[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> Tickle & Ors v Surrey County Council & Ors [2024] EWHC 3330 (Fam) (19 December 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2024/3330.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 3330 (Fam) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) LOUISE TICKLE (2) HANNAH SUMMERS (3) THE BRITISH BROADCASTING CORPORATION (4) PA MEDIA (5) ASSOCIATED NEWSPAPERS LTD (6) TIMES MEDIA LTD (7) GUARDIAN NEWS AND MEDIA LTD (8) TELEGRAPH MEDIA GROUP HOLDINGS LTD (9) NEWS GROUP NEWSPAPERS LTD (10) INDEPENDENT TELEVISION NEWS LTD (11) REACH PLC |
Applicant |
|
- and - |
||
(1) SURREY COUNTY COUNCIL (2) OLGA SHARIF (3) URFAN SHARIF (4) BEINASH BATOOL (5 10) U, V, W, X, Y, Z (by their Children's Guardian, Sarah Gwynne) |
Respondent |
____________________
Samuel Rowe (instructed by RPC) for the 3rd and 5th-11th Applicants
Callum Parke, a journalist for the 4th Applicant
Deirdre Fottrell KC, Emily James and Marlene Cayoun (instructed by Surrey County Council Legal and Democratic Services) for the 1st Respondent
The 2nd Respondent was neither present or represented
Cyrus Larizadeh KC and Clarissa Wigoder (instructed by Osbornes Law) for the 3rd Respondent
Joy Brereton KC and Amean Elgadhy (instructed by City Law Chambers) for the 4th Respondent
Rebecca Foulkes (instructed by Dawson and Cornwell LLP) for the 5th-10th Respondent Children
Hearing date: 9 December 2024
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Williams J:
i) Ground 1: It was procedurally irregular to make such an order at the hearing on 9th December 2024 without having raised, in the course of the hearing, that such an order would, or might, be made and actively inviting submissions where no such application was before the court;
The issue of naming third parties was raised by the Guardian and by the father that appeared to me to include the judges. When it became clear that the media parties distinguished between social workers, experts, guardians and judiciary I gave the parties the opportunity to make further submissions.
ii) Ground 2: The absence, even following the review undertaken leading to the decision today, of even brief indicative reasoning to support an order that has immediate effect, and is the point from which any time for an application for permission to appeal runs, is procedurally irregular;
The issue is hardly a simple one and as the Media parties submissions make clear, attempting to give even indicative reasons (as were canvassed in the hearing on 9th December 2024) carries with it a risk of misinterpretation. Issues of this importance warrant proper consideration and explanation. The parties had the option of a 2 day hearing on the 3rd and 4th December which I had made available to them at the expense of other matters that might have been heard, recognising the importance of giving the case a proper time estimate in order specifically so that I could give a judgment. The parties elected to vacate that hearing knowing that I was unable to give them anymore than ½ a day for an adjourned hearing with the consequence that I would be unlikely to do anything more than give a decision. This is recorded in Recital C to the order of 2.12.24 adjourning the hearing of 3 and 4 December 2024. I therefore do not consider it is open to the applicant to argue any injustice arising from this it occurred as a result of their application to vacate.
iii) Ground 3: On the merits: an order restraining the naming of any of the Judges who heard the historic proceedings (relying, for the avoidance of doubt, on the arguments set out in our additional note) is unprecedented and unsustainable and could not be contemplated (i) in the absence of any specific application (whether from any of the Judges concerned, or otherwise), and (ii) in the absence of any specific evidential justification (which for the avoidance of doubt has not been provided);
The authorities referred to in the additional submissions confirm that the decision to be taken is the ultimate balancing exercise between the Article 8 rights of the individuals concerned and the Art 10 rights of the press. The Court of Appeal decision in Abassi and other authorities make clear there is no class of individual who falls outside the ultimate balancing exercise which would include the judges and that the court must undertake an exercise in which those rights are balanced including the likely response to the publication of names by reference to specific and generic knowledge. My judgment will contain my analysis of the competing rights and how I have come to the conclusion I have. It may make provision for further consideration once the relevant individuals have been approached to ascertain their positions and to confirm whether they are any additional individual specific matters which might bear upon the decision. The Local Authority referred to the section 7 author having particular concerns and the experience of Ms Arthurworry in the Victoria Climbie case would suggest this sort of event and subsequent publicity can have profound implications for the health and well-being of the individuals concerned which may require further consideration. Once the genie of publication is released from the bottle it cannot be coaxed back inside. Any delay in the determination of the issue will cause minimal prejudice in the context of a matter of weeks and holding the ring requires non-publication rather than publication.
iv) Ground 4: The issue of the naming of Judges is a matter of exceptionally high constitutional and public importance, and in the context of the case the issue is urgent and cannot await reasoning in January;
The Court of Appeal function is to review the decision by reference to the reasons given. It is not a court of first instance who may consider the issue afresh save where it has determined the decision is wrong. The court of appeal will not be able to fulfils its statutory function until they have my judgment which regrettably due to the parties election of a later ½ day hearing rather than an earlier 2 day hearing will not be completed before I leave the jurisdiction at the commencement of my vacation.
v) Ground 5: The appeal enjoys sufficient prospects of success, and its overall importance justifies an immediate grant of permission to appeal.
The prospects of success are indeterminable although as I will apply the legal framework set out in my of June 2024 which was not appealed and which I therefore assume contains an appropriate and correct analysis of the law it would seem likely any appeal will have to revolve around my case specific weighing of the relevant factors.
i) The evidence heard in the criminal trial pointed to the likelihood of Mr Sharif being found guilty of murder or possibly manslaughter or causing or allowing Sara's death and to the possibility of Miss Batool being found guilty of murder or manslaughter or causing or allowing Sara's death.
ii) That Ms Tickle and Ms Summers' application for further disclosure of amber and red material was granted forthwith subject to a redaction scheme to withhold the disclosure of highly sensitive information about the children. In practice this meant that the information would be disclosed to the other media parties as well.
iii) That the media applications to relax the statutory reporting restrictions were granted to allow them to publish the information disclosed to them but subject to restrictions relating to the identification of the children and their protected characteristics, the identification of third parties and judges involved in the historic proceedings. These in fact amount to an extension of the statutory reporting restrictions as section 12(2) AJA 1960 would permit identification of the children's names and the judge.
iv) That the permission to publish was conditional upon verdicts being returned that Mr Sharif or Ms Batool were guilty of murder, manslaughter or causing or allowing the death of Sara and that no retrial of any of the three defendants was proposed.
v) I refused to authorise disclosure of documentation from the current wardship proceedings beyond that which had already been disclosed or to report upon the current wardship proceedings.
vi) I authorised the publication of the following judgments subject to the application to them of the redaction scheme which relates to documents and the confidentiality scheme relating to identification of the children and third parties/judges
a) The welfare judgment of 8th March 2024
b) The disclosure judgment of June 2024
c) This judgment.
vii) I prohibited any reporting of the hearing of 9th December 2024 until after the returning of verdicts
viii) I permitted parties and third parties to discuss the historic proceedings with the media but not to disclose information save in accordance with the redaction and confidentiality schemes
The Parties' Positions
[74] In undertaking the intense focus on specific rights, the court should where possible focus on the specific evidence which relates to the particular case rather than on generalities. However, that is not to say that the court can only take into account facts which are established. It is clear that some aspects of the balance cannot be proven as a fact how could one evidence the future risk of harm to a child from publication of sensitive information? The court can only conduct an assessment of risk based on what is known of the child but also based on the views of those who know or represent the child and the body of knowledge that emerges from the case law and other sources and the court's general experience. In considering the importance of 'open justice' in this case it may be impossible to predict how important it may be to the press to see the information. If it emerges from the criminal trial or otherwise that SS did not die at the hands of her parents and they are innocent of her death the basis of the open justice points would be much diminished if not extinguished there would be little of interest in the police, Family Court and social services' previous involvement if her death was a tragic event but unconnected to those earlier decisions. On the other hand if, as is suggested by the murder charge and what we are told of the post mortem findings, she died at the culmination of a lengthy period of inflicted injury then the open justice points would gain more weight; as a minimum the father or BB are likely to have failed to protect if the murder was committed by the uncle but that would not necessarily create a causal chain back to October 2019 and earlier. So where possible the court must reach its decision by reference to specifics but it may also need to weigh in the balance generalities which apply in the circumstances of the case. [my added emphasis]
[143] .. the conviction of the father and/or BB for murder, particularly if accompanied by evidence of on-going safeguarding concerns for a lengthy period prior to SS's death would give the Article 10 rights a compelling weight that might outweigh all but the most sensitive documents (medical or otherwise).
"crystallise an overwhelming public interest in understanding: (i) how Sara came to be placed in the care of her father, (ii) the effectiveness of the safeguarding undertaken by the Family Court, local authority, and CAFCASS, and (iii) the local authority's understanding of the risk posed by the father from its lengthy involvement with the family1 in light of the referral made by Sara's school on 10th March 2023 in relation to which the local authority made a decision to take no further action by 16th March 2022."
i) The Guardian had been able to speak to U: There was no discussion at that stage of the media applications for disclosure and publication. During their second conversation, the CG and U did discuss the media applications and U stated that he does not want any of his information to be published and that he wants "none of it" (i.e. information from the historic proceedings) to be shared. On 6 December 2024, U reiterated to the solicitor for the children that he does not want anything about himself, his siblings and family published. He was adamant and anxious that there should be anonymity and that nothing should be published that would identify him or any of his siblings.
ii) The Guardian also submitted that Z's position required particular consideration.
The manager of Z's accommodation told the CG on 7 November 2024 that Z is aware of the criminal trial but the unit are doing their best to limit Z's exposure to reporting and Z has been advised not to Google anything but to come to staff members if Z has any questions or wants further information. She shared that Z was doing well but they were seeing a little bit of tension in Z, which was being monitored and reassurance offered.
iii) What has not changed is that, since August 2023, the younger five children have experienced trauma and disruption at an unprecedented level. Further they have had very limited access to professionals, meaning that there has been no possibility of assessing the extent of the emotional and psychological impact on each of them arising not just from the events of the past seven months but of their life experiences generally. The full extent of what they have witnessed and experienced remains an unknown quantity although it is clear that they were in a home where severe physical abuse of their sibling was a regular occurrence.
iv) The subject matter of the reporting therefore has the potential of re-traumatising the children and the risk of causing them further harm, including through the public response to that information on social media which will not be subject to any editorial control, as already evidenced by some of the public responses to the limited reporting that has occurred (see paragraph 47 of the CG's analysis). As a result, the risks of harm to these children arising from further disclosure and publication are higher even than in other comparable situations, and that factor goes directly to the balancing test and the proportionality assessment.
v) Z is the most exposed of the sibling group to the destabilising effect of public reporting and the most affected on a social and emotional level as a result of Z's [complex needs]. Although Z's chronological age is 17, Z was assessed in 2022 as operating at the level of a [younger child]. Nonetheless Z is being supported to gain some independence, which is critical for Z's self-esteem. However, that increasing independence and exposure to third parties plus the change in support services as Z turns 18 in 2025 all mean that Z is likely to become more rather than less vulnerable as Z enters adulthood. Particular risks arise for Z relating to Z's potential to overshare information about himself and the family and the risk of exploitation by unsafe adults, which would be exacerbated by the disclosure and publication of information about the family generally and particularly of information about Z, with consequences for Z that could be profound for Z's stability, safety and emotional security. In those circumstances, Z's right to and need for respect of Z's Article 8 rights is particularly important and would require extremely compelling public interest reasons to justify any interference with them.
i) Mr Larizadeh KC on behalf of Mr Sharif did not oppose further disclosure to the press in order to enable them to better understand the context and background to the case but he opposed publication. He accepted that parties would be named but questioned whether naming third parties was appropriate without them being given an opportunity to make representations and suggested to name them without an opportunity to make representations would be a disproportionate interference in their Article 8 rights.
ii) Ms Brereton KC on behalf of Ms Batool opposed any further publication of information relating to the wardship proceedings given they are still on-going with decisions still being taken in England and Pakistan. She accepted that the material from the 2019 historic proceedings in which she was a party was disclosable and publishable although she did not wish for any identifying information about the children to be published including, names, ages, gender. She also raised the question that there may be particular issues with some of the third parties that may be relevant to their Article 8 rights which should be ascertained before a decision was taken to put their names into the public domain.
Background
Legal Framework
i) neither article has as such precedence over the other.
ii) where the values under the two articles are in conflict, an intense focus on the comparative importance of the specific rights being claimed in the individual case is necessary.
iii) the justifications for interfering with or restricting each right must be taken into account.
iv) the proportionality test must be applied to each.
This is how I will approach the present case.
Evaluation: Disclosure and Publication
'[ ] the conviction of the father and/or BB for murder, particularly if accompanied by evidence of on-going safeguarding concerns for a lengthy period prior to Sara's death would give the Article 10 rights a compelling weight that might outweigh all but the most sensitive documents (medical or otherwise).'
(a) The criminal trial has served to crystallise an overwhelming public interest in understanding: (i) how Sara came to be placed in the care of her father, (ii) the effectiveness of the safeguarding undertaken by the Family Court, local authority, and CAFCASS, and (iii) the local authority's understanding of the risk posed by the father from its lengthy involvement with the family1 in light of the referral made by Sara's school on 10th March 2023 in relation to which the local authority made a decision to take no further action by 16th March 2023; b. The "unbroken chain of causation" back to the family proceedings in 2013, 2015/6, and 2019 is now very clearly established.(c) c. The school referral in March 2023 was referred to within the criminal trial and reported, as was the fact of an order being made by the Guildford Family Court in 2019 ..
i) The children do not wish more material to be disclosed.
ii) They do not want more information published about their family and want to remain anonymous.
iii) The children have likely suffered harm of an exceptional level having lived in a household and almost certainly being aware their sister was being tortured and eventually murdered.
iv) For Z there are also compelling welfare-based reasons for insulating Z as a far as possible from being identified or having information about Z placed in the public domain.
i) Redaction
a. The name of the child referred to as Z shall be redacted where it appears in circumstances unconnected to allegations made by Z of physical abuse or neglect of Z by adults;
b. Information relating to Z's behavioural appearance or inference regarding Z's behaviour and whether it emerges from medical conditions or exposure to abuse shall be redacted;
c. Highly sensitive information about the children including medical and/or developmental information of the children (and in particular Z and the twins), and the relationships between the siblings shall be redacted;
d. The psychological assessments of the children shall be redacted;
e. The names of extended family members of the subject children (for example, a half-sibling of Sara's who was not subject to proceedings in England and Wales, and that child's father) shall be redacted; and
f. The names of any other child, unrelated to the family, shall be redacted.
ii) Identification
a) The name or date of birth of any of the subject children in the case (for the avoidance of doubt their respective ages in years may be reported);
b) The current address of any of the children (for the avoidance of doubt the fact that U, V, W, X, and Y are living with their paternal grandfather in the city of Jhelum in Pakistan may be reported);
c) The name or address of any current or former foster carer or residential unit of any of the subject children;
d) Any current school or hospital of the subject children;
e) The details of any of the subject children's protected characteristics and their additional learning needs and/or any diagnosed condition(s), save to the extent described in the approved published version of the judgment dated 7 June 2024;
f) Photographs or images of the subject children; and
g) The name of any third parties referred to in the historic proceedings for the avoidance of doubt including social worker, guardian other named professionals and experts instructed in the proceedings and any Judge who heard the historic proceedings (save for Mr Justice Williams)
Legal Framework: Naming Third Parties and Judiciary
i) The restriction of the naming of a Judge especially in the instant case where the Article 10 interests are very significant infringes the established principle of Open Justice in an unprecedented manner on the basis of generalised concerns (not even in evidence, but on the basis of the court taking judicial notice) about potential public/social media reaction.[Tickle/Summers]
ii) the Court reached a conclusion that is an extraordinary and unjustifiable interference with the media and public's Article 10 rights and an unsustainable derogation from the principle of open justice. Only in the most exceptional circumstances could it ever be permissible to prevent judges from being named in connection with court proceedings over which they have presided. The instant case is not one of those exceptional cases. [BBC and other Media parties]
iii) to impose an RRO on the names of judges involved in the Historic Proceedings would be an unjustified departure from the open justice principle and contrary to the public interest [PA]
iv) It is a derogation from the principle of open justice and an interference with the media and the public's Article 10 rights that could only be justified save in the most extreme cases and obviously cannot be justified on the facts before the Court. The balance falls decisively in favour of permitting the media to name the judges involved in the Historic Proceedings. [BBC and other media parties]
i) Toulson LJ in R (Guardian News and Media Ltd) v City of Westminster Magistrates' Court [2012] EWCA Civ 420 at [2] as "[open justice is] a constitutional principle which has been recognised by the common law since the fall of the Stuart dynasty".
ii) R (C) v Secretary of State for Justice [2016] UKSC 2 at [1], Baroness Hale described the principle as "one of the most precious in our law. It is there to reassure the public and the parties that our courts are indeed doing justice according to law".
"Any derogation from, or restriction upon, open justice is exceptional and must be based on necessity. Any restriction on the public's right to attend court proceedings, and the corresponding ability to report them, must be shown, by "clear and cogent evidence" to fulfil a legitimate aim, be necessary and proportionate:
But he went on to clarify that this did not apply where "statute grants automatic restrictions" and that where derogation from open justice was sought on the basis of interference with another qualified Convention right the court had to undertake the Lord Steyn 'ultimate balancing exercise' of the competing rights, the justification, and the proportionality of the interference.
Any balance starts with a very clear presumption in favour of open justice unless and until that is displaced and outweighed by a sufficiently countervailing justification. That is not to give a presumptive priority to Article 10 (or open justice), it is simply a recognition of the context in which the Re S 'balance' is being carried out
"[63] What's in a name? "A lot", the press would answer. This is because stories about particular individuals are simply much more attractive to readers than stories about unidentified people. It is just human nature. And this is why, of course, even when reporting major disasters, journalists usually look for a story about how particular individuals are affected. Writing stories which capture the attention of readers is a matter of reporting technique, and the European court holds that article 10 protects not only the substance of ideas and information but also the form in which they are conveyed: News Verlags GmbH & Co KG -v- Austria 31 EHRR 246 [39]... More succinctly, Lord Hoffmann observed in Campbell -v- MGN Ltd [2004] 2 AC 457 [59], "judges are not newspaper editors". See also Lord Hope of Craighead in In re BBC [2010] 1 AC 145 [25]. This is not just a matter of deference to editorial independence. The judges are recognising that editors know best how to present material in a way that will interest the readers of their particular publication and so help them to absorb the information. A requirement to report it in some austere, abstract form, devoid of much of its human interest, could well mean that the report would not be read and the information would not be passed on. Ultimately, such an approach could threaten the viability of newspapers and magazines, which can only inform the public if they attract enough readers and make enough money to survive." "
"if anything increased in an age which attaches greater importance to the public accountability of public officers and institutions and to the availability of information about the performance of their functions."
'38. Justice must be done between the parties. The public must be able to enter any court to see that justice is being done in that court, by a tribunal conscientiously doing its best to do justice according to law. For that reason, every judge sitting in is on trial. So it should be, and any exceptions to the principle must be closely limited [my added emphasis]
"[28] The next issue is whether the names of the Magistrates and the Legal Adviser should be allowed to be published. As I said in Tickle v Herefordshire CC [2022] EWHC 1017, it is important to be clear that the statutory restrictions on information relating to care proceedings have the purpose of protecting the anonymity of the children (and possibly their families) in proceedings rather than professionals involved. At [78] I said:
"However, the powers of the Court to order anonymisation in relation to professionals need to be exercised with considerable care. Social workers are employees of a public authority conducting a very important function that has enormous implications on the lives of others. As such, they necessarily carry some public accountability, and the principles of open justice can only be departed from with considerable caution."
[29.] The role of the judge is one that beyond any doubt requires public accountability and openness. No party submitted that the Magistrates should not be named. Further, I was shown no case that gave any support to an argument that the names of judges in a case could not be publicly named.
30. Society is necessarily very grateful for the role undertaken by Lay Justices for no remuneration and involving giving up much of their time. However, Lay Justices are judges and, in cases such as this, making very important decisions that impact on children and families in the most significant way. As such, there is no case for their names not to be in the public domain when decisions are made, in the same way as would the names of judges who had made such decisions.
[38]. As such, the Legal Adviser is an integral, and legally required, part of the decision making process. As such it appears to me to be right that their names can in principle be placed in the public domain. Again, no person specific circumstances were put before me as to why this particular Legal Adviser should not be named.
[39]. For these reasons I find that the press are entitled to name, if they so wish, both the Lay Magistrates and the Legal Adviser who were involved in this case.'
Yet the possibility of being named isn't made sufficiently clear to us when we apply or train for our roles in the family magistracy. Where it is mentioned in training and onboarding of new magistrates, the full implications and possible risks are not made clear. I for one didn't think too much about it at the time. It is also one thing to be named in a local paper. It is quite another to be named in the national press.
It is particularly troubling that we don't have clear guidance on who to turn to if we are named in the media. There is no protocol in place for our leadership magistrates or judges about how they should support members of the family panel who deal with particularly traumatic, controversial or high-profile cases
I say this as an aside to some extent because general issues with the Magistracy arising from the possibility of being named is an issue which would I think fall into the category of consideration identified in para 125 of Abassi as being an illegitimate consideration in the Article 10/8 balancing exercise. However, I think it illustrates that the assumption that those involved in the family justice system could expect to be named were they unfortunate enough to be involved in a case which developed into one of national interest is erroneous. Most social workers, magistrates, legal advisers and judges would never expect to feature in a case of this complexity and of national interest in contrast to the High Court Judges who would and where it is part of the Job Description.
The courts will be astute to protect from harm individuals caught up in litigation when it is appropriate to do so. In appropriate circumstances that protection will include the use of injunctions to mitigate the risk of future harm. The civil and criminal law both provide protection from various aspects of online attack, some preventive and other to provide a remedy for legal wrongs. To that extent nobody is obliged simply to 'put up with' abuse. However, the courts cannot shut down legitimate debate save when the rights of those affected by that debate, or put differently, the adverse consequences, are of such strength as to outweigh the right to free expression. Experience has shown that end-of-life proceedings can generate a fire storm on social media, sometimes fanned and taken advantage of by organisations and individuals with strongly held beliefs about the morality of withdrawing treatment. The fire storm often overwhelms calm debate. RROs become essential to protect the integrity of the proceedings and those caught up, directly and indirectly, in them. Indefinite orders are a different matter. They require careful scrutiny, clear evidence and an intense evaluation of competing interests.
Extract
What this case is not about though is whether an Islamic marriage ceremony (a Nikah) should be treated as creating a valid marriage in English law.
Headline
A British court has recognised sharia law for the first time in a landmark decision as a judge ruled that a wife can claim her husband's assets in the split. The High Court ruling on Wednesday said their union should be valid and recognised because their vows had similar expectations of a British marriage contract.
Evaluation
the public interest in naming the judges involved in the Historic Proceedings is exceptionally high; equal to the public interest in being able to name the Third and Fourth Respondents;
The decision making should be subject to a high degree of scrutiny which can only achieved to a proper extent by naming the judges in question. The public interest in enabling the public to scrutinise the decision making that led to SS being returned persistently to the home in which she was killed by a relative with parental responsibility over her extends to permitting the media to name the judges. It far outweighs the rights and interests of judges who must expect to be named in connection with proceedings that they have presided over, irrespective of whether or not those proceedings took place in public or private
It would be an exceptional step in any circumstances to prevent the media from naming judges who have overseen court proceedings and authorised court orders. Even where the parties are anonymised or the court is sitting in private (such as in family justice proceedings involving children), the judge's name is by custom and in furtherance of the open justice principle visible in the court list. Where a judgment is handed down or an order is made, the judge's name will be visible on the face of the judgment or order
The naming of a judge is an inherent part of the open justice principle.
The decision to prevent the naming of the judges must be supported by proportionately clear and cogent evidence that the rights and interests of the judges will be not just interfered with by them being named, but that such an interference outweighs the weighty public interest in open justice (see PMC at [41]. Given the extent of derogation from the open justice principle, absent an extant and clear risk to a judge's safety rising from being identified in connection with the Historic Proceedings (such as would give rise to a positive duty on a public authority under Articles 2 and 3 ECHR), the judge's Article 8 rights do not weigh heavily in the balance.
I had expected to be suspended from my job, but what absolutely killed me was being placed on the Protection of Children Act list in 2002. Now I was a child murderer who had become a pervert. If I looked in the mirror, I didn't see Lisa, just a dirty paedophile. In September the same year, I was sacked and referred to the psychiatric service, diagnosed with a 20% loss of faculties. I couldn't remember my past - where I'd come from, what I used to do - and could see only what was in front of me. By 2003, my grief finally began to come out. I was on antidepressants and alcohol and worn out through lack of sleep. My weight fell to five and a half stone. Whenever I left my flat all I could see was red - the colour I associate with Victoria in that kilt and jumper. By now it was clear I was having a breakdown. I spent five weeks in a psychiatric hospital and when I came out, I began tentatively, to get back into the world.
The Future
Conclusions
i) The press should have access to further information from the historic proceedings; their Article 10 rights outweigh the Article 8 rights (once the redaction protocol has applied) of the children and the third parties and make this a proportionate interference with such rights.
ii) The press should be able to report the information disclosed; their Article 10 rights outweigh the Article 8 rights (once the anonymity provisions are applied) of the children and the third parties and make this a proportionate interference with such rights.
iii) The press cannot name third parties; their Article 10 rights are outweighed by the Article 8 rights of the third parties and would make naming them a disproportionate interference with such rights.
iv) The press cannot name the judges; their Article 10 rights are outweighed by the Article 8 rights of the judges and would make naming them a disproportionate interference with such rights.
v) The press cannot report on the on-going wardship proceedings or receive further evidence filed in those proceedings save by further order by me; their Article 10 rights are outweighed by the Article 8 and 6 rights of the children and some of the parties.
vi) I will list the matter for further consideration in March 2025 to consider any further representations in relation to naming third parties and judges.