NEWS RELEASE
THURSDAY 5TH FEBRUARY 2004
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
MASSIVE AWARD TO ANTI-MONARCHY PROTESTERS
FOLLOWING JUBILEE DAY 2002 ARRESTS
MET APOLOGISE, ADMIT LIABILITY FOR FALSE IMPRISONMENTAND
BREACH OF HUMAN RIGHTS AND AGREE TO PAY
DAMAGES
23
anti-Monarchists are today jubilant following an award by the Metropolitan
Police of £80,500 following their unlawful arrests in a public house and on the
street on Jubilee Day, (4th June) 2002.
The
police have apologised in a letter to each of those arrested, accepted
liability for false imprisonment, and breaches of their human rights in
particular their rights to liberty, privacy, freedom of expression and freedom
of association. The police have awarded
them £80,500 following a collective action undertaken by the group.
The
circumstances of the arrests were bizarre, verging at times on the farcical:
- Some
members of the group had earlier in the day attended a public
demonstration against the monarchy at Tower Hill. A large joint police operation between
the Met and City of London Police had confined the protest to a small area
near Tower Hill tube station. As
the protest ended the demonstrators dispersed, and some event goers walked
to the nearby Goodman’s Field pub in Aldgate. They were followed by a group of around
50 police officers who waited outside and, following a briefing entered
the pub encircling the group, by now seated and enjoying a bank holiday
lunchtime drink.
- Other
customers looked on horrified as the police cautioned, filmed and led the
revellers out one by one, making them stand in line on the pavement, under
the auspices of “preventing a breach of the peace”. Others were arrested in order to
“prevent a breach of the peace” on the street having previously been
cordoned there by the police.
- The nature
of the arrests was farcical.
Officers asked each person in turn their intentions. Regardless of the answers all 23 were
summarily arrested. An officer notes that one arrestee stated categorically
that he had no intention of breaching the peace. The officer records in
his notes his reply to the man: “I believe you are here [in the pub] to
cause a breach of the peace therefore I am arresting you to prevent a
breach of the peace”. The
revellers were later to discover that in fact at a briefing although
officers were told to ask the revellers questions they were also told to
disregard the answers!
- Events
turned comical as a Routemaster Bus was commandeered and the arrestees,
some of whom had been handcuffed, ushered onto the bus and driven at speed
to several police stations around London!
- No charges
were ever brought against those arrested and the individuals were released
several hours later as jubilee celebrations were drawing to a close.
Trevor
Bark, a spokesperson for the group commented:
“This award, apology and acceptance of
liability demonstrate that the police now accept no offences were committed,
nor were likely to be. We remain convinced that these tactics were employed,
planned and coordinated in advance and at a very senior level, in order to
remove any dissent against the monarchy or the jubilee day celebrations
themselves.”
“We’d like to offer the Met the chance to
come clean and publicly state which senior officers ordered these arrests and
why.” he added.
The
group’s lawyer Mark Scott of Bhatt Murphy solicitors said:
“the police on 4 June 2002 acted entirely unlawfully and used their
powers to arrest in order to target demonstrators and seek to suppress and
restrain lawful protest, assembly and freedom of speech.”
…/ends
NOTES FOR EDITORS
- Spokespeople
will be available for interview on the day. Contact Trevor Bark on ……………
Solicitor Mark Scott of Bhatt Murphy solicitors will also be available for
comment. Contact 020 7729115 / 07932 065416
- Email
enquiries (in advance only) to breachthepolice@yahoo.co.uk
- Digital
Images of the Jubilee Day 2002 demonstrations are available on request
- The
press event begins at 10.00am,
Thursday 5th Feb at Broadway, New Scotland Yard, SW1. The group will present an enlarged
letter of apology and a cheque for damages before boarding an open-top
decorated Routemaster bus touring Central
London.
Limited places on the journey are available for press and news
crews. Contact ……. to confirm a place.
- The
Routemaster journey will leave New Scotland Yard at around 10.45am,
passing Buckingham
Palace
and proceed onto both Plumstead and Bishopsgate Police Stations, two of
the stations the arrestees were detained.
The journey will
culminate in their arrival at the Goodman’s Field pub, Mansell Street, Aldgate,
E1 at around 1.30pm. The group hope to finally finish the drinks they ordered
over 18 months ago!