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Libel laws group announced
Oliver Luft Press Gazette
DATELINE: 27/1/10
Justice Secretary Jack Straw has set up a working group of senior journalists and figures from the legal profession to consider changes to the laws on libel. The group, which includes Sunday Times editor John Witherow alongside executives from law firms Cater-Ruck and Shillings, will examine the possibility that current libel laws are having a "chilling effect" on freedom of expression, Straw said today.
The group will be chaired by Rowena Collins-Rice, the chief legal officer at the Ministry of Justice, and is expected to make its recommendations by mid-March.
Straw laid out the terms for a formal review of the libel laws late last months saying it would "consider whether the law of libel, including the law relating to libel tourism, in England and Wales needs reform, and if so to make recommendations as to solutions". He said today: "The working group is intended to have an intensive, short term focus and has been requested to make recommendations by mid-March."
The review will look at the issue of whether academics and scientists can defend remarks on the basis of fair comment or the public interest.The working party is also expected to look at whether the burden of proof should be shifted from defendant to plaintiff. In addition, it is expected to examine a number of issues raise by a report published jointly between English PEN and Index on Censorship including considering the case for capping the level of damages courts can award.
Other issues for examination include whether large and medium-sized corporations would have to prove malicious falsehood for a libel claim to succeed and the implications of the internet for libel.
The group will also consider if specialist libel tribunal should be established to deal with defamation cases away from court. The issue of costs incurred through of defamation proceedings is not to be considered as it is the subject of a separate Justice Ministry consultation.
Appeal Court judge Justice Jackson produced a 557-page report earlier this month examining the costs related to civil court proceeds in England & Wales that singled out media law as being one area with particularly high costs.
Straw then outlined proposals that could see libel cost dramatically reduced with the limits on success fees charged by lawyers in "no win, no fee" cases cut by 90 per cent.
Working Group Members:
David Banks (Media Law Consultant)
Sir Leszek Borysiewicz (Chief Executive of the Medical Research Council)
Tracey Brown (Managing Director, Sense About Science)
Desmond Browne QC (Barrister, 5 Raymond Buildings)
Rod Christie-Miller (Partner and Chief Executive at Schillings, Solicitors)
Robin Esser (Executive Managing Editor, Daily Mail)
Jo Glanville (Editor, Index on Censorship)
Jonathan Heawood (Director, English PEN)
Tony Jaffa (Head of the Media Team at Foot Anstey, Solicitors)
Sarah Jones (Head of Litigation and Intellectual Property, BBC)
Marcus Partington (Chair of Media Lawyers Association, and Legal Director, Mirror Group Newspapers)
Gillian Phillips (Director of Editorial Legal Services, The Guardian)
Gavin Phillipson (Professor at Durham Law School)
Mark Stephens (Partner at Stephens Finer Innocent, Solicitors)
Andrew Stephenson (Partner at Carter Ruck, Solicitors)
Paul Tweed (Senior Partner at Johnsons Solicitors)
John Witherow (Editor, Sunday Times).
Last modified: Wednesday, January 27, 2010
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Previous stories
Government Policy
Alastair Campbell's 'unprecedented' role in preparing dossier on Iraq's weapons of mass destruction
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Government to reverse policy on TV product placement
Damian McBride and the reality behind Labour smears
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"I will abide by civil service neutrality" says Downing Street's new spin supremo.
Speaker's call for an end to ministerial leaks: Downing Street's new media chief could play a role
Photographers snap into action over new law
Audiovisual Media Services Directive in the UK
Televised briefings are the way forward
Media gagged in the case of Daniel James
Does convergence matter?
Civil servant faces official secrets trial
New Threat to Media Freedom
Blair's farewell: No politician can live by spin alone
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New Media services should not be regulated like TV, says Lords Committee
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