News, notes, other stuff

12 December, 2010

Media Law - Codes of Conduct

Codes of Conduct

Codes of conduct aren't legally binding (though they can be referred to in a court of law, if the subject is whether or not the journalism was responsible) but it is the general rule that if you break that codes governing a certain body that you belong to, then you can lose your job.

The main codes of conduct are:

  • the NUJ's  - determined by journalists
  • the PCC (Press Complaints Commission) code of practice - very strict, can be sacked with compensation if a internal investigation rules against whoever violates the code
  • BBC Producer Guidelines
  • the OFCOM Broadcasting code - for commercial television, contains information about the watershed etc

NUJ
  1. A journalist has a duty to maintain the highest professional and ethical standards. - Obey the code
  2. A journalist shall at all times defend the principle of the freedom of the Press and other media in relation to the collection of information and the expression of comment and criticism. He/she shall strive to eliminate distortion, news suppression and censorshipEliminate distortion 
  3. A journalist shall strive to ensure that the information he/she disseminates is fair and accurate, avoid the expression of comment and conjecture as established fact and falsification by distortion, selection or misrepresentation. Fair, accurate, no comment as fact
  4. A journalist shall rectify promptly any harmful inaccuracies, ensure that correction and apologies receive due prominence and afford the right of reply to persons criticised when the issue is of sufficient importance. Rectify harmful inaccuracies 
  5. A journalist shall obtain information, photographs and illustrations only by straightforward means. The use of other means can be justified only by over-riding considerations of the public interest. The journalist is entitled to exercise a personal conscientious objection to the use of such means. Obtain photographs only by straightforward means unless absolutely necessary
  6. Subject to the justification by over-riding considerations of the public interest, a journalist shall do nothing which entails intrusion into private grief and distress. Don't intrude into death - private
  7. A journalist shall protect confidential sources of information. Protect your sources
  8. A journalist shall not accept bribes nor shall he/she allow other inducements to influence the performance of his/her professional duties. No bribes
  9. A journalist shall not lend himself/herself to the distortion or suppression of the truth because of advertising or other considerations. No lying for advertisements
  10. A journalist shall only mention a person's age, race, colour, creed, illegitimacy, marital status (or lack of it), gender or sexual orientation if this information is strictly relevant. A journalist shall neither originate nor process material which encourages discrimination, ridicule, prejudice or hatred on any of the above-mentioned grounds. No gratuitous mention of a person's race/gender/creed
  11. A journalist shall not interview or photograph children in connection with stories concerning their welfare without the permission of a parent or other adult responsible for their welfare. Don't interview children
  12. No journalist shall knowingly cause or allow the publication or broadcast of a photograph that has been manipulated unless that photograph is clearly labelled as such. Manipulation does not include normal dodging, burning, colour balancing, spotting, contrast adjustment, cropping and obvious masking for legal or safety reasons. Do not broadcast manipulated images
  13. A journalist shall not take private advantage of information gained in the course of his/her duties, before the information is public knowledge. Do not use information gleaned through investigation for unfair, personal gain
  14. A journalist shall not by way of statement, voice or appearance endorse by advertisement any commercial produce or service save for the promotion of his/her own work or of the medium by which he/she is employed. No endorsement

Media Law - The Freedom of Information Act 2000.

Freedom of Information Act 2000

The Freedom of Information Act came in to effect in 2005, and since then it has allowed any member of the public to demand certain information from public organisations. This is 'information which has been recorded in any form' and would therefore apply to minutes taken in a meeting, documents filed away in a cabinet and electronically stored data.

The Act can make a journalists' job infinitely easier if it is used correctly. Recent stories such as the MP expenses scandal would not have been possible without the Act in place, and without the evidence it provided the accusations would have purely been defamation. In the case of the scandal, the expense reports were leaked internally before they could be given to Heather Brooke, the journalist making the enquiries.

The Act could be used to obtain anonymous information (not relating to any named individual) about the frequency of sick days within a organisation, the type of injuries sustained in A&E visits or the amount of compensation a school might have to pay to injured pupils.

Public authorities covered by the FOI Act:
  • national government departments and ministries e.g. Home Office, Prime Minister's Office
  • House of Commons, House of Lords
  • the armed forces
  • local government authorities included councils, police, fire service
  • park authorities
  • state unis, colleges, schools
  • the NHS
  • advisory councils e.g. Ofcom
Procedure for making a request:
  • Find out who the F.I officer is in the organisation, ask to speak to them.
  • Frame the request in bureaucratic language
  • Ask if the organisation keeps the type of information you want
  • Ask if you can see it
  • Don't accept a flat out refusal; rephrase the request or break it down into a smaller one so they can't immediately deny you on cost grounds
  • If the request is denied an appeal could always be made.
The main problem with the Act is the number of exemptions which apply to it, which can be twisted and abused to obstruct the release of useful information. Extended dealing with bureaucrats also seems like an unpleasant drawback.





The main reasons for a denied request:
  • National secrecy, i.e. you can't phone up MI6 and ask which train their staff take to work
  • Cost of finding and collating data - if the cost (in terms of staff hours) of meeting the request exceeds more than £600 (or £450 for smaller council organisations.) Of course, they could be grossly overestimating how much the time of their staff is worth when denying you on this count.
  • the organisation doesn't have the information that you have specifically requested (you have to frame the request in a certain way or they can feign ignorance and not help you, almost like a search engine)
  • The information you request would breach someone's confidentiality (you can't phone the doctor that you heard Cheryl Cole goes to and ask for her medical records to see if there's anything gross and embarrassing lurking there)
The Information Commissioner's office in London is the advisory body on the FOI Act and, if receiving and granting an appeal against an obstruction such as the ones above (but usually on cost grounds), can encourage an organisation to release the relevant documents.

The public interest test is also applied when an organisation is asked to give information where a qualified exemption may apply; a loophole in the Act is that it does not specify how much time they have to do this test, and so the normal 20 day response limit could be dragged out for months.

A journalist must remember that information garnered and then published through use of the Act enjoys no protection of privilege, and will find themselves in an awkward position if somebody sues for libel. The only real defence here is that the information published is almost definitely true (justification) as it has been recorded by an official government body.




Media Law - Investigative Journalism

Investigative Journalism

Investigative journalism is distinct from ordinary news journalism. The latter is where it is simply the job of the journalist to go out, sit in a meeting or a court, Parliament or an award show and report back on what transpired. It is heavily dependant on a public agenda.

The former involves original/independent research and one story can sometimes take years to fully develop. There is no agenda, and the journalist originates the story themselves.

Many of the most famous news stories are the result of extensive investigative journalism. The Watergate scandal was uncovered by journalists, as were the terrible effects of thalidomide (and more to the point, the fact that Distillers apparently knew about this harmful link but chose to do nothing about it.) Harry Evans is responsible for showing the public the truth about thalidomide and is thought of almost as a hero. Without uncovering and publicising the case to the extent it was, the people affected may have had an even harder time at getting compensation for the disabilities that were inflicted on them.


The Innocence Project is another branch of investigation. It attempts to review cases thrown out by appeals to see if there is a chance that the person/people in prison have been wrongly convicted.

The Birmingham Six are a good example of a miscarriage of justice - 6 Irish men (some of them with prior convictions) were pinned for an IRA attack on a pub in Birmingham in the 70s. Two appeals had previously been unsuccessful, but in 1991 (after 16 years in prison) the men were finally cleared of their convictions due to evidence of police fabrication and a decade later were even awarded compensation for their wrongful imprisonment. In 1985, journalist Chris Mullin had investigated the case for World In Action and broadcast of what he found cast the first serious doubts on the men's convictions. He could be attributed with getting the ball rolling in terms of the men's eventual absolution and exposing the police involved for the frauds that they were.


Exploiting the evidence gap

In criminal law, the standard of evidence must leave a jury 'beyond all reasonable doubt' that a defendant is guilty of the crime they've been charged with.
In civil law, the standard of evidence is only 'on the balance of probability.'

This means that if a newspaper wanted to comment on an inactive case (this is crucial, or else they risk contempt of court) and say that someone is guilty, then they can. This is exactly what the Daily Mail did in regards to Stephen Lawrence's killers - they investigated the case themselves and found that those five men were almost certainly responsible for the death of Lawrence, but a trial with a jury was looking unlikely. As bold as the headline looks, the only thing that the Mail are really opening themselves up to is a libel writ, and even then they would be able to win if they could prove that these men are probably murderers.


Subterfuge

'Camera in a bag.' It is key to investigative journalism as without it, there may be no other way to gather the evidence necessary for a proper story that would have a concrete justification defence should it go to court.
Subterfuge must be explicitly approved by the editor/commissioning body and can only be used if the story is without malice, in the public interest and there could be no other way to prove it (i.e., you couldn't just ring a policeman up and ask them if they're a massive racist and get an honest answer.)

BBC News
Knowing this, Mark Daly decided to investigate alleged institutional racism in the ranks of police cadets in Manchester. He spent a total of 18 months applying for and working undercover, and it was during his time in the police training academy that he secured the most secret footage of his colleagues spouting racist things/behaving in a similar manner. His findings were broadcast on Panorama in 2003.

"We look to the police for protection, advice and security - it's for this reason I believe our investigation was justified"
- clear public interest defence.

So use of subterfuge must be:

  • very much in the public interest
  • without malice
  • approved by the editor
  • the only way to make a story viable

11 December, 2010

Media Law - Copyright

Copyright

Copyright is the protection of intellectual property; this protection can only ever extend to work done, and never simply an idea. More than one person can have the same idea - saying that you could copyright an idea would be to suggest that you could copyright an entire genre, which is impractical/unfair. The work must also be original and substantial to receive this protection.

It is the work produced which is valuable, and is therefore to the detriment of its originator if someone else benefits from their labour. Work can be in the form of manual labour (painting a picture, making a model) or intellectual work.

Because the work has value, the copyright to it can be sold. When this happens the original owner no longer has any legal right to use that piece of work any more, as this right belongs to the buyer.

The law sees no distinction between work done by hand or work done using education.

Under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 copyright protects any literary, dramatic, artistic or musical work, sound recording, film, broadcast, or typographical arrangement. This copyright doesn't have to be formally registered but it is a good idea to assert copyright in a piece to dissuade anyone from assuming it is free to use.

Copyright lasts for 70 years from the end of the authors death.
Copyright in a broadcast is retained for 50 years.
In 2008, the Government said it was considering extending the copyright of sound recordings from 50 to 70 years as well.

Copyright in news stories 

In 2007, Dan Brown was sued unsuccessfully for breach of copyright by Michael Baigent and Richard Leigh, who wrote The Holy Blood and The Holy Grail. They lost because the judge upheld that copyright can only extend to the arrangement of facts and ideas and they way in which they are expressed - the idea itself (in this case that of Templar knights and Jesus' descendants etc.) - doesn't have any protection at all.


Copyright in maps and drawings

You can't publish any of an artistic work such as a map or drawing without permission from the creator.
In 2001, Centrica (associated with the Automobile Association) paid £20 million in an out of court settlement to Ordnance Survey for the use of OS maps as a base for their own maps without asking.
Ordnance Survey had introduced subtle errors into its maps to catch out potential plagiarists (like a watermark in a digital image)

Copyright in speeches

Under the 1988 Act, there is copyright in spoken words, even if they are not delivered from a script, as soon as they are recorded.

The speaker owns the literary copyright to their own words, unless they are speaking in the course of their employment. Copyright in a speaker's words is not infringed when reporting parlimentary or court proceedings.


Ownership of copyright


An employer will own the copyright to anything produced while you're under their employment (a newspaper could use an article for anything they liked, any work that an individual produces for a uni course will be attributed to the uni, etc) The newspaper has no right, however, to copyright of work done by non-members of the staff, even if the work has been specifically ordered from the contributor.

Defences against copyright infringement 


'Fair dealing' in newspapers

There is no copyright in a news story, but persistent lifting of facts from another paper may be an infringement of copyright law because of the skill, labour, and judgement that went into the research in the stories.

Fair dealing is a defence that will sometimes allow some quoting from another paper on a current news story.
If a substantial piece of work is taken then there must be sufficient acknowledge to its source.

Photographs are exempt from the defence of fair dealing, under Section 30 of the Copyright Designs and Patents Act 1988. If a newspaper steals exclusive photographs from another, then they are very much open to a claim for infringement.


Public interest

The 1988 Act states that nothing in the Act affects 'any rule of law preventing or restricting the enforcement of copyright on the grounds of public interest or otherwise' but this defence appears to be very shaky and there are not many examples where it has succeeded. 

In the Hyde Park Residence case, the Court of Appeal said that the Sun's actions could not be defended as in the public interest and that the Copyright Act 1988 does not give a court general power to enable an infringer to use another's copyright in the public interest.


08 December, 2010

Media Law - Confidentiality

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Breach of confidence

It is the principle that a person who has obtained information in confidence should not take unfair advantage of it. It affects journalists because the main way of preventing these breaches are in the form of interim injunctions which prevent the media from publishing any confidential information. It is a rapidly expanding area of the law which is mainly linked to privacy, and is perhaps being spurred along by the culture of celebrity and the subsequent court cases that have resulted from press and photographs they didn't like.

The Douglas case is the most often cited case concerning confidence/privacy issues.


Elements of a breach of confidence -
Mr Justice Megarry in 1968 said there are three elements in a breach of confidence:
  • the information must have 'the necessary quality of confidence' 
  • the information must have been imparted in circumstances imposing an obligation of confidence (e.g. a doctor's office)
  • there must be an unauthorised use of that information to the detriment of the party communicating it
Quality, circumstance, detriment.


The quality of confidence - 
Information is not confidential if it is of trivial significance, or deemed to already be in the public domain.

Obligation of confidence -
Contractual relationship: contract between a company and an employee that they will not reveal their employer's secrets.
Gagging clauses

Domestic relationships -
In 1967 the Duchess of Argyll prevented the People newspaper (as well as her former husband) from publishing marital secrets.
In the 1980s the courts were willing to extend the protection given there to less formal relationships, to prevent kiss-and-tell stories.
Information about transient affairs i.e. those with prostitutes is far less likely to receive this protection.

Third parties -
A journalist who comes across information that they realise was imparted in confidence may have a legal duty to respect the confidence. To go ahead and publish information that a court could prove the journalist knew was private would cause them to commit a breach.

Unethical behaviour -
There is an obligation of confidence on those who obtain confidential information by means such as trespass, theft, bugs or long-range cameras. This is presumably to protect celebrities from the paparazzi. It also applies to 'camera in a bag' investigations on an organisation (which must be authorised by the editor and deemed as in the public interest)




English law recognised no right to privacy until 2000. Before then, people who believed their privacy was going to be infringed used breach of confidence law to prevent any further intrusion.
This was difficult as there was 'the essentially different nature of the two kinds of right', referring to privacy and confidence. The Law Commission's report said:
'An obligation of confidence, by definition, arises, first, from the circumstances in which the information is given. By contrast, a right of privacy in respect of information would arise from the nature of the information itself; it would be based on the principle that certain kinds of information are categorised as private and for that reason alone ought not to be disclosed. In may case where privacy is infringed this is not the result of a breach of confidence'

So confidence is circumstantial, privacy is a concept which is more innate. If you were to pick up a diary dropped by somebody in the street, without any context you would still realise that it is a private document and hopefully treat it as such.

The European Convention on Human Rights was incorporated into English law in 2000, which contained the idea that everybody has the right to privacy. It solidified breach of privacy being an actionable offence.

In 2001, judge Dame Elizabeth Butler-Sloss developed the law of confidence when she imposed an injunction banning the media from releasing details about Jamie Bulger's killers, who were to be given new identities on release. It was argued that their human right to privacy, to life, and to freedom from torture far outweighed those of freedom of speech on  behalf of anyone wanting to expose them.


How confidentially can make journalism difficult

A journalist, on obtaining interesting information about a person's misconduct, will seek to get this party's side of the story in the interests of fair play and some legal protection from libel.

If the source of the information received it in confidence, however, approaching the person to ask for their take on things could just result in them seeking an injunction, effectively killing the story before it even has a chance to develop.

To get around this, a journalist could use the source as a lead and seek out more information from a non-confidential route, then question the subject of investigation based on this. If the information isn't confidential, then there can't be an injunction.

It is always worth ringing up the party concerned; the 'facts' gleaned from the source could always, after all, not be true. In 1977 the Daily Mail had to pay substantial libel damages to BL (British Leyland) after publishing a story which claimed BL were conspiring to defraud foreign governments - the letter which led their story had turned out to be a forgery.

Injunctions, and the overall effect confidentiality has on the media

A person who has learnt that the media is planning to publish a story on them with information they have obtained from confidential source can try to get a temporary injunction banning publication of the offending material.

Section 12 in the Human Rights Act 1998 contains rules which intend to provide some protection against injunctions in matters involving freedom of expression.

An application for a injunction can be made without notice - this is where the paper are given no indication that the offending material has an injunction made against it, and so subsequent publication could be contempt of court.

Section 12 is supposed to prevent this from happening - saying that if a journalist is not present when the application is made, then the court must not grant the injunction unless the person seeking it has taken all practicable steps to notify the publisher or if there are 'compelling' reasons why the journalists should not be notified. No examples of compelling reasons are given in MacNae's which suggests those reasons are probably highly subjective.

Injunctions are usually carried out at speed and it may not always be possible to get a hold of the journalists. Injunctions can be granted overnight - in the Douglas case, a temporary injunction against Hello! was granted. The court was told OK! tried to contact Hello!'s editor at the time (the middle of the night) but unsurprisingly the phone was answered by a security guard who was unable to help.

Effect on local papers

In 1982, the Watford Observer planned to publish a story based on documents that showed that the publisher Robert Mawell's printing operation, Sun Printers was going under and that he was going to have to lay people off.

The day before press day, a reporter telephoned the company seeking comments.
At midday the following day (press day) Maxwell phoned the paper and pleaded with them to not release any details of the story at this stage. The editor declined, and so his company's lawyers applied for an injunction soon after and were granted one within the next few hours. They phoned the paper at 4.30 to tell them about the injunction, a time when the editorial and typesetting work for the paper would have been completed. Fortunately the paper had prepared alternative material for use in its pages after Maxwell had initially phoned the office.

Bill Goodwin case

In 1989 an engineering company, Tetra Ltd, obtained injunctions against The Engineer and its reporter, Bill Goodwin. The company had realised that a draft copy of plans for a large bank loan had disappeared. The day after this happened an unidentified source phoned Mr Goodwin and gave him information about the company, which included the amount of the projected loan and the company's forecast results.

Goodwin then phoned the company to double check these figures, which caused them to take out a without notice injunction preventing the magazine from publishing anything concerning the company's financial plans on the document. They later obtained an order requiring him to hand over the document which would disclose the source of information. Goodwin refused to do this and so was fined £5,000, but protected his source. In 1996 the European Court of human Rights held that the fine/court order had violated Goodwin's right to freedom of expression.

Injunctions

In 1987, the Court of Appeal held that when an injunction is in force preventing a newspaper from publishing confidential information, other newspapers in England and Wales that know of the injunction can be guilty of contempt of court if they publish that information, even if they are not personally named in the injunction.
In 1989 two papers were fined £50,00 each for publishing extracts from Spycatcher because at the time of publication they knew that interim injunctions were in force against the Observer and the Guardian preventing them from publishing this material.


Injunctions are sometimes worded in such a way that journalists are even prevented from mentioning the existence of the proceedings.

An injunction obtained in an English court does not prevent publication in another country. It does not, therefore, prevent publication in Scotland, though Scottish judges may be asked to impose their own injunction, known as an interdict.

Cost of injunctions

A person seeking an injunction must give a cross-undertaking in damages - an undertaking that he will pay any damages to the defendant if it turns out that the interim injunction should not have been granted.

The defendant may also get costs; In 1994, Camelot tried to get an injunction preventing papers from reporting the winners of the first jackpot in the National lottery - this ultimately failed and they were required to pay £5,000 costs to the paper.

Challenging an injunction can be very expensive, regardless of the outcome. The News of the World claimed in 1987 that it had spent £200,000 in an unsuccessful attempt to defeat an injunction granted to a health authority preventing the paper using information from personal medical records supplied by one or more of the authority's employees. The records showed that two practising doctors in employment were HIV+.

Fines

Disobeying an injunction can result in an action for contempt of court. The News of the World was fined £10,000 for publishing a story headlined 'Scandal of Docs with AIDS' after the injunction was granted.

Order to reveal source

A court can order a journalist to reveal the source of their confidential information, e.g. Goodwin case

Damages

In the Douglas case the two film stars were awarded £14,600 for 'distress' and incidental costs.
Supermodel Naomi Campbell was awarded £2,500 damages for distress and hurt feelings in 2002 against Mirror Group Newspapers when she sued for breach of confidence and infringement of the Data Protection Act 1998. The Daily Mirror had published a story about her receiving therapy from Narcotics Anonymous for drug addiction. A further £1,000 was awarded for an additional article published by the paper.


Disclosure in the public interest

The Human Rights Act 1998, in Section 12, says that when a court is considering imposing an injunction in a matter affecting freedom of expression, and where journalistic material is involved, it must have particular regard to the extent to which it is, or would be, in the public interest to be published.

Judge Lord Denning said that when considering applications for an injunction on grounds of confidentiality, courts had to hold the balance between two competing interests. On the one hand there was the public interest in preserving confidence. On the other was the public interest in making known to people matters of public concern.

In the case Lion Laboratories v Evans [1985], the Court of Appeal held that the publication of confidential information revealing that a type of breathalyser machine used by the police did not work, was in the public interest. As was the broadcast of undercover filming by an employee in breach of confidence which showed misconduct at a funeral home (Service Corp International plc v Channel Four [1999])

In the 2002 Naomi Campbell case, Mirror Group Newspapers argued that the Narcotics Anonymous story was published in the public interest because the model had previously gone out of her way to tell the media that, in contrast to other models, she did not take drugs (hypocrisy). This was obviously untrue and disclosure was necessary to correct a false public image. In 2004 the House of Lords agreed that it was in the public interest to report that Naomi was receiving treatment for drug addiction, but to report the place of treatment, her reaction to it, and to surreptitiously obtain photographs of her emerging from the place of treatment was crossing the line and was no longer in the realm of public interest.

Section 12 of the Human Rights Act says that a court considering a matter affecting freedom of information must have particular regard to 'any relevant privacy code.' In the Douglas case the relevant privacy code was that of the Press Complaints Commission. In this code, it is clear that there may be certain exceptions to the rules if the information can be demonstrated to be in the public interest.

This is said to include:

      • detecting or exposing crime or a serious misdemeanour
      • protecting public health and safety
      • preventing the public from being misled by some statement or action of an individual or organisation.

The editor must be able to clearly demonstrate how the public interest is served by publishing private information.

People in the public eye

In 2000, a judge refused an injunction sought by Lord Levy against Times Newspapers. The story was about his tax affairs, and was clearly obtained in breach of confidence. The judge said that Lord Levy was a prominent supporter of the Labour Party, which had a manifesto commitment to closing tax loopholes, and his own tax affairs would shed light on the integrity of that position, which was in the public interest.

In the Naomi Campbell case against the Daily Mirror, Lord Phillips, Master of the Rolls, said the Court of Appeal did not believe that just because an individual had achieved fame that their private life could be laid bare by the media:
"We do not see why it should necessarily be in the public interest that an individual who has been adopted as a role model, without seeking this distinction, should be demonstrated to have feet of clay."
But he continued:
"Where a public figure chooses to make untrue pronouncements about his, or her, private life, the press will normally be entitled to put the record straight."



Development of the law

Upon the introduction of the legally recognised right to privacy on the 2nd October 2000, journalists became concerned at the potential effect this right could have on their freedom to publish true information concerning the public interest. Section 12 of the Human Rights Act thankfully requires courts, when considering an injunction, to have 'particular regard' to the importance of freedom of expression, guaranteed by Article 10 of the Convention.

The Douglas case is often cited as a demonstration of the persistent confusion surrounding privacy law. In December 2000 the Court of Appeal lifted the injunction that prevented Hello! from publishing its pictures of the wedding of the two film stars but the court did not have to decide whether or not such publication was unlawful. In 2003 the judge who was given that task declined to hold that there was an existing law of privacy under which the stars and OK! could recover damages from Hello!. He said that there were conflicting views in the authorities as to whether such a law existed.

He decided that the stars had won the case not under privacy law, but on the grounds that the wedding was protected under the law of commercial confidence as a valuable trade asset. In 2005 the Court of Appeal disagreed with this and held that the stars confidence had been breached by Hello! and that they (meaning the stars) could sue the magazine but OK! could not.

Another important development in privacy law was the Princess Caroline case, in which the European Court of Human Rights held in 2004 that respect for her private life was breached by photographs of scenes from her daily life, i.e. shopping or on holiday, in public places (von Hannover v Germany)

In 2008, Max Mosley sued the News of the World over stories, photos and video footage of him taking part in kinky, not safe for work kind of stuff. This case did not establish new principles of privacy - it was the level of damages awarded that was remarkable and it put privacy on a par with other costly legal actions such as libel.


Article 8 of the Convention

The right to privacy is guaranteed by Article 8 of the Convention on Human Rights, which says:

1. Everyone has the right to respect for his private and family life, his home and his correspondence.
2. There shall be no interference by a public authority with the exercise of this right except such as is in accordance with the law and is necessary in a democratic society
- in the interests of national security, public safety or the economic wellbeing of the country,
- for the prevention of disorder or crime,
- for the protection of health or morals, or
- for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others.

In this case, a 'public authority' includes the media.


Laws providing protection to privacy

Breach of confidence

The law of breach of confidence is founded on the principle that a person who has acquired information in confidence should not take unfair advantage of it. Originally the obligation was understood to arise only where the parties had a recognised relationship (e.g. doctor/patient) but judges have modified the law to infer such a relationship where no obvious relationship exists.

In the Douglas case in 2000 Lord Justice Sedley said that there is a distinction to be made between the law protecting those whose trust has been broken, and the protection of people who have experienced unwanted intrusions into their personal lives. He said that it was good that the law no longer had to construct an artificial breach of trust to protect an individuals privacy now that privacy is a recognised legal principle.

Privacy was strengthened even more by the ruling of Dame Elizabeth Butler-Sloss, who granted an injunction preventing anyone from publishing the new identities of Jamie Bulger's killers, citing their rights to life, privacy and freedom from torture.

'Kiss and tell' stories are problematic for judges, as they must carefully consider whether any of the information released had the 'necessary quality of confidence.'
In a new approach to the law of confidence, the question is whether Article 8 (right to privacy) is 'engaged', which depends on whether the information was 'private'. All of this hangs on whether the claimant had a 'reasonable expectation of privacy.'

In the following years after the incorporation of the Human Rights Act into British law, courts took on the view that not all sexual conduct could strictly be treated as having the quality of confidence, or any legal protection at all.

In 2002, a judge refused to grant an injunction to Jamie Theakston banning the Sunday People from publishing an article about his activities in a brothel. The judge said that a 'fleeting' sexual relationship in a brothel was not confidential (Jamie Theakston v MGN Ltd)

In the same year an injunction was lifted by the Court of Appeal which had banned the publication of the extra-marital affairs of a footballer, Garry Flitcroft (A v B (A Company) The judge who had granted the injunction explained that the law gave protection of confidentiality to sexual relations inside of marriage, and ruled that in a modern context the position should be extended to relations outside of marriage. The Court of Appeal, when lifting the injunction, argued that there is a definite distinction to be made between the confidentiality attached to what is supposed to be a permanent relationship, and transient affairs.

The Max Mosley case

The News of the World printed the story of Max Mosley being involved in a sado-masochistic orgy with five women, claiming that it had a Nazi theme. It also put secretly filmed footage on its website.The informant was one of the women who had taken part in the activities.
Mr Mosley claimed that the activities were consensual, harmless, and there were no Nazi overtones.

Mr Justice Eady held that the woman informant owed a duty of confidence, as in previous cases where the relationship was transitory. Eady held that if there had indeed been Nazi overtones then there would have been a public interest in exposing Mosley's activities. However, because the behaviour wasn't there then the judge said he could find no public interest to justify the intrusion, filming, or publication.

The judge ruled in Mosley's favour but refused to award exemplary damages.


Can information be confidential if its in the public domain?

In 2005 a judge granted an application restraining a newspaper from publishing the addresses of buildings acquired for housing vulnerable adolescents, although the addresses would be known to neighbours and others who lived nearby and maybe also from the Land Registry.  Mr Justice Tugendhat said:

"There will be cases where personal information about a person (usually a celebrity) has been so widely published that a restraint upon repetition will serve no purpose, and an injunction will be refused on that account...
I conclude that the information as to the addresses which is sought to be restrained is not in the public domain to the extent, or in the sense, that republication could have no significant effect, or that the information is not eligible for protection at all."

Obligation of confidence

Where the relationship is a contractual one the courts will hold the confidant to a very high standard of confidence. Naomi Campbell won a summary judgement against her former P.A, who had given information to the News of the World for their story 'Fiery model attacks aide over secret love scenes with heart throb Joseph Fiennes'

Ex-employees of celebrities, such as drivers and nannies, are not free to speak about the private life of their former boss when the employment ends. The Beckhams obtained an injunction against their former driver and their former nanny to uphold duties of confidence.

The Data Protection Act

The Naomi Campbell case alerted the media to the implications for the law of privacy of the Data Protection Act 1998. She sued the Daily Mirror for both breach of confidence and infringement of the DPA.

A journalist collecting personal information can lay themselves open to a claim for compensation if the person concerned suffers damage as a result of the unauthorised disclosure of that information.
The advantages for a claimant suing under the DPA rather than breach of confidence are:

  • There is no general public domain defence
  • When published, there is no blanket public interest protection for media
  • The requirements of the first data protection principle are very strong, and in most privacy cases are unlikely to be satisfied
  • There is an entitlement to compensation for distress even if no damage can be proven. (much like libel)

The Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000

The RIPA prohibits intention and unlawful interception of communications by post or phone or other telecomunnication systems. They say that the sender or recipient of an intercepted message can sue, even if the person having the right to control the use of a private system gives permission, if such interception is 'without lawful authority.'

The Act provides a means for punishing illegal hacking into mobile phones. Doing so can fetch the perpetrator two years in jail, a fine or both.

In 2006 Clive Goodman, editor of News of the World, pleaded guilty with another man on charge of conspiring to intercept mobile phone voicemail messages under the Criminal Law Act 1977, which covers conspiracy. The case came to light in 2005 after a series of stories were published about Prince William that only a few people could have possibly known about, such as a knee injury. It became known that News of the World were 'intercepting' his aides' voicemail messages.

Journalists will frequently record their own telephone calls. Under the 2000 Act, interception occurs in the course of transmission, so recording telephone conversations by a device at either end of the communication is not interception and is lawful. To not declare that they are a journalist to the person they are speaking to, however, can only be defended if the information obtained meets the public interest and there is no other way to get the information.

In 2011, it came to light that News of the World were targeting not only Royals, politicians and celebrities, but the voicemail of murder victims (most notably that of Millie Dowler), their families or relatives of solidiers killed in action. This rephrensible action caused a media frenzy and News of the World has since ceased production.

The wider ranging affect that these events will have on media law surrounding the issue is currently unknown.

Trespass

Trespass appears to impose large restrictions on a journalists' conduct.

Trespass to land

A wrongful interference with the possession of 'land', which includes buildings such as houses. Wrongful interference means going there without consent. It is a tort (not a criminal offence), and the occupant can sue for damages or get an injunction to stop it from happening. In the Kaye v Robertson case, a journalist from the Sunday Sport intruded into a hospital room where Kaye was lying semi-concious; the reporter interviewed and photographed him. Kaye could not sue for trespass because the hospital ward did not belong to him. Therefore, a journalist cannot be sued for trespass for watching or photographing a person on their own land, provided that the journalist did not enter the land.
Entry by fraud (i.e. by pretending to be a doctor) and unauthorised searching of the house is also punishable.
Damages paid are usually not substantial, unless there is evidence that they have forced entry for a story. They are then liable to pay exemplary/punitive damages.

Trespass to goods

If a journalist visiting a contact picks up a letter addressed to their contact while they are out of the room, the journalist is committing a trespass to the goods and can be held liable. The journalist cannot be sued for trespass for reading the letter while it is lying on the desk. But if he takes the letter away and intends to permanently deprive the owner of it, it could bring about the more serious tort of conversion or even the criminal offence of theft.

26 November, 2010

Journalism Now - The Daily Star and Radio 3

News Agenda Presentation – The Daily Star and BBC Radio 3

The Daily Star and Radio 3 are very different in their approaches to the news, a fact which is reflected in their vastly different target audiences.

The Daily Star was launched in 1978; from the start it was intended to be a 'lighter' take on news and its focus was, and still is, mainly on celebrities. This has worked out well for the Star, which achieves a circulation of 863,805 and a total adult readership of 1,648,000. The age of the newspaper seems to be in line with that of its target audience. Most readers are under 54 years of age and according to the Star's own demographic profile, it expects the audience to mainly be made up of 25 – 34 year olds. The majority of readers are male. It expects them to regard the paper primarily as entertainment, with news items slotted between colourful spreads depicting women in the most recent reality television programme. The Star's advertising rates are £97 for a colour display and £72 for a monochrome one.

The Star also expects the majority of its readers to be in full time employment and therefore have some disposable income. These advertisements tend to be video games (to appeal to the predominantly male readership), deals in 'downmarket' supermarkets (e.g. Aldi, Morrisons – to appeal the C2DE demographic) and package holidays (to appeal to those with young families.) In terms of language used, most sentences comprise monosyllabic words and colloquial terms, which suggests that the assumed reading age of the audience is low. It is sensationalistic and frequently employs the use of emotive terms where a more 'neutral' word could have worked, which links to the Star's primary motive of providing entertainment for its audience.

The average Daily Star reader prefers watching television over reading – this is highlighted in the graphology of the newspaper. There is a larger ratio of pictures to text, it is colourful and the font for headlines is big and striking. This style of presentation is effectively trying to emulate television, which its audience can relate to, and when paired with stories about people who regularly appear on the television it captures the attention of the reader.

Any serious news items that are included amongst celebrity news are dealt with in a manner that is consistent with every other tabloid. The tone of the paper could be described central-right – it won't hesitate to have headlines referring to 'asylum seekers' even if they only play a small part in the story. Political correctness is not really on the agenda for the Daily Star, but neither is it in the interest of its readers.

Radio 3 (formerly The Third Network) was launched in 1967, and attracts 2,145,000 listeners each week. It is aimed at an older audience. 57 is the average age of a listener, and they will listen to Radio 3 for about 6 hours each week. Their audience is not varied in age: there is a very small percentage of listeners that are 35 and under. Almost half of them are retired, and perhaps due to their age are more likely to own their own house than the average person. The split between male and female listeners is fairly even. There are no advertisements on BBC Radio 3 – this makes it difficult to estimate which social grade their audience could fit in to. The audience are discernible only by the service that Radio 3 offers – hours of classical music with some interviews, which would probably not appeal to C2DEs.

The news bulletin for Radio 3 is supplied by BBC News. The news provided is therefore regarded as politically 'centre' though some may argue that the BBC leans toward the left. The bulletin is always short, concise and never contains any 'celebrity gossip.' The news agenda is concerned largely with political, economical and world news. The BBC will only present the news in a way that is factual and impartial and will actively avoid using any emotive language. Political correctness is high on the agenda of the BBC as they are the national broadcaster for the United Kingdom and therefore have an extremely broad audience to cater for.

The bulletins will cover four of the top news stories of the day, usually with a specific news item of particular importance recurring throughout the week. The final item of the bulletin usually deviates slightly from the political/economical focus and instead be a story concerning medicine, conservation, environment or charity. There are no jingles or breaks between news items which suggests that Radio 3 assumes their listeners will stay tuned in for the duration of the bulletin and have a good attention span.

In many ways the audiences of the Daily Star and Radio 3 are polar opposites – while readers of the Star are young, interested in pop culture, male and politically right-leaning, listeners of Radio 3 are old, interested in 'higher' culture, evenly split in terms of gender and, if the presentation of the news is taken to reflect the opinions of the listener, slightly left-leaning.


References:

Radio 3 Audience research (2004) - http://www.adambowie.com/weblog/archive

The Daily Star Factbook (2009) http://images.dailystar-uk.co.uk/pdfs/DailyStarfactbook09.pdf

Radio 3 audience figures (2010) http://www.mediauk.com/radio/311/bbc-radio-3

21 November, 2010

Media Law - Defamation Cont.

The Reynolds defence

The Reynolds case in 1998 recognised that journalists have a duty to tell their readers about certain stories, and that this duty affords a certain privilege defence against libel action.

The defence was born when a former Irish Prime Minister, Albert Reynolds, sued the Sunday Times over a story which he thought led people to believe that he had deliberately misled his government by suppressing important information concerning the High Court.
Although the Times lost in a subsequent appeal, the Lord Chief Justice (Lord Bingham) said: "As it is the task of the news media to inform the public and engage in public discussion of matters of public interest, so is that to be recognised as its duty."

Lord Nicholls set out a list of circumstances to be examined by the court when looking at this defence:
  1. The seriousness of the allegation. The more serious the charge, the more the public is misinformed/the individual harmed if the allegation is not true.
  2. The nature of the information, and the extent to which it is a matter of public concern.
  3. The source of the information. Some informants have no direct knowledge of events, may be acting in their own interest or are being paid for their stories.
  4. The steps taken to verify the information.
  5. The status of the information. The allegation may have already been the subject of an investigation which commands respect.
  6. The urgency of the matter. News is often a perishable commodity - i.e. the subject may just be fashionable at the time
  7. Whether comment was sought from the claimant. He may have information no-one else had access to.
  8. Whether the article contained some mention of the claimants side of the story.
  9. The tone of the article. It cannot adopt allegations as statements of fact.
  10. The circumstances of the publication, including the timing.


Criminal Libel, slander, and malicious falsehoods

The preceding instances of libel have treated libel as a tort - a civil wrong that can be awarded with damages.

Libel can also be a criminal offence, of which it can take two forms:
  • defamatory libel
  • seditious and obscene libel
Prosecutions using these forms of libel are unlikely nowadays but still possible.

Criminal defamatory libel - 
Libel in this case is not the same as defamatory libel in civil law, where the remedy is in the form of damages paid to the claimant. Publication of libel that can actually be considered a crime could be statements which might lead to a breach of the peace. It is punishable by a prison sentence of up to a year, and if it can be proved that the originator knew the statements to be untrue then this can be doubled. The CPS is, however, reluctant to use the law of criminal libel where civil law would serve the situation better.

Publication -
to sustain a prosecution for criminal libel the words must be written, or be in some permanent form - but there is no need for publication to a third party. It would be enough to have a letter containing inflammatory material addressed to the person who is defamed written by the defendant, as this in itself could breach the peace.

Libelling the dead -
Libel of the dead may be the subject of a prosecution in criminal libel law if they were said specifically to elicit a response from someone who is likely to breach the peace. Slandering somebody who's dead to someone who is mild mannered, therefore, is fine.



Slander

Generally speaking, libel is in some permanent form e.g. written words, a drawing or photograph) whereas slander is spoken or in some transient form.

There are exceptions:
  • defamatory statement broadcast on radio or television, or in a cable programme, which is treated by the Broadcasting Act 1990 as libel
  • a defamatory statement in a public performance of a play, by virtue of the Theatres Act 1968.
A main difference between slander and libel is that no actual loss is automatically assumed in slander and it is up to the claimant to prove that there is some potential for their reputation to be marked.

Malicious falsehoods

A malicious falsehood is an action for a statement which could not reasonably be deemed as defamatory (e.g. reporting that a solicitor has retired when they have not) but has still caused the claimant to incur some damage (in that case, their clients looking for other solicitors.) Unlike libel, it is entirely the burden of the claimant to prove that there has been actual damage for which they should be rewarded, AND that the statement was published with malicious intent. They're fairly rare.




Media Law - Defamation

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What the claimant must prove

Defamatory statements have the following potential qualities:
  • Exposes a person to hatred, ridicule or contempt
  • causes them to be shunned or avoided
  • discredits them in their trade, business or profession
  • lowers them in the minds of 'right-thinking' members of society.
A claimant only has to show the court three things when suing for libel:
  1. the publication is defamatory
  2. it may be reasonably understood to refer to him/her - identification
  3. it had been published by a third person 
They don't have to prove:
  1. that the statement isn't true. The statement is assumed to false by the court. It is the burden of the defence to provide justification that the defamatory statement was in fact true.
  2. that there was intention. It is a weak defence to say that 'I didn't mean to damage that person's reputation' and presence of malice is even worse.
  3. proof of actual damage. The potential for damage is what is concerned; a statement that tends to discredit is a defamatory statement. 


Identification

The claimant will need to prove that the published matter is or could (in the case of groups) be referring to them. Omitting the name of the claimant in the offending statement is not enough of a defence. The general test in defamation law is as follows - if enough detail is published for people acquainted with the claimant to believe a statement applies to him or her, then the case is legitimate.
"It is not necessary that all the world should understand the libel; it is sufficient if those who know the claimant can make out that he is the person meant."

Positive identification is very important to prevent accidental libel. In 1940, the Daily Express reported that 'Harold Newstead, 30 year-old Camberwell man' had been thrown in jail for nine months for bigamy. Another Harold Newstead who lived in Camberwell successfully sued for libel as it could just as easily refer to him - he said that it was the duty of the newspaper to provide more detailed information of the convict so as to avoid confusion with anyone else. Newspapers today go to great lengths to positively identify convicts or defendants in court cases - a picture, age, address and occupation are commonly shown if provided or mentioned in the court.


Defamation of a group - a defamatory statement which applies to a sufficiently small group of people is bad, as it will allow every member of that group to sue. Saying that 'one of the detectives at Springfield police station is corrupt,' without positive identification of that single detective, damages the reputation of every detective there. It identifies them in libel law to their acquaintances and colleagues, and they could easily sue and win in a libel action. Vague, controversial statements are therefore to be avoided which for the sake of proper reporting is probably a good thing.

Juxtaposition - a story concerning something defamatory can mark the reputations of somebody else who isn't even involved if the news items are arranged in such a way to look linked. The claimant(s) can then successfully sue if they can reasonably show that their reputation could be damaged as a result of thoughtless editing.

Publication

The claimant has to prove that the statement has been published. It cannot be a personal correspondence between the claimant and the one being sued in which something offensive was said. They must prove that the offending statement has been communicated to at least one other person. In the case of newspapers this is no problem to prove.


Internet publication - the court will never assume that internet publication is corollary to a widespread audience. Also, the recipients of the material must be in the same country as the claimant, or else damage to reputation can't really be a reasonable possibility.

Repeating statements of others - repetition of libel is bad. In each fresh publication, a fresh case is thrown open - the repetition rule. The person who originated the defamatory statement could be liable, but the publication who repeats it is as liable or perhaps more so, as they have chosen specifically to repeat their sentiment above anything else they could have published instead.

Online archives and repetition - the repetition rule is important for sites that contain archive material. The usual defence to libel action is that there was more than year between publication and the launch of the lawsuit. However, the law implies that whenever an archive is accessed it is akin to a new publication and can therefore be used in a libel suit. Therefore, anyone who is seeking damages for defamatory statements made in a newspaper article can sue twice if the same article is available online.

The section 1 defence - Newsagents and booksellers simply 'disseminate' of the passage of words and so are not responsible for their content. This defence was unavailable to distributors and broadcasters, until The Defamation Act in 1996 extended the defence. It now applies to anyone who was not the author, editor or publisher and who did not know that the publication contained a defamatory statement.

A court deciding whether a person took due care or has reason to believe that they could have contributed to the publication of the defamatory statement must regard:
  • the extent of his/her responsibility for the content of the statement/decision to publish it
  • the nature or circumstances of the publication
  • the previous conduct or character of the author, editor or publisher.
The defence also applies to the broadcasters of live television as they have no control over the originator of a defamatory statement made on air.

ISPs also enjoy the protection of the section 1 defence as they are nothing than a passive 'host' on which defamatory statements may be published and play no role at all in what is published; they would be liable, however, if they failed to remove contentious material after they have already received complaints.




Six main defences journalists can ensure their article adheres to when researching a story:
  • Justification
  • fair comment
  • absolute privilege
  • qualified privilege
  • accord and satisfaction
  • offer of amends


Justification is essentially truth; if in a libel case the defamatory statement can be proved to be true, then it provides complete protection. It is the job of the defence to do this - the claimant only has to prove that the statement has potential to defame, that it was published and that the claimant is identified. 
This defence applies to statement of fact (that someone has had an affair or is entangled in a legal dispute when they claim not to be), as opposed to an expression of opinion (that John Doe is stupid and ugly)
The standard of proof is thankfully lower than in criminal cases - 'on the balance of probability' instead of 'beyond all reasonable doubt.' The defence must have sufficient evidence in the form of documents or witnesses that are prepared to give testimony in court.

Levels of meaning and reporting police investigations

When considering reports that will link a claimant with criminal conduct, the courts recognise three levels of meaning:

  • the report indicates the person is guilty of the criminal offence (Level 1 meaning)
  • it indicates that they are reasonably suspected of the offence (Level 2 meaning)
  • or that there are grounds for an investigation (Level 3 meaning)
Providing reasonable suspicion -
It is defamatory to say that a person is reasonably suspected of an offence (and leaving it at that) as it implies something about a person's conduct to warrant the suspicion. To have justification as a defence you must prove that their conduct is capable of arousing that suspicion.

In 2003 the Sun had to pay £100,000 in damages to a children's nurse for running the headline 'Nurse is probed over 18 deaths.' She had been under investigation for the deaths of terminally ill children at the time the story was published but police then concluded that there were no grounds to suspect her. The Sun tried to show that there were reasonable grounds for suspicion, but they were relying on the fact that there had been a number of allegations against her which is not satisfactory proof in any court. - Elaine Chase v News Group Newspapers Ltd [2002]

Avoid implying habitual conduct -
To say of a person that 'they are a thief' may be true in the most simple and literal sense, but if that conviction applies to a one-off for a relatively minor theft (e.g. halfinching a packet of bacon from the local Co-op in their youth.) 
The connotations of branding someone as a 'thief' so absolutely implies that that is what that person does for a living and that they are a habitual re-offender.
This is where a defence of justification may fall down, and many libel cases arise where a journalist implies habitual conduct from a single incident.


Fair comment


The defence of fair comment protects published opinion which is not pretending to be factual.

Main requirements of the fair comment defence:

  • the published comment must be the honestly held opinion of the person making it
  • the comment should be recognisable to the reader/viewer/listener as opinion - cannot be worded as factual allegation
  • the comment must be based on provably true facts/privileged matter
  • those facts/matter must be recognisably alluded to in what is published with the comment, unless the fact is so widely known that it is unnecessary 
  • the subject commented on must be a matter of public interest
All of these requirements must be met for fair comment to succeed.

Opinion must be 'honesty held', not 'fair' - 
Truth is not applicable to a comment - its subjective nature makes it impossible. A comment can be responsible/irresponsible, informed/misinformed, constructive/destructive - it cannot be held as true or false. Defendants using fair comment do not need to persuade the judge or jury to share their views. Instead, what they must do is show the jury that the comment based upon established facts is a view that a person could reasonably and honestly draw on those facts.

Proof of malice may undermine the fair comment defence - 
Malice has different meanings depending upon whether the claimant is considering fair comment or qualified privilege as a defence. Malice in the case of fair comment would undermine whether the comment the person has expressed is their honestly held view (as it would be impossible to determine if it was simply to cause embarrassment or injury to the claimant), and as such would invalidate the claim to fair comment as it being their honest opinion is one of the requirements.


Reviews, Humour, Satire, and irony
Fair comment protects the expressions of opinions contained in reviews of music, books, holidays and restaurants. Cases which attempt to sue writers of reviews and satire usually fail - in 2008 Sir Elton John sued the Guardian for libel over a spoof article which was a weekly instalment in the newspaper and so clearly identifiable as humour. Sir Elton claimed that the article was implying his charitable commitments were insincere and that most of the money he has raised will go towards a charity ball rather than useful causes. Mr Justice Tugendhat ruled his claim out, saying that if the Guardian had found actual evidence that this was the case then it would no longer be fair comment and constitute a serious story; they hadn't, and so the comments expressed were just a form of teasing and protected under fair comment.


Privilege

These are occasions where the public interest demands that there must be complete freedom of speech, without any party involved being at risk for defamation proceedings even if the statements are defamatory.
Privilege exists under common law and statute.

Absolute Privilege
Falseness of a statement and malice are inapplicable where absolute privilege exists. However, transferral of what is said on an occasion in absolute privilege to a publication will only enjoy qualified privilege. E.g. Members of Parliament have absolute privilege and can say whatever they want to each other in the House of Commons, but a journalist reporting what they have said may find themselves open to defamation writs.
Qualified privilege is still a sound defence in court to defamation, but it depends on there being a proper motive in publication (usually public interest.)

The only time that journalists have absolute privilege is when they are reporting court cases, and then there are requirements that what is published is:

  • 'a fair and accurate report of judicial proceedings held in public within the United Kingdom, published contemporaneously.'

Absolute privilege for court reports is vital for the media as most of what is said in court is highly defamatory and it would be impossible to report it without a sound legal defence against libel. The court wants the media to report these cases in the first place as it wants the public to see that justice is being done.


Reports must be fair -
A report must contain:

  • a summary of both sides
  • no substantial inaccuracies
  • no disproportionate weight to one side or the other
In 1993 the Daily Sport paid damages to a police officer acquitted of indecent assault. The paper had reported the opening of the case by the prosecution and the main evidence of the alleged victim but did not include her cross-examination by the defence on the same day which subsequently weakened her entire allegation. The paper later printed the officer's acquittal, but he still decided to sue for defamation.

Reports must be accurate -
All allegations in court reports must be attributed to their originator or the publication runs the risk of presenting these allegations as fact. i.e. to say that 'Brown had a gun in his hand' is incorrect, 'Smith said Brown had a gun in his hand.' is correct.
To incorrectly identify someone as a defendant when they are only a witness/unconnected to the case, or be inaccurate about what charges they face leaves a media organisation with no protection at all.

Reports must be contemporaneous -
Contemporaneous means 'as soon as practicable' e.g. in the first issue of the paper following the court's session. In cases of court orders preventing the immediate publication of certain matter, the definition of contemporaneous extends to 'as soon as practicable after publication is permitted.'

Protection only for reports of proceedings - 
"Extraneous comments can be included or other factual material but it must be severable, in the sense that a reasonable reader could readily appreciate that the material did not purport to be a report of what was said in court."

Privilege does not protect defamatory matter shouted out in court e.g. from the public gallery by someone unrelated to the proceedings, but if they were somebody who had given evidence as a witness in that case then inclusion of the comment in a court report would be protected under qualified privilege.

Qualified Privilege
Qualified privilege is available as a defence when it is deemed that the facts in the publication should be freely known in the public interest.

Qualified privilege by statute - 
Qualified privilege differs from absolute privilege in that the motive of publication must be clear and free of malice. Reports of proceedings listed by the Schedule 1 to the 1996 Act must be fair, accurate and published without malice, and also that the matter published generally be in the public interest.

In respect to malice, Lord Nicholls said that 'the purpose of the defence of qualified privilege is to allow a person who has a duty to perform, or an interest to protect, to provide information without the risk of being sued. If a person's dominant motive is not to perform this duty or protect this interest, he cannot use the defence.'



This is a plea that the matter has already been settled e.g. by publication of a correction and apology which has been accepted by the claimant as a settlement of his complaint.

'Without prejudice' -
A solicitor writing on behalf of a client demanding a correction and apology will always avoid the inference that this apology will be enough in itself to avoid a defamation lawsuit, and make it clear that the request is made 'without prejudice' to any other legal action that may become necessary.
'Without prejudice' in this case means 'off the record' - during the negotiations where the two parties may try to settle it out of court, anything discussed cannot be used against a party in a court of law if this attempt fails.



The media can defame a person unintentionally in various ways, but the Defamation Act 1996 provides for a defence known as 'offer to make amends.' To use this defence, 'a defendant must make a written offer to make a suitable correction and apology, to publish the correction in a reasonable manner, and to pay the claimant suitable damages.'
It can only be used where the defendant had no reason to believe that the statement complained of referred to the claimant, and that said statement was defamatory of them.
The claimant can prove that the publication of the statement was not 'innocent' if they wish to reject this offer.
The offer of amends must be issued quickly after a complaint; a judge may 'discount' resulting compensation in a libel case if the editor provides a 'speedy, unequivocal and prominent apology' to the claimant. 
The offer is binding; the Court of Appeal refused to allow publishers Random House to withdraw their offer of amends where they wished to use the defence of justification instead after new evidence came to light.