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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Wright v Gregson & Ors [2010] EWHC 1629 (QB) (01 July 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2010/1629.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 1629 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
KEVIN JOHN WRIGHT |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) ELEANOR GREGSON (2) MARC ASTLEY (3) EXPRESS & ECHO NEWS & MEDIA LIMITED (4) NORTHCLIFFE MEDIA LIMITED |
Defendants |
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Aidan Eardley (instructed by Foot Anstey) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 23 June 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Eady :
"Kevin Wright is using funds raised by thousands of people across Devon to buy the sprawling property near Exeter – which will also be the family home."
" 'This has always been the next obvious step for the fund,' he said.
Mr Wright says that the retreat will be a place where children suffering from cancer can come and stay with their parents.
They will be given health and lifestyle advice on how to get the most from the child's conventional medical treatment.
…
'This will be a place where families can come down and stay for two or three weeks, and the Royal Devon & Exeter is just up the road,' he said."
" 'This is not a Kevin Wright house, it is a Bobby's Fund retreat, although we are operating as a new organisation now.
'I shall be paying rent to live there out of my own money.'
Mr Wright said he owed thanks to the 'people of Devon', whose 'generosity' has helped to pay for the retreat.
…
'Their generosity could go on to help thousands of children.'
Mr Wright said he hoped to open similar retreats in the future.
'Hopefully, it's just the first of many,' he said."
There is more beside, but I do not think it necessary to cite further passages.
"Mansion set to go on market for £3.25m that cancer fund dad is planning to buy up."
The story which is claimed as an "EXCLUSIVE" continues from the front page on to pages 4 and 5, where there appears the following heading:
"It hasn't gone on the market yet and the owners weren't aware of any interest but this is …
The £3.25m country pile that Kevin Wright is planning to buy with Bobby's Fund donations."
Again, the coverage is extensive and accompanied by no less than 13 photographs of various parts of the "mansion".
"THIS is the multi-million pound country estate where Kevin Wright, founder of Bobby's Fund plans to set up home.
The Echo can exclusively reveal pictures of the property, near Exeter, which Mr Wright is set to buy with cash from the organisation's coffers."
The defamatory meaning attributed by Mr Wright is much the same as in the case of the first article (see paragraph 7 above). It is made clear, however, in the very next paragraph on the front page that "Mr Wright will be paying Bobby's Fund rent for his family to live there". In addition, the following two paragraphs appear on page 4:
"He told the Echo that he also planned to use the estate as the family home for himself, wife Jacqui and seven-year-old son Bobby, in whose name Bobby's Fund was set up.
He said: 'This is not a Kevin Wright house, it is a Bobby's Fund retreat, although we are operating as a new organisation now'."
"FUNDRAISERS working under former Bobby's Fund boss Kevin Wright have been reported to the Charity Commission after carrying out unlicensed street collections, the Echo can reveal."
"Street collectors from Exeter's Kids Integrated Cancer Treatment (KICT) – set up by a former senior boss of Bobby's Fund – have been fundraising in towns across the country, including Tiverton.
But local authorities claim the charity has failed to apply for legal street collection permits. And now police and officials at the Charity Commission have been alerted to the activities of KICT by a council licensing boss.
Marjory Parish, licensing manager at Mid Devon District Council, claims the organisation has 'misled' the public and is trying to avoid the law.
She has complained about KICT to the charities governing body, which has admitted that it had concerns about the fund.
KICT is registered to an address in Pinhoe Road, Exeter, and is headed by Ian Weir.
…
[On page 5]
Mr Weir was formerly involved in the running of the now disbanded Bobby's Fund, which was investigated by the Gambling Commission.
Bobby's Fund claimed to have raised millions to help young cancer sufferers after it was set up several years ago.
But as revealed in the Echo, it came under fire for not registering as a charity and after admissions from Mr Wright that he had attacked an employee.
And a separate fundraising campaign called Marni's Appeal – set up by Bobby's Fund – was at the centre of a criminal investigation in Nottingham.
Mr Wright previously denied having any links to the new charity KICT. But he has now told the Echo that he is a 'parent advocate' for the organisation who makes donations to the fund.
Workers from KICT have recently carried out several street collections in Fore Street, Tiverton, despite being warned by officers from Mid Devon District Council that they were acting without the required licence.
Ms Parish said that when challenged, KICT collectors who wore clothing emblazoned with the charity's logo, said they were selling pamphlets for a periodical company owned by Mr Wright.
…
[Ms Parish said] 'My officer told them that they would still need a permit.
'They came again a couple of weeks later and said they were selling booklets for a company called Health Truth News owned by Kevin Wright.
'They said that the profits went to this company and that Mr Wright made donations to KICT.
'The collectors were all dressed in their charity clothes and they gave a clear impression they were carrying out street collections for charity but were, in fact, selling booklets for a company owned by Mr Wright.
'It is completely misleading to the public as they believe they are donating to a charity raising money for children with cancer'.
Ms Parish said she contacted police on one occasion requesting that the street collectors be moved on.
And she has confirmed she told Mr Wright that he appeared to be conducting an unlicensed street collection and that his fundraisers could be liable for arrest.
She added that she had contacted the Charity Commission with her concerns.
'I have spoken to the Charity Commission and they have told me that they are uncomfortable with the activities of KICT and that the charity is under observation', she said.
Torbay Council has also revealed that KICT failed to apply for a permit for four days of fundraising carried out in September.
The charity revealed that it had raised £2,500 from collections in Paignton and Brixham.
And Ms Parish claims authorities outside Devon have raised concerns about the fundraising activities of KICT, including a council in Dorset.
Responding to the claims Mr Wright said: 'We have a commercial arrangement between Health Truth News and KICT.
'Health Truth News publishes information and chooses to give its profits to KICT – last month it donated £5,000 to KICT. I don't take any wages from it and earn my money through various other business ventures that I am involved with, including a chemical company and a motorcycle company'.
Mr Weir added: 'These were not street collections, we were trading as news vendors which we can legally do without a permit.
'We are selling something for the money which people give to us – I completely disagree that we are misleading people'.
A spokeswoman for the Charity Commission said: 'We have received a complaint suggesting an unauthorised street collection by Kids Integrated Cancer Treatment has taken place.
'We are currently considering these concerns to determine what, if any, role there may be for us'."
"MANY Echo readers will be familiar with the name Kevin Wright.
A controversial character, he spent many years raising cash for a cancer fund named after his son Bobby.
That all came to a halt in August last year after the Echo revealed how the organisation was being investigated by the Gambling Commission.
Mr Wright said the 'negative publicity' had made it impossible for him to recruit staff for a fundraising call centre he had been operating and called it a day.
However, since then his name has been linked to another cause, KICT, which, as we report today, is also courting controversy.
Meanwhile, a separate fundraising campaign set up by Bobby's Fund was at the centre of a criminal investigation.
It would seem that despite his altruistic efforts, Mr Wright has developed a habit of attracting the wrong sort of attention to the projects he is involved with.
This may, of course, be pure coincidence but it cannot help any credible organisation to come under the scrutiny of either the Gambling Commission, the Charity Commission or, indeed, the police.
And the latest run-in appears to have been both avoidable and unnecessary.
People wearing clothing emblazoned with the KICT logo carried out several collections despite being told they were working without the required licence.
We should point out that when questioned they named Mr Wright as the man whose company they were working for and it also happens that KICT is run by a former Bobby's Fund associate.
If any picture begins to emerge from all of this it's an incredibly murky one.
Of course, no one is forcing people to donate money to the organisations that Mr Wright has connections with, as loose as they may be, and when it comes to handing over your hard-earned cash there is no shortage of worthy causes.
This newspaper has campaigned tirelessly on behalf of charities such as Dream-A-Way, Elf, Hospiscare, NSPCC and Macmillan, among others.
All are, without exception, run by genuine, caring, honest and dedicated people and in some cases, Dream-A-Way for example, not a penny is paid to the people that run it.
The Echo will continue to work hard for all these charities and you will see them featured in our pages over the months and years to come.
However, there are some causes we would be highly unlikely to ever lend our support to and, without a shadow of a doubt, KICT is one of them."
"KICT is run by people that are not genuine, caring, and dedicated people … By associating the Claimant in the way it does with KICT the Express and Echo are conveying this defamatory meaning to their publishees about the Claimant."