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Other In the Media General news
In the Media
General
| June-18-13 - Assange embassy policing has cost £6m »
Julian Assange has told the Ecuadorean foreign minister that he is prepared to extend his embassy stay to five years, ahead of the first anniversary of a stalemate that has cost the UK taxpayer an estimated £6 million. ... [view] |
| June-17-13 - Notorious cells could become luxury pads »
Their names conjure up criminal masterminds and some of the bloodiest tales in history. But now the likes of Dartmoor, Wormwood Scrubs and Pentonville prison could be turned into plush apartments and boutique hotels. ... [view] |
| June-17-13 - Legal aid champion Storer honoured »
Monday 17 June 2013 by Catherine Baksi Carol Storer, director of the Legal Aid Practitioners Group, was among the lawyers recognised in the Queen's birthday honours list at the weekend. ... [view] |
| June-17-13 - Prison hotels: welcome to a night in the nick »
British boutique hotels could be about to get a boost from an unexpected quarter. Yesterday, new plans were put forward for a series of "super prisons" holding as many as 3,000 inmates. Which will mean that some of the nation's most famous old slammers could get a new, and very different, lease of life. ... [view] |
| June-16-13 - There are some things no one should be able to Google »
It's why the UK Government is getting tech companies together next week to look at what more needs to be done to tackle child sexual abuse online. This is a significant challenge, and as an established player Google has a responsibility to take a lead. ... [view] |
| June-14-13 - Thousands of court workers to strike on Monday »
Friday 14 June 2013 by John Hyde More than 16,000 court and Crown Prosecution Service workers will stage a one-day strike on Monday, as campaigners against various government reforms step up their attack. ... [view] |
| June-14-13 - Old Bailey offers peek at ‘Dead Man’s Walk’ »
Monday 17 June 2013 'Dead Man's Walk' is a series of narrowing arches leading from the condemned cells of the Old Bailey to the gallows which operated outside the main gate until 1868. ... [view] |
| June-14-13 - Mystery surrounds legal training report »
Monday 17 June 2013 The Legal Education and Training Review (LETR) report remains under wraps as the profession's regulators, now in possession of the completed document, continue to cite 'commercial confidentiality' for withholding its disclosure. ... [view] |
| June-13-13 - Man dials 999 to complain about prostitute's looks »
The caller, who has since been warned for wasting police time, contacted officers to complain that the sex worker had broken the strict set of rules stating goods must be of satisfactory quality and fit for purpose. ... [view] |
| June-13-13 - 'Crime pays' and it's fun, say crooks »
In a poll of nearly 3,000 offenders for the Ministry of Justice, many made candid admissions about their attitudes to law and order, including one in eight who said they got excitement from committing crime. ... [view] |
| June-13-13 - Defamation on social media »
Monday 17 June 2013 by Julian Pike On 24 May Mr Justice Tugendhat handed down the judgment in McAlpine v Bercow [2013] EWHC 1342 (QB), finding that Mrs Bercow's tweet carried a defamatory meaning. Following the judgment it was announced that Bercow had accepted an earlier settlement offer, saying that 'today's ruling should be seen as a warning to all social media users'. Although Twitter litigation is no longer new (the site has been the form of publication in a number of cases, most notably Cairns v Modi [2012] EWHC 756 (QB)), McAlpine is the first to really tackle the peculiar nature of this social media genre and could mark a key moment in social media use. ... [view] |
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