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Grenfell Model Man Not Guilty
Answers
If "the right to free speech" is to mean anything, it must always encompass "the right to offend".
17:50 Thu 22nd Aug 2019
He was acquitted on a technicality.
They could not be sure that the video that ended up on YouTube was shot by him or someone else. So the case against him might be an error.
It was not a victory for free speech, or the right to offend. It was a badly run investigation that failed because of sloppy treatment of the evidence. A victory against incompetence.
They could not be sure that the video that ended up on YouTube was shot by him or someone else. So the case against him might be an error.
It was not a victory for free speech, or the right to offend. It was a badly run investigation that failed because of sloppy treatment of the evidence. A victory against incompetence.
The Police and the CPS were too keen to obtain a conviction because of the delicacy surrounding everything about Grenfell, which resulted in them not undertaking their job properly, so it was incompetence more than anything else.
That said, I always felt very uneasy about this being brought to trial at all; it was tasteless, but where was the crime? (or was it brought under the banner of a 'hate crime', which seems to be the catch-all for offense taken nowadays).
davebro - "Some of the figures in the building model were depicted as non-white." That doesn't make it racist.
That said, I always felt very uneasy about this being brought to trial at all; it was tasteless, but where was the crime? (or was it brought under the banner of a 'hate crime', which seems to be the catch-all for offense taken nowadays).
davebro - "Some of the figures in the building model were depicted as non-white." That doesn't make it racist.
// Just before Ms Arbuthnot left court to consider her verdict at the end of the two-day trial, defence barrister Mark Summers QC revealed he had just been made aware of evidence that a second video was recorded.
He argued it meant there was "absolutely no way" to know which piece of footage had made its way onto YouTube and gone viral.
Clearing Mr Bussetti, Ms Arbuthnot said she could not be sure the video used in the case was taken by him. //
If he didn’t take the offending video, then he cannot be guilty of the crime he was prosecuted for. That does not mean there was no crime, or that justice was done. It means the someone else was possibly guilty, but the prosecution was so farcical, that that person was not in Court.
He argued it meant there was "absolutely no way" to know which piece of footage had made its way onto YouTube and gone viral.
Clearing Mr Bussetti, Ms Arbuthnot said she could not be sure the video used in the case was taken by him. //
If he didn’t take the offending video, then he cannot be guilty of the crime he was prosecuted for. That does not mean there was no crime, or that justice was done. It means the someone else was possibly guilty, but the prosecution was so farcical, that that person was not in Court.
Of greater concern to me (far greater than whether this childish escapade gave rise to "offence") is that an acquittal was only secured by the skin of its teeth. Evidence that a second person may have possibly shot the video only arrived after both sides had closed their cases though the police knew of it for a long time. As said earlier, once again the police fell drastically short of their responsibilities to disclose all the evidence they had and not just the bits that suited their case.
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