Âé¶¹ÒùÔº


Legal warnings on UK court cases to be posted on Twitter

Twitter users have been increasingly falling foul of laws surrounding court reporting
Twitter users have been increasingly falling foul of laws surrounding court reporting

The British government will from Wednesday tell Twitter and Facebook users how to avoid "inadvertently breaking the law" by revealing banned details from court cases.

Legal advisories previously sent only to the mainstream media will be published on networks in recognition of the fact that newspapers and television no longer have a monopoly on news.

There are strict rules in place in Britain on what can be reported or publicly discussed about a court case, with fines levied on those deemed to have prejudiced a fair trial, while it is also illegal to identify some victims of crime.

But these rules are increasingly being broken by users of social networks, most recently when socialite Peaches Geldof tweeted the names of two mothers whose babies were involved in sexual abuse orchestrated by disgraced rock star Ian Watkins.

Geldof, the daughter of Live Aid founder and Boomtown Rats singer Bob Geldof, apologised and swiftly deleted the tweets.

But police are considering whether to press charges under the law protecting the identity of victims in sexual offences cases.

"Blogs and social media sites like Twitter and Facebook mean that individuals can now reach thousands of people with a single tweet or post," said Attorney General Dominic Grieve, the government's chief legal advisor.

"This is an exciting prospect, but it can pose certain challenges to the criminal justice system.

"In days gone by, it was only the that had the opportunity to bring information relating to a court case to such a large group of people that it could put a court case at risk.

"That is no longer the case, and is why I have decided to publish the advisories that I have previously only issued to the media."

Grieve said he hoped to "stop people from inadvertently breaking the law".

"This is not about telling people what they can or cannot talk about on social media; quite the opposite in fact, it's designed to help facilitate commentary in a lawful way."

The 's advisories will be published on his website and his official Twitter feed.

© 2013 AFP

Citation: Legal warnings on UK court cases to be posted on Twitter (2013, December 4) retrieved 20 May 2025 from /news/2013-12-legal-uk-court-cases-twitter.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Afghan Twitter users meet face-to-face as web booms

0 shares

Feedback to editors