An odd DPP letter and a curious government witness statement – an overall view of the dropped Chinese prosecutions

20th October 2025

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In a few posts last week I wrote about the dropped prosecutions of the two alleged spies for China. These posts were here and, on Friday, at Prospect (click here).

Partly publishing these posts was because of the inherent interest of the case, and partly this was because new information arose – in particular, the government witness statements.

Just now taking a step back, why should this case be of any wider interest? Why is not just another collapsed case, one of many that happen every court day?

The interest does not come (for me) from it being related to China. This is not a foreign policy or a security policy blog, and I am indifferent whether the other country involved in this case is China or any other country.

This is, however, a blog about legal messes, and it is a blog that often focuses on close readings of documents (usually so as to understand how legal messes come about).

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And in this case, there is a mess. A major prosecution has been dropped and nobody – at least outside of the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) – knows why. But what we can be reasonably certain about is that the CPS’s public reasons for dropping the case do not add up.

(It initially seemed the government’s position also did not add up, but the publication of the witness statements rebutted this view. That said, we do not know what, if any, other interventions the government may have made.)

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Then there are two extraordinary documents.

The first is the letter dated 7 October 2025 from the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP), the head of the CPS, to two parliamentary committee chairs. In this he gets the court wrong whose decision he is blaming and curiously switches from the first person to the third person at a significant point.

The second is the first witness published statement, the only one (correctly) dated from before the charges were made against the two defendants. Here, as this blog has shown, the witness is being asked by the CPS to give evidence under the wrong Act. This is why he does not give evidence that China is an “enemy”.

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My opinion is that the letter dated 7 October 2025 is a misleading document.

The error by the DPP (of all people!) to get the court wrong – referring to the (generally civil) high court instead of the criminal court of appeal on appeal from the criminal court) – suggests he was not personally familiar with the case in question. It is the sort of mistake senior lawyers make when they have not actually read a case themselves. As such it looks more a line-to-take he has inserted into the letter from somebody else.

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Lets look further:

I am satisfied that the decision to charge this case in April 2024 was correct. This was on the basis of where the law stood at that time in relation to the requirements of the Official Secrets Act 1911.

But we know from the first witness statement that the witness was not asked about the legal test in the 1911 Act. He was asked about the test in the 2023 Act which did not apply at the relevant time. So unless there is evidence of which we do not know, the decision to charge was based on evidence for a different offence, which did not require evidence of an enemy.

If this is correct, the quoted statement above cannot be right.

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Lets go on:

Some weeks later, a High Court decision (R v Roussev and others 2024) ruled that “enemy” for the purposes of the 1911 Act includes a country which represents at the time of the offence, a threat to the national security of the UK.

Here is referring to a decision of the court of appeal on appeal from the crown court.

But this decision widened the definition of “enemy” not narrowed it.

This means if the evidential test had actually been met before it would necessarily have been met again.

This too is not a correct statement by the DPP.

(And “weeks”? The court of appeal decision of July 2024 is not only weeks after the charging decision of April 2024.)

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It is however correct that the DPP now start pressing the government for evidence about the enemy. This explains the second (incorrectly dated) witness statement of 21 February 2025 and the third witness statement of 4 August 2025.

Why did it take until February and August 2025 for the witness to be asked to give evidence which is (supposedly) prompted by a court decision of July 2024?

It seems that it is not until February 2025 that the CPS actually have the evidence that would have justified the original charging decision of April 2024, let alone any re-visiting of that evidential test.

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And finally:

In the light of this new judgment, it was considered that further evidence should be obtained. Efforts to obtain that evidence were made over many months, but notwithstanding the fact that further witness statements were provided, none of these stated that at the time of the offence China represented a threat to national security, and by late August 2025 it was realised that this evidence would not be forthcoming. When this became apparent, the case could not proceed.

This account is also not correct.

The second (incorrectly dated) witness statement of 21 February 2025 and the third witness statement of 4 August 2025 both provide evidence that China is expressly a threat, especially paragraphs 4 to 7 of the latter statement

To say that “by late August 2025 it was realised that this evidence would not be forthcoming” makes no sense against the published witness statements.

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Sentence-by-sentence, paragraph-by-paragraph, the DPP letter dated 7 October 2025 does not add up, and it contains a sequence of incorrect and misleading statements.

It is an odd letter for a DPP to send about a legal mess.

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And as this blog focuses on legal messes and close readings of such documents that is why this blog has published a few posts on this subject.

The analysis on this blog, however, does not make out any conspiracy theory. As is said above, we do not know why the prosecution was dropped – and there may be evidence of interventions and decisions which we do not have.

We only know, on the basis of official documents, that the official explanation makes no sense.

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What the Chinese spying case witness statements reveal

16th October 2025

Trying to make sense of the nonsensical decision to drop the Chinese spying prosecutions

The Kneecap prosecution collapsed because police and prosecutors did not take terrorism law seriously

29th September 2025

Where “a technicality” hides a fundamental error

There is an old chestnut of a phrase: “off on a technicality”.

What this usually means – or at least is usually intended to mean to mean – is that but for some procedural or evidential error, a person would have been found legally liable for a thing.

The term even has its own page at TV Tropes

The wording has become so common, however, that it now can cover the ending of any case, even if it would not be the case that a person would have otherwise have been found guilty or civilly liable. It now just means that a case has come to an end without any substantive finding either way.

It is a journalistic shorthand which can obscure as much as it explains.

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Last week the prosecution collapsed of Liam Og O hAnnaidh (Anglicised as Liam O’Hanna). The defendant is, of course, part of the Irish rap group Kneecap.

And according to the judgment which brought this case to an end:

On 21st November 2024, the Defendant performed as part of the rap group, Kneecap, at the O2 Forum, Kentish Town, in London. It is alleged that, as part of this performance, the Defendant displayed a Hezbollah flag in such a way or in such circumstances as to arouse reasonable suspicion that he is a supporter of a proscribed organisation.

Hezbollah (also known as Hizbollah) is a proscribed terrorist organisation under schedule 2 of the Terrorism Act 2000:

Hizbollah listed as a terrorist group in a statute

The group was added to the schedule, it seems, in 2019.

Under secton 13 of the 2000 Act a person in a public place commits an offence if he (or she) wears, carries or displays an article, in such a way or in such circumstances as to arouse reasonable suspicion that he (or she) is a member or supporter of a proscribed organisation:

The section 13 offence in the statute

On the face of it it, if the prosecution can show that a defendant wore such a prohibited item the prosecution would be straightforward.

But.

The Terrorism Act – being terrorism legislation – imposes an additional burden on a prosecution when such an offence has been committed for a purpose wholly or partly connected with the affairs of a country other than the United Kingdom.

The Terrorism Act provides that there is a safeguard.

Before a prosecution can be brought the consent of the Attorney General (or his or her deputy the Solicitor General) should be obtained – a consent which should (at least in theory) not be taken for granted.

This is not a trivial tickbox, but an important requirement set by parliament.

For terrorism legislation is special – it provides a powerful body of law in addition to the general criminal and civil law of the land. In principle, it should only be used sparingly and carefully, when the general law of the land is insufficient.

And because terrorism law is so powerful -especially in respect of how it can interfere with fundamental rights – it has these additional safeguards.

One such safeguard is that it not enough for the police and Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) to want to bring a prosecution in respect of a person who is a member or a supporter of a foreign proscribed organisation, it also needs the consent of the government’s most senior law officer.

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Terrorism law is important and it should be taken seriously, not least by the police and CPS.

But in this case, the police and the CPS did not take it seriously.

As Joshua Rozenberg helpfully sets out in his post on this case, the decision to prosecute was left to the very last minute of the six-month period (endind 21 May) to bring a prosecution:

Timeline of prosecution

There was then, on 22 May, what must have been a “oh XXXX” moment for the police and the prosecutors as it seems to have suddenly dawned on them that they needed the consent of the Attorney General (or his/her deputy the Solicitor General).

Whoopsie.

And so there was a scramble.

The police and the prosecutors were more like students with an essay crisis, than custodians of the public interest.

This was Keystone Cops stuff.

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There are errors, and there are errors.

There are technicalities, and there are technicalities.

Some technicalities are about a party not complying with the procedural rules of the court or attempting to put in evidence which is not admissible.

These can be serious errors but they are everyday errors, within the confines of litigation in action.

And then there are errors so fundamental – so basic – that they go to the very ability of a court to even hear a case.

These are jurisdictional errors.

(As Aslan might say, this is the deeper legal magic.)

If a court does not have jurisdiction, it cannot hear a case at all.

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If one looks at the judgment you will see that the judge – the most senior magistrate in England of Wales – is at pains to emphasise that his decision has nothing with the merits of the case:

4. This ruling is not about the defendant’s innocence or guilt rather only whether this court has jurisdiction to hear the case.

5. Therefore, this ruling is confined exclusively to the question of jurisdiction. It concerns whether these proceedings were lawfully instituted within the statutory time limit prescribed by section 127 of the Magistrates’ Courts Act 1980 and, crucially, with the necessary consents as required by S 117 Terrorism Act 2000.

6. It is neither necessary nor appropriate for the Court, at this stage, to engage with the merits of the underlying allegation, or to determine whether the offence is in fact made out from the evidence.

And the Chief Magistrate ruled that the court had not got jurisdiction:

75. Thus, I am satisfied that proceedings against this defendant were instituted on 21st May 2025 when the written charge was issued. At that time, the necessary consent and permission required by law had not been obtained. As such, the proceedings were instituted unlawfully and are null.

76. I therefore hold that the Crown has failed to establish jurisdiction. The proceedings instituted in this case are invalid and the Court has no jurisdiction to hear them.

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A jurisdictional challenge is not easy in any area of law. To bring such a challenge means telling the court they cannot even hear the case. These are often “brave” submissions.

And so it is no surprise that the defendant in this case instructed not one, not two, but three King’s Counsel, as well as a junior barrister:

List of three KCs

Such a challenge would require resources not normally available to a defendant.

One wonders how many cases where there has been no jurisdiction have been brought where the defendant could have challenged jurisdiction but did not have the awareness or the means to do so.

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Some cynics have opined that this was a convenient way for the British state to get rid of what may have been an embarrassing case.

Not so here.

The judgment shows that the prosecutors worked hard – indeed were desperate – to get the judge to accept jurisdiction, and indeed they also knocked out the alternative basis for jurisdictional challenge.

This is actually a highly inconvenient ruling for the prosecutors, meaning they can no longer get by with retrospective consents.

They really will not like this.

Indeed, as Joshua Rozenberg reports at his post, an appeal by case stated is being seriously considered by disappointed prosecutors.

We can bet it is.

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At the bottom of this mess is a simple point: the police and the prosecutors were careless with terrorism law and careless about its express safeguards.

Things were left to the last minute and a consent (which may or may not have been given) – a step imposed by parliament as a crucial step – was not obtained.

And this mishap meant that the Chief Magistrate of England and Wales had no jurisdiction to hear what was on the face of it a terrorism case.

Police and the prosecutors should remember that this is terrorism law that they are dealing with.

Terrorism law should be taken seriously.

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The Prime Minister’s extraordinary and significant statement on MI5 misleading the High Court

25th September 2025

A practical example of the judiciary and the executive holding the security service to account

In his post on Monday on the collapse of the Chinese spying prosecution (to which I have already added one footnote), Joshua Rozenberg linked to this fascinating written statement from the Prime Minister.

It really deserves a closer look, as it reveals something extraordinary and significant about the relationship between our security state and the other elements of our constitutional order.

The statement (broken into smaller paragraphs and with emphasis added) was as follows:

In July this year, the High Court and the Investigatory Powers Tribunal handed down judgments following MI5’s provision of incorrect evidence to the Courts in relation to the case of Agent X.

On 2 July the High Court concluded that the High Court, the Investigatory Powers Tribunal, the Investigatory Powers Commissioner and the associated Special Advocates were misled by MI5. It also concluded that – once it had been determined that the evidence given to the Courts was incorrect – the subsequent investigations carried out suffered from serious procedural deficiencies. As such, the High Court ordered that a ‘further, robust and independent investigation’ should take place and recommended that this should be led by the Investigatory Powers Commissioner.

In its judgment of 30 July, the Investigatory Powers Tribunal agreed with the High Court’s conclusions and set out further specific issues on the provision of false evidence. The Tribunal requested these were answered via further investigation and again recommended this be taken forward by the Investigatory Powers Commissioner’s Office. Both Courts will use the outcome of this investigation to determine their next steps in relation to the case of Agent X.

Exercising the power conferred by sections 230 & 234(3) of the Investigatory Powers Act 2016, I have now issued a direction to the Commissioner to commence this investigation immediately. In accordance with my obligation to publish such directions under section 230 of the Investigatory Powers Act 2016, I am depositing a copy of the Direction and Terms of Reference in the Libraries of both Houses.

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Well.

There are two parts to this which render it extraordinary.

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First is the very finding that MI5 had misled not just a court, and not just a court and a tribunal, but also misled everyone involved.

That is not a finding which one expects to see made of a security service – and it certainly is not one which would be made lightly.

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But the second extraordinary thing is that the court and the tribunal did not merely accept the MI5-commissioned investigations that cleared those involved of any deliberate wrong-doing.

Indeed, a strong High Court bench – including no less than the Lady Chief Justice and the President of the King’s Bench Division – stated “the investigations were procedurally deficient and we cannot rely on their conclusions…the serious procedural deficiencies of the investigations”.

 

This was not going to be a court that that would simply nod along.

This was instead going to be a court that was going to actually check and balance the security service

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This was a huge step.

The High Court then “direct[ed] that a copy of this judgment be sent to the Secretary of State for the Home Department, who has Ministerial responsibility for MI5”.

But it was not the Home Secretary who was to give a statement to Parliament about this matter.

It was the Prime Minister himself:

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Who knows what will happen next. It may be that the independent investigation agrees with the MI5-commissioned investigations into what went wrong. It is an independent investigation, after all.

But the very fact that the court would openly find it had been misled by the security service and to then not automatically accept the assurances that there was no deliberate wrongdoing is extraordinary – and it is significant.

For it signifies that even in these dismal constitutional times, there are checks and balances in our constitutional arrangements and that those checks and balances do operate.

Often the lot of a constitutional law blog is to set out when a constitution is not working, but from time to time it is good to set out when it does.

We don’t always have to brace, brace.

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Recognition of Palestine is ultimately a political not a legal question

23rd September 2025

International law should provide guidance but not a barrier to the recognition of a State

Palestine has now been recognised as a State not only by the United Kingdom, but also by Australia, Canada, France, Belgium, and other countries.

This means about 156 States (out of a total 193 member states of the United Nations) recognise Palestine.

This is all notwithstanding a warning not long ago that such recognition would not be compliant with international law (though that warning could not bring itself to say such recognition would be in breach of international law, as I pointed out at Prospect).

There is perhaps no greater a “political” question than the recognition by one polity of another polity.

And although international law may provide guidance and criteria for what constitutes a State capable of being recognised by other States, the law must be careful not to intrude into what are ultimately political questions.

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Comments are welcome, but they are pre-moderated and comments will not be published if irksome, or if they risk derailing the discussion.

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The curious dropped prosecution for Chinese spying

22nd September 2025

What late “evidential” change could explain this sudden decision?

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Over at his substack, Joshua Rozenberg discusses the curious case of the dropped prosecutions for alleged Chinese spying. He quite rightly derides the Speaker of the House of Commons for what seem to be legally illiterate comments about a private prosecution.

The only point this blog will emphasise is that the prosecution was dropped because the “evidential threshold” could not be met.

This is an interesting detail.

There are, as you may know, generally two tests to bring a prosecution – the public interest test and the evidential test. This is known overall as the code test and it has to be kept under review as a case continues.

Usually when the state wants to avoid a perhaps unhelpful prosecution regarding intelligence or national security it will rely on the public interest test. That is the standard get out, and so if there was a geo-political explanation for the prosecution to end, that is the basis that one would expect would be used.

But here the prosecutor made the express point in open court that it was the evidential test which had been applied.

This is the Crown Prosecution Service guidance for the “evidential” test:

4.8 When deciding whether there is sufficient evidence to prosecute, prosecutors should ask themselves the following: Can the evidence be used in court? Prosecutors should consider whether there is any question over the admissibility of certain evidence. In doing so, prosecutors should assess: the likelihood of that evidence being held as inadmissible by the court; and the importance of that evidence in relation to the evidence as a whole. Is the evidence reliable? Prosecutors should consider whether there are any reasons to question the reliability of the evidence, including its accuracy or integrity. Is the evidence credible? Prosecutors should consider whether there are any reasons to doubt the credibility of the evidence. Is there any other material that might affect the sufficiency of evidence? Prosecutors must consider at this stage and throughout the case whether there is any material that may affect the assessment of the sufficiency of evidence, including examined and unexamined material in the possession of the police, and material that may be obtained through further reasonable lines of inquiry.

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Given the evidential test must have been met for the prosecution to have got this far indicates that perhaps one of two things may have happened.

Either there was fresh defence evidence or – and this would be an intriguing possibility – key prosecution evidence had suddenly become unavailable or was decided to be unsound.

In either situation for this to come to light at such a late stage is rather remarkable.

How fascinating.

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Why what is happening in the United States shows the need for the United Kingdom to repair its own constitution

15th September 2025

Our polity is there for the taking

There are only so many ways of saying that the United States polity is broken.

There is a lot going on over there, and what is going on requires explanation, but there is little or nothing that can now be usefully said from a United Kingdom constitutionalist blog.

This is because looking at it from a constitutionalist perspective is – at least for now – a redundant exercise.

Indeed, one could go so far to say that their constitution is no longer even in crisis. It is instead damaged, perhaps irrecoverably so.

It is post-crisis.

It is almost as if their constitution is no longer there.

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The important thing – crucial thing – is to ensure the United Kingdom’s polity does not follow suit.

For – as I set out in Prospect recently – the United Kingdom constitution is perhaps more vulnerable to an illiberal radical takeover than the United States one.

Our doctrine of parliamentary supremacy, together with the royal prerogative and the legion of “Henry VIII” powers already in legislation, mean that an incoming government with a firm majority will have near-absolute legal power.

The prospect of such a possibility should, of course, make our current government and parliament want to repair the constitutional roof before a radical illiberal storm arrives.

(House of Lords reform, electoral reform, reforming statutory instruments, placing the remaining prerogative powers on a statutory basis, and so on.)

But, of course, they will not.

And, also of course, many constitutional reforms could be undone in a couple of years by a government with a firm majority: no parliament can bind its successor.

But at least an incoming radical illiberal government in the United Kingdom would be prevented from doing at speed and at scale what is happening in the United States.

There is going to be a concerted effort to bounce the United Kingdom into an early general election. But even if this parliament runs its normal course, our polity is simply there for the taking.

Brace, brace.

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This post originally had the title “The pointlessness of UK constitutional commentary on US events – why there is little or nothing useful now to say on US constitutional events from a UK perspective”

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What Banksy’s RCJ mural maybe gets wrong

9th September 2025

Judges are not to blame for the protest laws promoted by the executive and passed by parliament and implemented by the police and prosecuted by the Crown

The Royal Courts of Justice on Strand is a superficially impressive building.

It projects the might and grandeur of the legal system.

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This elegance continues inside with a bracing great hall with law and justice-related art and statues, and in a gallery above glass cabinets exhibiting judicial costumes.

(Pics above from Wikipedia.)

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And adjacent to that great hall are several quaint period courtrooms – very pretty but also very uncomfortable and inefficient.

Like a great deal of the British constitution, the RCJ is a Victorian construct made to look and feel a lot older.

And it is quite dreadful building for its practical purpose.

Yet it is there – and perhaps more than the Old Bailey round the corner and certainly more than the Supreme Court on Parliament Square, it is a physical and aesthetic embodiment of our domestic law.

The RCJ is not only where justice is supposed to be done, but it also where justice is seen to be done.

The RCJ is primarily about optics, not functionality.

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Yesterday another work of art about justice was added to the RCJ, supplementing the various sculptures and paintings inside.

This was, of course, this mural by Banksy:

Aesthetically it is no worse than the depictions of judges and justice inside the RCJ.

But it was unauthorised and so, from a legal perspective, prima facie criminal damage.

And, as Joshua Rozenberg has spotted, the supposed barrister in the Banksy Instagram picture must be a model, given a mistake in their dress.

Furthermore, as 1001 respondents on social media pointed out in merry unison, the judge is using a gavel, and judges in our jurisdiction do not use gavels.

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Indeed, much of the response to the new art had little or nothing to do with what it depicted.

As such, it maybe failed in its presumed purpose – of getting people to discuss the law of protest and protesting.

And even the depiction was perhaps wrong: judges are not to blame for the laws promoted by the executive and passed by parliament and implemented by the police and prosecuted by the Crown.

Indeed it is often the courts that are the last protection for protesters.

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One amusing aspect of the incident is that the RCJ – to match its visual rhetoric – provides one of the most elaborate security theatres of any public building.

Security is not only done, but – oh dear gods – it is seen to be done.

And yet yards away from where the zealous performances of security take place, an artist was able to commit what the law would probably regard as criminal damage without interruption.

It was only when it came to public notice that anything was done about it.

The Guardian:

The BBC:

One news report stated that yesterday morning, “guards were trying to stop people from taking pictures. More staff then arrived with supplies to cover it up”.

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Another amusing aspect to this is that the RCJ itself is where an intellectual property judge once wrestled with questions about the law relating to Banksy murals:

One wonders where any civil dispute or criminal appeal about this week’s mural would be heard, given a possible conflict of interest.

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Criminal damage is wrong, and as this appears to be criminal damage then this makes this wrong.

Those embarrassed by the failure of the usual RCJ security theatre will no doubt press for an investigation and prosecution.

If there is a prosecution and a conviction then there will be no doubt that this was criminal damage.

But if there is a prosecution there may also be a defence, and an acquittal.

If so, the artist would be saved by the very court process they are depicting in the mural.

Which would be ironic, don’t you think.

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On Angela Rayner and tax law

4th September 2025

Think of these three dimensions

It may be that Angela Rayner is blaming tax law for her own mistake – or it may be that tax law may be to blame.

But conceive the following:

– an X axis which is tax law

– a Y axis which is trusts law involving children

– a Z axis which is deeming provisions

Few mortals – and indeed few lawyers – would be confident on anything which combined two, let alone three, of these axes. (I probably could just about deal with Z.)

Again, this complexity may just be convenient cover for an avoidable error by Rayner, maybe. She is a politician.

But that X, Y and Z together?

*Winces*

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