Climate protesters in England and Wales lose criminal damage defence

Posted: March 18, 2024 by oldbrew in ideology, Legal, News, solar system dynamics
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Appeal court says defendants’ ‘beliefs and motivation’ do not constitute lawful excuse for damaging property. They may think their imaginary weather scenarios, supposedly based on climate models and ‘greenhouse effects’, should be taken seriously but the rest of the world has no obligation to do so.
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One of the last defences for climate protesters who commit criminal damage has been in effect removed by the court of appeal, says The Guardian.

The court said the “beliefs and motivation” of a defendant do not constitute lawful excuse for causing damage to a property.

The defence that a person honestly believes the owner of a property would have consented had they known the full circumstances of climate change has been used successfully over the last year by protesters.

After an appeal by the attorney general, Victoria Prentis KC, based on a case brought against a defendant known as C, the court of appeal said “the political or philosophical beliefs” and the “reasoning and wider motivation” of the defendant were “too remote” from the criminal damage and did not constitute lawful excuse, and said evidence from defendants about the facts of climate change would be inadmissible.

Tom Little KC, acting for the attorney general, had told the appeal court judges that use of the so-called “consent” defence under the Criminal Damage Act 1971 was wrong and too broad an interpretation of the law.

The defence, which relates to criminal damage only, involves a defendant arguing they had an honest belief that the owner of the property damaged would have consented if they had known the reasons why the action had been taken.

The lady chief justice of England and Wales, Sue Carr, said the court had to consider whether the circumstances of the damage included the merits, urgency or importance of any matter about which a defendant was protesting.

She said: “The court holds that the circumstances of the damage have to be linked directly to the damage. They might include, for example, the time, place and extent of the damage. In a protest case, they would include the fact that the damage was caused as part of a protest.

“But the circumstances would not include the political or philosophical beliefs of the person causing the damage. They would not include the reasoning or wider motivation of the defendant. Those matters are too remote from the damage.

“Evidence from the defendant about the facts or effects of climate change would be inadmissible.”

Full article here.

Comments
  1. saighdear says:

    Now I wonder what’s causing this apparent change in direction by the Judiciary? I’d been under the impression that so many had gone soft on Green and some other issues.

  2. Tim Routledge says:

    Can we run over them now?

    [reply] not advisable 🙂

  3. Curious George says:

    The defence that a person honestly believes the owner of a property would have consented had they known the full circumstances of climate change has been used successfully over the last year by protesters.

    Would that apply to a robbery as well?

  4. oldbrew says:

    Worth noting: ‘After an appeal by the attorney general’.

  5. johnd2008 says:

    The reasonable damage clause was intended to cover damage caused to remove a danger. For example, breaking a car window on a hot day because a young child had been left alone in it and was suffering from the heat inside.

    Another example , breaking down a door to get some person collapsed inside.

    It was not included in the Criminal damage Act to exempt protestors doing damage to further their point, but to cover emergency services and anyone helping them in dealing with an emergency.

  6. Phoenix44 says:

    “The political or philosophical beliefs…”

    Exactly. Not scientific facts but beliefs.

    Finally some sense from the legal system.

  7. stpaulchuck says:

    Oh wow! Score one for the non-nutters.

    Now, let’s settle this insanity of sitting in roads and blocking traffic. Personally I’d like to see an open season on them. My F-150 can take out any stupid barricades they build in the road and follow up with taking them out as well.

    I’ve always thought the country should call out the snow plows and run them down the lane at 40 mph, especially the ones with the wing plows. ha ha ha

  8. saighdear says:

    Attaboy! that’s the way to do it,  get an unfortunate elderly person with a mind debilitating terminal illness and give them the thrill of a lifetime – to drive such a vehicle.
    Hmmm, well it was only a thought: MORE THAN these idiots ever give us when we have a job to go to.  …. just saying!

  9. claudbarras says:

    So does this mean every motorist blocked by these numpties in the past and future can sue for damages ?

  10. oldbrew says:

    This case was about making excuses for criminal damage.

  11. platformZed says:

    saighdear says:
    March 18, 2024 at 6:48 pm
    Now I wonder what’s causing this apparent change in direction by the Judiciary? I’d been under the impression that so many had gone soft on Green and some other issues.

    Maybe someone has pointed out if they ruled in favour they will have to likely address anti abortion activists doing the same thing at some point.

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/feb/23/mps-to-get-free-vote-on-decriminalising-abortion-in-england-and-wales

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