• Make a contribution
  • Get the Print Edition
  • Sign up for our daily newsletter
Wednesday, November 19, 2025
  • Login
Reading Today Online
  • HOME
  • YOUR AREA
    • All
    • Caversham
    • Central Reading
    • East Reading
    • Katesgrove
    • Reading
    • Southcote & Coley
    • Tilehurst & Norcot
    • Whitley

    Two men arrested in connection with rape of teenager in Reading

    Teenage girl raped by two men along Oxford Road in Reading

    Reading therapy centre receives The King’s Award for Voluntary Service

    Berkshire’s Got Talent is looking for you

    Facial recognition roll-out in Berkshire

    Fire near Three Mile Cross

    Cat rescued by fire crew in Reading after getting stuck under house

    Thames Valley Buses introduces new ticket machines and tap-on, tap-off system

    Woman injured in ‘unprovoked attack’ in Reading Town Centre

  • COMMUNITY
  • READING FC
  • SPORT
    • All
    • Basketball
    • Football
    • Rugby

    Reading FC become first professional club to appoint head of AI

    Formula E accelerates climate conversations on campus at University of Reading

    Supercomputer tips Reading FC to surge into top six before suffering play-off heartbreak

    Reading FC lead push for League One salary cap, but EFL set to reject proposal

    First football matches played at Shinfield sports centre

    Reading FC fans celebrate homecoming of academy graduate

    Rinomhota returns as Reading FC confirm signing

    Reading FC Women v Kidlington Youth Pictures: Neil Graham, NGSportsPhotography

    PICTURE GALLERY: Reading FC Women hit double figures in stunning cup victor

    Reading FC tipped to narrowly avoid League One relegation

  • ENTERTAINMENT
    • ARTS
    • READING FESTIVAL
    • READING PRIDE
    • WOKINGHAM FESTIVAL
  • READING FESTIVAL
  • PRIDE OF READING
  • BUSINESS
  • MORE…
    • ADVERTISE
    • CONTACT US
No Result
View All Result
Reading Today Online
No Result
View All Result
Home Crime

Defend Our Juries stages latest protest against ‘criminalisation’ of mentioning climate change and jury nullification

Jake Clothier by Jake Clothier
Friday, April 19, 2024 8:02 am
in Crime, Featured, Reading
A A
Defend Our Juries is holding a sit-in protest outside Reading Crown Court today as part of its continued campaign against what it argues is the eroding of the right of jurors to acquit a defendant on matters of principle. Picture: A Defend Our Juries protest held outside Reading Crown Court last year.

Defend Our Juries is holding a sit-in protest outside Reading Crown Court today as part of its continued campaign against what it argues is the eroding of the right of jurors to acquit a defendant on matters of principle. Picture: A Defend Our Juries protest held outside Reading Crown Court last year.

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

A GROUP campaigning for the preservation of jury equity is staging its latest protest in Reading today, Friday, April 19.

Defend Our Juries is holding a sit-in protest outside Reading Crown Court today as part of its continued campaign against what it argues is the eroding of the right of jurors to acquit a defendant on matters of principle.

Protestors will hold up signs depicting the inscription on a stone in the Old Bailey, which explains the principle of jury equity

They will be joining thousands across the country taking action today, as the permission hearing for Trudi Warner is heard in the Royal Courts of Justice.

Warner, 68, was prosecuted for contempt of court after holding up a sign explaining the right of juries to acquit outside Inner London Crown Court last March.

In a statement from Defend Our Juries, the group argued that: “By displaying these signs the group are showing the ridiculous nature of the prosecution against Trudi Warner.

Related posts

Two men arrested in connection with rape of teenager in Reading

Teenage girl raped by two men along Oxford Road in Reading

Reading therapy centre receives The King’s Award for Voluntary Service

Berkshire’s Got Talent is looking for you

“Countless thousands of pounds of public money have been spent pursuing a pensioner for showing a sign that is literally on display inside the Old Bailey

Nullification is just one of the things that a number of defendants have been barred from explaining as part of their defence by the Court of Appeal.”

Jury equity, or nullification, is an option available to jurors to acquit in spite of the directions given by the judge, even if they are directed that there is no available defence.

Nullification is a way of declaring a defendant is not guilty, even if the law suggests they should be, and has been used to exonerate those exposing government dishonesty.

While it is not enshrined in law explicitly, it is the result of two other principles: that jurors cannot be punished for passing an ‘incorrect’ verdict, and that an acquitted defendant cannot be retried for the same offence.

The rulings also meant that some defendants were unable to give legal defences about their actions, including climate activists who were barred from explaining their actions to juries by describing climate change and fuel poverty.

Known as the “consent” defence, those accused of criminal damage could argue that property owners would have consented to damage had they known about the circumstances, and hence the cause, of that damage.

Protestors successfully used this defence in 2023 in a case which saw nine people who targeted the London headquarters of the HSBC Bank acquitted of smearing paint on the building, as well as those of a number of political parties.

Attorney General Victoria Prentis then issued an appeal on the consent defence, which has been a part of British law since 1971.

The appeal was accepted, and judges ruled last month that the defence would no longer be admissible in court.

The lady chief justice of England and Wales, Sue Carr, said that political or philosophical views were “too remote” to provide a lawful excuse defence.

The defence became a tool used by climate protestors in court as a result of other restrictions about what explanations they could give in court.

Defend Our Juries is also protesting these restrictions, which were seen in a string of cases involving Insulate Britain activists at the Inner London Crown Court.

Three of those accused, Giovanna Lewis, Amy Pritchard, and David Nixon, were sentenced to jail time early last year for addressing the jury to explain that climate change was a motivator of their actions.

Judge Silas Reid, who presided over the cases, argued that the point of the trials was not to decide whether the defendants’ actions were moral, only whether their peaceful protests had caused a nuisance or not; that motivation had no relevance to the case.

He told the defendants that the reasons for their actions were “for history to judge, not the jury” – a move which one of the defendants argued effectively “criminalised” the mention of the climate crisis.

Many argue that protestors’ explanation to the jury has led to a jury nullification despite legal directions suggesting that they were guilty of the crime.

Defend Our Juries has laid out three main aims for its action: to bring to the attention of the public an effort to undermine trial by jury, to raise awareness of a constitutional “safeguard” in the acquittal of the accused as a matter of conscience, and to ensure defendants have an opportunity to explain their actions, including motivation and beliefs.

Following the case of Trudi Warner, protestors are putting themselves at risk of prosecution by holding up the sign.

Tony Goodchild, from Reading, is among those participating in the protest, and said: “I am sitting here because I believe the moral law is stronger than an unjustly applied law, and juries must be free to express that in their verdicts.”

More information about the Defend Our Juries campaign is available via: defendourjuries.org

Keep up to date by signing up for our daily newsletter

We don’t spam we only send our newsletter to people who have requested it.

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

Previous Post

Jailed: Reading drug dealer who hid nearly 250 class A wraps in his trainers

Next Post

Tilehurst man jailed after riding ebike despite being banned from driving

FOLLOW US

POPULAR STORIES

  • Former Reading FC boss Ruben Selles returns to management with new job

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Four potential options as new Reading FC manager after Hunt sacking

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Reading FC legend Brian McDermott starts new role

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • ‘He would be the perfect signing’: Reading FC fan favourite training with club ahead of potential return

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • ‘Absolutely embarrassing’: New Reading FC boss starts with shocking FA Cup defeat to non-league Carlisle

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

RDG.Today – which is a Social Enterprise – provides Reading Borough with free, independent news coverage.

If you are able, please support our work

Click Here to Support RDG.Today

ABOUT US

Reading Today is dedicated to providing news online across the whole of the Borough of Reading. It is a Social Enterprise, existing to support the various communities in Reading Borough.

CONTACT US

news@wokinghampaper.co.uk

Reading Today Logo

Keep up to date with our daily newsletter

We don’t spam we only send our newsletter to people that have subscribed

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

The Wokingham Paper Ltd publications are regulated by IPSO – the Independent Press Standards Organisation.
If you have a complaint about a  The Wokingham Paper Ltd  publication in print or online, you should, in the first instance, contact the publication concerned, email: editor@wokingham.today, or telephone: 0118 327 2662. If it is not resolved to your satisfaction, you should contact IPSO by telephone: 0300 123 2220, or visit its website: www.ipso.co.uk. Members of the public are welcome to contact IPSO at any time if they are not sure how to proceed, or need advice on how to frame a complaint.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • MY AREA
    • Central Reading
    • East Reading
    • Bracknell
    • Calcot
    • Caversham
    • Crowthorne
    • Earley
  • COMMUNITY
  • SPORT
    • Reading FC
    • Football
    • Rugby
    • Basketball
  • ENTERTAINMENT
    • ARTS
    • READING PRIDE
    • WOKINGHAM FESTIVAL
  • READING FESTIVAL
  • PRIDE OF READING
  • OBITUARIES
  • BUSINESS
  • ADVERTISE
  • CONTACT US
  • SUPPORT US
  • SIGN UP FOR OUR NEWSLETTER
  • WHERE TO GET THE PRINT EDITION

© 2021 - The Wokingham Paper Ltd - All Right Reserved.