitioner had intentionally
sought to identify the complainers for vindictive purposes. Such an
interference may only be justified if the interference is in accordance with Art.
10 (2); that is, if it is prescribed by law and necessary in a democratic society.
The test applied by the court is not one which is prescribed by law because it is
vague and unforeseeable.

38. In order to meet the test to be prescribed by law, a provision must be both: (i)
accessible; and (ii) expressed with sufficient precision to enable the petitioner
to regulate his conduct. The accessibility of the terms of s.11 is not challenged.
However, the test applied by the court fails the second arm of the test for two
reasons: (i) it is imprecise; and (ii) its application is unforeseeable.

39. In relation to precision, the terms of the test set out by the court bear close
consideration:
“The question which must be asked is whether in its context the material was
such as was likely, objectively speaking, to lead to identification of the
complainers. If the material would be likely to enable a particular section
of the public to do so that would be sufficient.”

40. What is “a particular section of the public”? Is it based on the number of people
who may be able to identify the complainers? If, so how many people need to
be able to identify the complainers, in order to satisfy the test? Can one person
constitute a particular section of the public? Does it matter that the section of
the public in question already holds additional information which is not
available to the public at large? Do those members of the public who are
actively trying to piece together disparate information from across the internet
constitute a particular section of the public? Do close colleagues or family
members of the complainers constitute a particular section of the public? The
court provides the potential journalist or editor with no assistance on any of
these matters.

41. The court’s imprecision feeds into the issue of foreseeability. Without clear
guidance as to what amounts to a “particular section of the public” the
potential journalist or editor is unable to anticipate the consequences of its
reporting of matters which are legitimately in the public interest, as the
Salmond trial undoubtedly was. Almost any piece of information could be the
final piece of the jigsaw for members of the public who are already aware of
various other facts in relation to the case. Accordingly, publication of any issues
in relation to the charge, the locus, the dates or any aspect of a complainer’s
evidence could result in the author or publisher being the subject of a petition
for contempt of court. A journalist or media outlet cannot adequately predict
whether the court will consider that their individual piece of the jigsaw is the
final one or not. It also gives rise to the fear of arbitrary enforcement.

42. It would be surprising if that was the court’s intention. At §44 of its Opinion,
the court makes reference to the Independent Press Standard Organisation
Editors Code of Conduct and in particular Cl. 11:
“Victims of sexual assault
The press must not identify or publish material likely to lead to the
identification of a victim of sexual assault unless there is adequate justification
and they are legally free to do so. Journalists are entitled to make enquiries but
must take care and exercise discretion to avoid the unjustified disclosure of the
identity of a victim of sexual assault.”

43. The court is clear at §47 that it would expect responsible journalists to follow
the Code of Conduct. It is respectfully submitted that the test applied by the court
goes beyond the terms of the Code of Conduct and accordingly beyond the
realms of what responsible journalists would understand their duty to be. The
Code of Conduct prohibits the identification of complainers or publication of
material likely to lead to the identification of complainers. No reference is made
to the sphere of potential individuals who might be able to identify a
complainer but, in such an absence, it is reasonable to interpret the Code as
prohibiting identification to the public at large. That is consistent with the
terms of s. 11 of the 1981 Act. It is consistent with the fact that the media
frequently does report information relating to trials which may assist small
sections of the public, who already hold additional information, in identifying
complainers. It is the only application of the Code which allows journalists and
editors any confidence that the information they intend to publish does not
breach a s. 11 order. Given the prominent role the court attributes to the Code of
Conduct, the expectations afforded by its terms ought to be given significant
weight when considering the issue of foreseeability. The problem is
compounded, given the strict liability test imposed by the court; no defence is
open to journalists on the basis that they had not anticipated that this specific
section of the public may hold more jigsaw pieces than an ordinary member of
the public.

44. The likely consequence of the court’s approach to the test is a chilling effect on
journalistic reporting of criminal proceedings. Faced with an unforeseeable
test, where identification to any ill-defined section of the public could give rise
to proceedings for contempt, it is respectfully submitted that many journalists
will err on the safe side and opt not to publish information which is otherwise
in the public interest. That may be even more so for those working as
freelancers in the new media, without the protection afforded by media
organisations with the resources to obtain formal advice and defend any
contempt proceedings. Given the emphasis which Strasbourg has placed on
freedom of expression and of the reporting and discussion of matters in the
public interest, such a chilling effect would be intolerable.

45. Accordingly, the court’s test is not consistent with Art. 10 of the ECHR.

Ground 5: the court’s finding of contempt in respect of the 18 March 2020
article was unfair at common law and incompatible with Art. 6 ECHR

46. Fair notice is a cornerstone of both the common law and the protections
provided by Art. 6. This is clear in both civil and criminal proceedings: (i) in
civil proceedings, a party may not seek to prove matters for which there are no
averments on Record; (ii) a conviction must be consistent with the terms of the
indictment; (iii) a note of argument may not raise issues not set out in the
Grounds of Appeal. Art. 6 (3) (a) of the ECHR, similarly, provides that those
facing criminal charges must be informed promptly of the nature and cause of
the accusation against him.

47. The issue of fair notice in contempt proceedings has been repeatedly
emphasised. In re Yaxley-Lennon [2018] 1 WLR 5400, Lord Burnett CJ noted at
§29:
“Procedural fairness has always been a requirement in contempt proceedings,
including the need to particularise the alleged contempt at the outset. An alleged
contemnor must know what it is he has done which is said to amount to a
contempt of court so that he can decide whether to accept responsibility or
contest the allegation. Whilst that is a common law requirement, it chimes with
article 6.3 of the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and
Fundamental Freedoms which requires, amongst much else, that anyone
charged with a criminal offence must (a) . . . be informed promptly, in a
language which he understands and in detail, of the nature and cause of the
accusation against him; and (b) . . . have adequate time and the facilities for the
preparation of his defence”
At §66, he continued:
In contempt proceedings, touching as they do on the liberty of the subject, there
is a need for the contempt in question to be identified with precision and the
conduct of the alleged contemnor identified with sufficient particularity to
enable him, with the assistance of legal advice, to respond to what is a criminal
charge, in all but name.

48. The requirement for fair notice ought not to be in dispute. The court itself
recognised the importance of this principle at §62 of its Opinion. The court
rejected additional submissions which were not made by the Crown within the
body of its petition. However, the court went on to fall into the same error
against which it warned the Crown.

49. The court’s decision in relation to the petitioner’s article of 18 March 2020 is
contained at §80-84. The Crown’s position in its petition was that this article
may, read with other information, identify the complainer known as Ms D:
Petition for Contempt at §33-39. It did not aver that the article would identify, or
contribute to the identification of: Ms A, B, F/J or H. The court nonetheless went
beyond the terms of the petition and made findings that the article breached
the s. 11 order in relation to those women as well. The principle of fair notice
applies equally to the submissions made by the Crown and the findings which
are open to the court. In the words of Lord Hope in Byrne v Ross 1992 SC 498 at
506:
“It is necessary in the interests of fairness that the alleged contempt should be
clearly and distinctly averred and that the proceedings for contempt be
confined to the averments.”

50. The proceedings were not confined to the averments. The court made findings
which went beyond the terms of the Crown’s averments. It was not open to it
to do so (notwithstanding its assertion at §6 of its Statement of Reasons refusing
permission to appeal) and, in doing so, it erred in law and acted unfairly et
separatim incompatibly with Art. 6 (3) (a) of the ECHR.

APPEAL AGAINST SENTENCE

Ground 1: the sentence of eight months’ imprisonment was excessive

51. The principles in relation to sentencing those who have been found to have
breached the Contempt of Court Act 1981 are helpfully summarised in Lord
Burnett CJ’s decision in Re Yaxley-Lennon [2018] 1 WLR 5400 at §80:
“the factors material to punishment can readily be adapted and applied to cases
involving breach of reporting restrictions. They would usually include: (a) the
effect or potential consequences of the breach upon the trial or trials and upon
those participating in them; (b) the scale of the breach, with particular reference
to the numbers of people to whom the report was made, over what period and
the medium or media through which it was made; (c) the gravity of the offences
being tried in the trial or trials to which the reporting restrictions applied; (d)
the contemnor’s level of culpability and his or her reasons for acting in breach
of the reporting restrictions; (e) whether or not the contempt was aggravated by
subsequent defiance or lack of remorse; (f) the scale of sentences in similar cases,
albeit each case must turn on its own facts; (g) the antecedents, personal
circumstances and characteristics of the contemnor; (h) whether or not a special
deterrent was needed in the particular circumstances of the case.”

52. Taking the above factors, and the general principles of sentencing, into account,
the sentence imposed on the petitioner was excessive. In particular, the
petitioner would highlight the following factors which were given insufficient
weight:
I. The petitioner was otherwise of good character. He had never
previously been convicted of any offence.
II. The petitioner had a long history of public service and public interest journalism.
III. The court was presented with unchallenged affidavit evidence
that the petitioner had not intended to breach the s. 11 order or to
commit a contempt of court. If the Crown, or the court, had
reason to disbelieve the evidence in mitigation, it ought to have
heard evidence in mitigation: Anthony Stewart v HM Advocate
[2017] HCJAC 86 at §9. The practice adopted by the court was
simply to reject the evidence given by the petitioner and find, on
the contrary, that he “relished” his task.
IV. It was accepted that the petitioner had a number of serious health
issues.
V. The Criminal Justice Social Work Report had identified that the
petitioner was unlikely to reoffend in the same manner: Criminal
Justice Social Work Report p. 6.
VI. The petitioner was willing, and financially able, to pay a fine.

53. The sentence imposed was also inconsistent with comparative sentences for
breaches of reporting restrictions:
I. HM Advocate v Clive Thomson (25 February 2021) also concerned a
breach of the s. 11 order put in place in relation to the Salmond
trial. The contemnor in that case was found to have deliberately
named five of the complainers on Twitter and associated them
with the initials being used by the media. The contemnor’s
actions were described as a “blatant and deliberate breach of the
order”. The same cannot be said of the petitioner’s actions, both
in light of his affidavit and the steps taken by him to try to avoid
identification.
II. HM Solicitor General v Mayfield [2021] EWHC 1051 (QB)
concerned the breach of a reporting restriction order by posting
the names of prosecution witnesses on Facebook and posting
videos and photos taken from inside the courtroom along with
text identifying the witnesses. A twelve-week custodial sentence,
suspended for two years was imposed. Again, this is in the
context of a deliberate and specific identification of those
protected by the reporting restriction.

54. In light of all the above, a custodial sentence of eight months was excessive.

Ground 2: the sentence of eight months’ imprisonment was incompatible
with Art. 10 of the ECHR

55. This ground of appeal proceeds on the basis of two propositions: (i) the
petitioner is a journalist; and (ii) it will be disproportionate to sentence a
journalist to a custodial sentence as a result of what they publish, except in
exceptional circumstances.

56. Strasbourg has repeatedly emphasised the important role that journalists play
in civil society: Delfi AS v Estonia (2016) 62 EHRR 6 §133-134; Magyar
Tartalomszolgaltaok Egyesülete and Index.hu Zrt v Hungary, no. 22947/13, 2
February 2016 at §56. Their freedom of expression is accordingly worthy of
particular protection.

57. In seeking to limit the protections afforded to the petitioner by reason of the
form his publishing takes, the court erred. In substance, his work is journalism
and is worthy of the same protections. The petitioner is a “public watchdog”.
That role must include those, such as the petitioner, whose work criticises the
mainstream account. The petitioner accepts that his activities must be held to
the same standards as mainstream journalists (a submission which was noted
by the court at §47 of the court’s Opinion), but the corollary is that he is subject
to the same protections as the mainstream press. The fact that he publishes
through new media is irrelevant and the court erred in drawing such a
distinction.

58. If the same standards are applied to the petitioner as the mainstream press,
then a custodial sentence of eight months cannot be seen as a proportionate
disposal in relation to the finding of contempt.

59. The principle that press offences ought not ordinarily to be punished with
custodial sentences has been clear since at least the Strasbourg court’s decision
in Cumpana and Mazare v Romania (2005) 41 EHRR 14. At §115 the court notes:
“Although sentencing is in principle a matter for the national courts, the Court
considers that the imposition of a prison sentence for a press offence will be
compatible with journalists’ freedom of expression as guaranteed by Art.10 of
the Convention only in exceptional circumstances, notably where other
fundamental rights have been seriously impaired, as, for example, in the case of
hate speech or incitement to violence.“

60. Exceptional circumstances do not exist in this case. The petitioner has not
published hate speech, nor has he incited violence. There are no features of this
case which are analogous to these extreme examples. The importance of
complainer anonymity is, of course, important but it cannot be said that the
publication of information which may, inadvertently, lead to the identification
of the complainers by a discrete and undefined section of the public, is
sufficiently serious as to justify the imposition of an eight-month custodial
sentence on a journalist who was exercising his role as a public watchdog. The
Strasbourg court has made no suggestion that circumstances analogous to
those in this case amount to the exceptional circumstances required by
Cumpana and Mazare. In such circumstances, it is not for the domestic courts to
dilute the protection afforded by Strasbourg: R (AB) v Secretary of State for Justice
[2021] UKSC 28 at §54.

61. It has already been submitted that the imprecision of the test set out by the
court is likely to have a chilling effect of press reporting on criminal
proceedings. That is a fortiori the case in circumstances where an inadvertent
breach of a s. 11 order may have the effect of subjecting a journalist or publisher
to a lengthy custodial sentence. Such a chilling effect is to be discouraged and
the approach taken by the court in the petitioner’s case is accordingly
inconsistent with Strasbourg’s jurisprudence in relation to Art. 10.
62. Again, considerations of comparative justice are instructive. The petitioner has
been subject to a longer custodial sentence than was imposed in Clive Thomson
which concerned a non-journalist deliberately identifying the complainers by
name. There is no principled basis to argue that the activities of the petitioner
were more prejudicial to the rights of the complainers than in that case and
certainly no basis to support a finding that his activities constituted exceptional
circumstances in the sense referred to in Cumpana and Mazare. The imposition
of a fine could have marked the court’s disapproval of the petitioner’s conduct
and, accordingly, the more restrictive disposal of a custodial sentence was
disproportionate and not in accordance with Art. 10 ECHR.

CONCLUSIONS
63. There is no evidence that the petitioner intended to identify any complainer.
Indeed, there is no evidence that any member of the public has identified a
complainer from the petitioner’s articles. There was unchallenged evidence
before the court that the petitioner had sought at all times to remain on the right
side of the s. 11 order. In such circumstances, both the finding of contempt and
the sentence imposed cannot be supported.

64. The court erred in law in finding the petitioner in contempt of court. There is
no basis for: (i) applying a test of strict liability; (ii) criticising the petitioner’s
unchallenged evidence; (iii) applying a test of identification of “identification
to a particular section of the public”; nor (iv) making findings that went beyond
the notice given in the Crown’s petition. Accordingly, declarator ought to be
granted that the finding was wrong, unjust and contrary to law.
65. The court also erred in imposing an eight-month custodial sentence. This was:
(i) excessive at common law; and (ii) a disproportionate interference with his
Art. 10 rights. Accordingly, declarator ought to be granted that the sentence
was excessive and contrary to law.

Roddy Dunlop QC, Dean of Faculty
David Blair, Advocate
2 February 2022

I am afraid that I am going to have to renew my appeal for funds to help with the legal costs. Fighting these kinds of actions is simply crippling. Your dedication to freedom and support have so far saved me from personal bankruptcy, but we now need to raise a further £80,000 immediately – of which we readers have very kindly donated over half since I made the renewed appeal two days ago.




Click HERE TO DONATE if you do not see the Donate button above

Alternatively:

Account name
MURRAY CJ
Account number 3 2 1 5 0 9 6 2
Sort code 6 0 – 4 0 – 0 5
IBAN GB98NWBK60400532150962
BIC NWBKGB2L
Bank address Natwest, PO Box 414, 38 Strand, London, WC2H 5JB

Bitcoin: bc1q3sdm60rshynxtvfnkhhqjn83vk3e3nyw78cjx9
Ethereum/ERC-20: 0x764a6054783e86C321Cb8208442477d24834861a


Allowed HTML - you can use: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>

54 thoughts on “Our Argument in Court Today: Full Text of Our Submission

1 2
  • Kerchee Kerchee Coup

    “May Truth and Righteousness Prevail”.Hoping Scottish legal sytem can restore its standing from this day forward.

    • Vivian O'Blivion

      I very much doubt that cesspit is capable of healing itself. Outside intervention will be required.

  • Mist001

    12. More fundamentally, the distinction is wrong in principle. It is an outdated one which fails to take account of the current media landscape.

    I wrote yesterday:

    “Blogging and the internet in general, still isn’t taken seriously by the ‘establishment’ and that’s why the distinction was made between you and mainstream media. You’re dealing with dinosaurs who cannot see, or are purposely ignoring, the future.”

    For me, this is the crux of the matter not just in Craig’s case but throughout the UK legal establishment.

    It’s heartening to see that Craig’s legal team recognise this problem too.

  • Bruce_H

    Why is the hearing in private? I thought that justice had to be seen to be done? Is this a new measure or a difference between the Scottish and the British/English system? If the former it’s hardly an improvement!

  • Jules Orr

    Each point undeniable. Very best of luck. Under a just system of course Dorrian should be wheeled back out in front of a jury and forced to explain her reasoning in every particular. Once it had been quickly established she acted contrary to all logic but wholly in accordance with her puppet mistress’s instructions she would be offered a choice: immediate retirement, sans pension; or an 8-month term in high-security lockup, with a requirement either way of a £2 million compensation payment to Craig Murray, cost to be shared with Nicola Sturgeon. Only then would some measure of justice have been done.

  • Rhys Jaggar

    Mr Murray – I cannot make a donation immediately but will be able to in the first few days of March.

  • Jomry

    Unfortunately, you are not the ‘right kind’ of journalist and the court was right to differentiate between you and accredited MSM journalists. We can control the latter and their output, in so many ways, through the organisations which employ them. You, on the other hand, have no such constraints and the only levers of control available to us are the law and the many legal mechanisms we can employ.

    You have therefore been taken in hand to protect the public from unpleasant truths – and as a warning to others who do not have the approved licenses for information handling. And if you resist, we can keep you tied up in legal wrangling for years and years until everyone has forgotten about you. In fact, that is our proven strategy for keeping the public – and in particular certain sections of it +safe and secure.

  • Ingwe

    Thank you for posting the full submission. As a retired lawyer, I find this very interesting. I am somewhat disquieted that the appeal was not public.

    Did you receive any indication of when a decision is likely?

    I have donated to your legal fund but further donations (apart from my subscription) may have to wait for a month or so as things are tight here. I know that some who post sentiments to the effect that your appeals are “great for the lawyers” may be incredulous that a retired lawyer may be feeling the pinch but there it is!

    Bon courage!

  • kashmiri

    Craig – your Monday summary was waaay more convincing than what your solicitor has come up with. Especially the part on “new media” seems unconvincing. Anyhow, good luck with this.

    It must be appreciated that you do stand a chance of winning against the state. You’d stand no such chance in Russia, Uzbekistan, etc.

    • Giyane

      kashmiri

      The ECHR enshrines certain rights of our democracies in which the state can be challenged by the people. This is an essential component of human society. The US does not elect a government, it is elected by Senators, and the people have to shut up.

      There is no comparison between European Law which documents human rights and US or Uzbek Law. There is a very clear understanding in all societies that the people have a right to speak, but it is not enshrined in Law.

      Lady Dorrian wants to put us in the same position as the US, a position that has not existed here since 1640 in this country. An extremely retrogressive step.

    • Xavi

      No chance he would be jailed in Britain on some confected, highly selective charge of jigsaw identification. That’s something else we can lord of over others about. Oh hang on

    • Ingwe

      And now it looks like RT is to be banned. This government’s narrative is palpably so shaky, that it simply cannot tolerate any alternative narrative. What a freedom-loving democracy we live in.

      I also do sarcasm.

  • Ian

    This is fascinating, Craig, a really closely argued, comprehensive takedown of your ‘trial’. It seems unassailable to me, therefore the response today will I hope be as detailed, and will take all of your points into consideration. That is the very least any citizen has a right to expect. It is, as we know, one of the most egregious aspects of your trial that your defence and evidence was dismissed without adequate reason, and moreover with a sneering contempt. I realise you cannot appeal on the grounds that the original judge allowed personal speculation and prejudice to cloud her judgement (not to mention ignorance of the media, and an unprecedented invention of it into two categories) but that is what shone through that judgement.

    Of course, we could make up our own minds on that, entirely justifiably because we could read the judgement afterwards. Your commitment to open and transparent legal process in your appeal is commendable and demonstrates exactly why it is of the utmost importance that the public can have access to the details of cases which are indubitably in the public interest. It should be obvious that if we agree, as citizens, to be bound to legal process and judgement, that all of us see that fair and due process has been followed and that we can follow the arguments and counter arguments deployed. Any custodian of the law, especially senior ones, should understand the basic principle of democratic accountability and scrutiny of the process and of course should unfailingly uphold this most basic priniciple of law and citizenship. Why would they disagree if they believe their judgement and system sound? Like doctors, they should have a legal equivalent of the Hippocratic Oath.

    Needless to say, that is why I believe your openness in publishing your appeal and affidavits is a challenge to them to do the same. And that is why it is deeply concerning that they are apparently saying that no transcripts can be published or disseminated. Why would that be, if they believe in the fairness of their system and their jidgements, and on what constitutional grounds can they make such a decree?
    Clearly the only reason can be political and that of course is a blatant breach of the most fundamental guarantees of any democratic state, which is the separation of powers between the judiciary and the executive.

    If they wish to preserve whatever is left of the reputation of Scottish law, then I do not see how they cannot match your honest and open transparency. All of us must be able to assured of the soundness and equitableness of the legal apparatus, which can judge us all, for our system to function by retaining the trust of the citizens it acts on behalf of.

    That is why your approach is commendable, principled and of the utmost importance for your own judgement but for a far wider constituency. As your submission is so comprehensive, it is incumbent on them to answer your points equally comprehensively, in all of our interests. Should they disagree and hide behind some kind of secrecy, we will all know where we stand in this country with regards to the prospects of justice and transparency – those considerations should be unimpeachable and override any petty political reasons for making judgement or denying access to the reasons for it. It affects us all, what we can read and say, what kind of country we live in and what the future holds.

    That is why it is important, transcends this particular case, and I applaud you for making a stand, where many others would shrink.

  • Robert

    Roddy Dunlop writes with clarity, doesn’t he!

    I read as well his letters to SG when the AS civil cvase was falling apart. These show the same clarity.

    • Jimmy Riddle

      …. well, he *should* write with clarity if he is getting 80 000 pounds for it!

      I was amazed when Lady Dorrian banged him up in the first place, because I had heard rumours that she was actually professional and that she wasn’t corrupt.

      It’s clear that (a) Craig is innocent of any wrong-doing and that (b) the whole business of contempt-of-court was utterly corrupt.

      My guess is that Craig will win on the appeal if they think they are unlikely to be able to fix the ECHR. On the one hand, I don’t believe in the probity of the ECHR; on the other hand, they aren’t going to do anything whereby they are seen to be blatantly corrupt.

      So there is a chance – and it will be interesting to see just how far the corruption of the Crown Office and the Scottish judiciary extends.

      By the way, I have saved this blog post onto my hard disc, because I confidently expect that Craig Murray will be served a court order instructing him to take it down.

      • Lapsed Agnostic

        Good post, Jimmy. I, too, was flabbergasted to see our excellent host get a prison sentence at all, let alone eight months.

        Anyway, on the basis of his submission, if the judges again rule against him, it will be interesting to read their ruling, to say the least (assuming we’re allowed to do so).

        The aspect of the error-strewn* original ruling that I found most bizarre was that, whilst the ‘Yes, Minister’ post of 18th January was found to breach the court order, it wasn’t found to be in contempt of court. See para 90 in:

        https://www.scotcourts.gov.uk/docs/default-source/cos-general-docs/pdf-docs-for-opinions/2021hcj002.pdf?sfvrsn=0

        *It couldn’t even get the year of the court order right (para 68).

        • Justin

          Yes, the “Yes Minister Fan Fiction” article of 18 January 2020 wasn’t ruled to be in contempt of court, nor was any other article before 10 March 2020. The verdict did consider those earlier articles, but they weren’t notified to the court at the time by the prosecutor so no binding judgement was made on them, and they weren’t covered by the Section 11 anonymity order on 10 March. Indeed, they were expressly excluded from the judgement of contempt.

          “[18] The Crown could not rely on articles published before the date of the court order as constituting a breach of the section 11 order. In the petition, including the petition as amended, articles published prior to 10 March 2020 were not relied upon, whether in isolation or in conjunction with other articles, to constitute a breach of the section 11 order, which was asserted only in respect of articles published on or after 10 March 2020. Had the Crown wished to rely on these articles as contempt they should have done so in the petition.

          “[19] In any event, reliance on these articles for the section 11 claim is affected by the same arguments in relation to delay as apply to the second strand of alleged contempt. The Crown were aware of these articles shortly after publication but took no enforcement action. No reason is given for the delay. Proceedings of this kind should be brought as soon as practicable after the event has come to the petitioner’s attention: Robb v Caledonian Newspapers Ltd 1995 SLT 631. Where there is a long delay the court should decline to exercise its jurisdiction. In this case the delay endured for the whole period of the trial in question. Had there been thought to be a risk of prejudice to those proceedings the matter should have been brought to the attention of the High Court as soon as possible. In any event, it was submitted that there had in fact been no substantial risk of prejudice, for reasons developed in the written submissions.”

          Paragraph 63 of the verdict refers to the articles published before 10 March:

          “[63] In the circumstances we do not consider it open to us to consider the terms of these articles on their own in relation to head 1(a) of the allegations. That does not mean that we cannot consider whether the articles are a breach of the court order, but would prevent such a breach featuring in any finding of contempt.”

          In summary, in the concluding paragraph (§90) of the verdict, it states,

          “Having regard to the context in which these articles appeared, including the terms of the article of 18 January 2020 and the tweet referring thereto, as well as the content of the respondent’s affidavit, we are satisfied that these breaches of the court order, in respect of the articles of 11, 18, 19 March, 3 April and the tweet of 2 April, must be considered to constitute contempt of court.”

          In other words, the articles prior to 10 March were considered as setting the context for the later reports on Salmond’s court proceedings (i.e. “potential prejudice”), but were themselves excluded from the finding of contempt. It was only the court reports and the accompanying tweet that were held to be in contempt.

          • Lapsed Agnostic

            Thanks very much for clarifying that in detail Justin. Things make sense now. I only skimmed through the first section of the ruling and must have missed that. Anyway, let’s hope things are going well for our host in court.

  • Ronny

    In an ideal world I wouldn’t have to pay for an individual to fight for honest government but as the body politic has been taken over by a repugnant cancerous growth of which Lady Dorrian is merely one pus-dribbling orifice, I have donated to your cause. They’ll screw you again here but we’ll win in Europe.

  • Formerly T-Bear

    Seems my donation today violated EU ‘laws’. As one very high ranking person once voiced “F__k the EU”, I will add my small voice to echo “F__k the EU”. The donation was made in two halves, gladly given.

    Am only part through reading your post. Splendidly presented, probably to be subverted by pathological denial; previously voiced as Star Chamber defending Star Chamber. Does failure of appeal to this court open doors to ECHR, or do other levels need be transversed before access happens?

    I profoundly appreciate your epistle of 12/09/21 and hope my reply was adequate to resolving the perpetual problem of censorship but that can wait for less tumultuous times. Please take care of your health given the stress and duress of legal proceedings. Viva Republic of Scotland!

    • Piotr+Berman

      I am an EU citizen and USA resident, so upon visiting Germany or Poland I may become subject of their laws. What was exactly wrong with my donation?

      • Formerly T-Bear

        Am not legally trained but would think you are always under the exercise of law in whatever country you are in, particular to that country. The original use of passports was to grant the citizen of that country the ability to be in another sovereign state under the protection of that state; a sovereign to sovereign consideration. Thus wherever you travel outside your sovereign country, you would be subject to that country’s exercise of law.

        My donation was halted to obtain documentation identifying myself. A first time experience on that platform. Instead of proceeding, I halved the donation and made it twice without problem. Apparently Brussels has enacted the requirement questioning the legitimacy of the transaction; negating in the process a substantial fraction of any support I would give that entity in the future. Once such behaviour was the easy way to create enmity.

  • aLurker

    Meaning of quantum valeat in English:

    quantum valeat
    Pronunciation /ˌkwɒntəm ˈvalɪat/
    adverb
    rare Law

    For what it is worth; with the understanding that the value or credibility of the statement, testimony, or piece of evidence under discussion may be diminished in consideration of mitigating factors.

    https://www.lexico.com/definition/quantum_valeat

  • dearieme

    I can see that your crime is not worshipping in the temple of the Great Goddess Sturgeon. Does that mean that you are the wrong sort of tartan fascist? Or, even worse, a tartan anti-fascist? God, it’s too complicated for me. I just hope that as much as possible of Scotland secedes from the madness.

  • Stuart MacKay

    Craig, the RSS feed from your blog is currently broken due to a “bad” character in this post. The line in question is

    “II. The petitioner had a long history of public service and publicinterest journalism.”

    The “bad” character is between “public” and “interest”. If you replace it with a space then all will be well.


    [ Mod: Fixed. Thanks for pointing that out. ]

  • Marie Clark

    Good luck to you Craig, have made a donation and given gladly towards your appeal. Should never have had to happen in the first place. I find that I now have a great deal of contempt for our so called justice system as a whole, and my greatest contempt is for Lady Dorrian.

    Any idea when you will get a decision?

  • Jimmy Riddle

    Could someone who knows give a brief summary of what happened in court today? I just looked at Craig’s twitter feed and it said something along the lines of `Well, I’ve heard of a hostile court, but that was ridiculous.’ It sounds ominous and I’m wondering just how low the judiciary can stoop ……

    Anyway, my very best wishes and admiration to Craig.

  • Aidworker1

    These arguments are incredible and moving.

    If this fails we’ve totally lost our democracy and judiciary.

    I’m not sure where we go from here.

  • Allan Howard

    At one point in Craig’s submission it says the following:

    At §4 of its Statement of Reasons refusing permission to appeal to the Supreme Court, the court said:

    “The applicant describes himself as a “journalist in new media”. Whatever that may involve, it is relevant to distinguish his position from that of the mainstream press, which is regulated, and subject to codes of practice and ethics in a way in which those writing as the applicant does are not.”

    Yes, and here’s a perfect example of how ethical they are – ie a fraudulent survey concocted by the Sun to paint junior doctors as hypocrites during the period they were taking industrial action:

    ‘Survey shows 93% of junior doctors would back a fully privatised health service if it meant a pay increase’

    https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/2323924/survey-shows-93-of-junior-doctors-would-back-a-fully-privatised-health-service-if-it-meant-a-pay-increase/

    There are literally hundreds of examples of lies and falsehoods dissembled by the Sun alone, but there was another one from 2016 which just about the whole of the main-stream press deceived their collective millions of readers with, and THAT was the falsehood that Ken Livingstone – in his now infamous radio interview with Vanessa Feltz – said that Hitler was a Zionist. The Mail repeated the falsehood at least three times in an article they posted on their website later that day, after he’d been suspended (and no doubt in the actual newspaper). If you want to check it out, the headline is:

    ‘Labour in crisis over ‘anti-semitic’ scandal: MPs demand Corbyn gets his ‘head out of the sand’ after Red Ken is SUSPENDED for claiming Hitler backed moving the Jews to Israel ‘before he went mad and ended up killing six million Jews”

    And in the very first paragraph/sentence it says the following:

    Jeremy Corbyn tonight denied Labour was facing an anti-Semitism crisis despite being forced to suspend his old friend Ken Livingstone for claiming Hitler was a ‘Zionist’.

    NB And in case you’re not aware of the fact, when Ken said that Hitler was supporting Zionism, he was alluding to The Haavara Agreement, an historical fact, albeit one that practically no-one had ever heard of at the time.

    • Allan Howard

      And just for the record, here’s a transcript (from an article in the Independent) of what Ken said:

      Asked whether Naz Shah was antisemitic:

      “She’s a deep critic of Israel and its policies. Her remarks were over-the-top but she’s not antisemitic. I’ve been in the Labour party for 47 years; I’ve never heard anyone say anything antisemitic. I’ve heard a lot of criticism of the state of Israel and its abuse of Palestinians but I’ve never heard anyone say anything antisemitic.

      And he then goes on to say:

      “It’s completely over the top but it’s not antisemitism. Let’s remember when Hitler won his election in 1932 [it was in fact 1933], his policy then was that Jews should be moved to Israel. He was supporting Zionism – this before he went mad and ended up killing six million Jews.”

      And in his resignation statement (reproduced in full on JVLs website, and well worth taking the time to read) Ken said the following:

      At 8.50am on 28th April 2016 I was asked by Vanessa Feltz on BBC Radio London to respond to a social media post by the Labour MP, Naz Shah, quoting Martin Luther King, that ‘what Hitler did was legal’. King’s point, obviously, having been that just because something is legal (talking in the context of racist segregation laws in the US in the 1960s) does not mean it is right. I saw no relevance between Hitler and Labour so I responded in under 40 words pointing out that in the 1930s Hitler had supported Jews leaving Germany – including moving to Israel and he had arrived at a practical agreement with Zionist organisations on this.

      Just to be clear, it was Vanessa Feltz that brought up Hitler, and NOT Ken, as most of the MSM said at the time. And what Ken is saying of course is that Hitler was supporting Zionism by way of supporting The Haavara Agreement (check out the wikipedia entry for the agreement if you’re not familiar with the details). Anyway, here’s a link to his statement:

      https://www.jewishvoiceforlabour.org.uk/article/ken-livingstones-resignation-from-the-labour-party/


      [ Mod: Thanks for this Allan, but it’s drifted off topic and this thread is meant to be about the appeal against Craig Murray’s conviction. Any further comments about Ken Livingstone’s remarks should be posted in the discussion forum. ]

      • Allan Howard

        Afterthought: The key difference between Craig and numerous so-called journalists who work for the MSM is that Craig has integrity….. And is of course a truth-teller!

        And the PTB really REALLY don’t like people who expose their narratives for the falsehoods they so often are!

  • ET

    My brain hurts reading this. I have to read it in stages. Read CM’s blog and get a law degree by osmosis.
    Whilst my brain hurts it is mostly hurting because of the unravelling of just how bad the original decision of the court was.

  • Clark

    From Craig’s previous post, second paragraph, two days ago:

    – “But the legal distinction made by Lady Dorrian’s judgement between “new media” and “mainstream media”, in terms of their liability to prosecution and to imprisonment, has to be fought, because coming from a three judge bench of the High Court in Edinburgh it is a citable precedent throughout many English speaking jurisdictions (and is directly contrary to ECHR rulings).”

    Make no mistake, that is what this is about; Craig is an incidental target – though conveniently for the establishment, one they have wanted to silence for decades. It’s about trying to get the Internet Genie back into the establishment’s bottle. Likewise with Julian Assange.

    It is highly ironic. In the 1980s the US government tasked their technical community to build a communication system that couldn’t be censored. The engineers and programmers delivered exactly as tasked, and ever since then the US government has been trying to censor it.

    These court cases show that it can’t be done by technical means – or at least, they can’t afford to do it. We saw that time after time in the Arab Spring. People organised through modern communications and governments couldn’t filter them out, so they ordered the entire system turned off – and their economies instantly plummeted. Most held out a few days at most before turning it back on. Likewise with encryption; governments can’t have a backdoor installed without ruining the security of the entire transaction system.

    So instead the legal system is being corrupted so that people can be prosecuted for publishing.

    It is only going to get worse. Fossil fuels are depleting, the atmosphere is overloading, ecosystems are dying, species are going extinct at unprecedented rates, and the sustainable systems humanity needs for the future have not been built. On the current course civilisation is facing collapse, and the establishment is moving to protect its privilege. Push has come to shove. Our governments are not coming to save us; quite the opposite, they are moving to control us.

    It is up to us now; be out on the streets from April 9th.

    https://rebellion.global/

    • Dr John O'Dowd

      Very perceptive. All true.

      But overlaying that is the Scottish dimension. The British state cannot and will not lose its Scottish colony which gives them a seat in the security council and a place to dump the American nukes that the USA allows them to be pretend are an ‘independent nuclear deterrent’.

      Our colonial Cron Office judiciary were pressed into action – plus British assets within the SNP and “Scottish” Government (Scottish colonial civil service) – plus an MI5 man in the Crown Office.

      Mr Salmond and Mr Murray seriously threaten the continued existence of the British state. That’s why the original conspiracy to jail Salmond was hatched – and Mr Murray reported on it truthfully. And when an honest jury scuppered plan A – Murray broke the house rules by reporting why the jury came to their conclusion.

      They (the judiciary) are used to getting their own way without challenge – the costs of doing so alone prevent much of this.

      They didn’t reckon with Mr Murray – and a loyal following of good people willing to support financially and morally his brave and principled fight.

      We will continue to stand with him.

    • deepgreenpuddock

      thanks Clark another incisive comment on a topic that has deep philosophical roots and speaks io the way humanity is moving in relation to the Pandora box of technological monsters that have begun to reveal the inadequacies of our current political and social and judicial systems. it quite scary at the same time as opening out entirely new and expanded opportunities for freedom and human development. What will prevail? Regression or progression?

  • IMcK

    What I find most striking is the blatant disregard of justice by the representatives of the so-called justice system. They do so with seemingly complete confidence that justice cannot be imposed upon themselves, or at least not by their victims. I hope CM can go some way to being an exception to the latter statement.

  • Jm

    The MSM regulated eh?

    Oh I suppose that explains massive phone hacking, insider dealing, scam, fake stories, fake people, setups, Hillsborough, the list is endless.

    • ET

      Crowdsourcing.
      We all of us use the acronym MSM, Main Stream Media, to refer to the shite we are subjected to. I want to introduce a new term to the lexicon. CRAP media. Corporatocratic Rapacious “something” Propaganda/Propagandising media. I am struggling with the “something.” All help apreciated. Perhaps “Armed?” Corporatocratic Rapacious Armed Propaganda. We could have shit/shite/shitty/ media but I really think we need the essence of corporatocratic instilled.
      Help please.

  • Jon Musgrave

    I see that Russia has now invaded Ukraine.
    Time to support the defenders of their own country and utterly condemn Russian expansionism and empire building.

  • deepgreenpuddock

    A light reading of the submission reveals that the crown’s case is shot through with inconsistencies and a frightening lack of intellectual rigour. They really have got themselves into a pickle. It reveals the poverty of thought and insight inherent in the crown’s case. That is seriously alarming because it means that the organisation that has the pick of legally trained people in Scotland cannot muster arguments which are consistent and logical, to advance their case. They have been able to hide behind the failure of accountability in our ‘modern’ democracy. It is a really deep problem and I am grateful for your fortitude in standing up to what amounts to political, judicial and legal abuse. Mind you we will have to see what the counter arguments reveal. Will the crown attack this with intellectual rigour and incisive observation, or will they just hoist up their robes of office and twirl their wigs in indignant fury, and retire into their dependency on their fictitious gravity and institutional support. Interesting times indeed. I await developments, partly with relish and partly with trepidation.

1 2

Comments are closed.