Carl Gardner
October 22, 2009
I spoke to Charon QC this afternoon about last Friday’s judgment in R (Mohamed) v Foreign Secretary, in which the Administrative Court ruled that it should make public in its original judgment 7 paragraphs, consisting of 25 […]
Carl Gardner
October 20, 2009
I’m pleased the Guardian defeated Carter-Ruck in the Trafigura, Minton report, superinjunction affair. I don’t know or understand why a superinjunction was granted preventing publication of the fact of the injunction (as opposed to an ordinary injunction merely preventing publication […]
Carl Gardner
October 17, 2009
As you may well already know, Trafigura have abandoned their attempts to injunct publication of the “Minton report” – as the Guardian reported last night. I’m sorry to keep saying I told you so but the Guardian story confirms […]
Carl Gardner
October 16, 2009
The Guardian today is reporting that Carter-Ruck has written to the Speaker arguing that discussion of Trafigura and the injunction against the Guardian is sub judice. Here’s the Carter-Ruck letter.
First, what the letter says. To be fair to […]
Carl Gardner
October 15, 2009
The news that the BNP has conceded the need to change its constitution in the face of legal action by the EHRC represents a brilliant victory for the equality watchdog and its legal director, John Wadham. I take my […]
Carl Gardner
October 15, 2009
Some MPs are, predictably, whining about the letters being sent to them by Sir Thomas Legg, who’s been auditing their expenses going back over the last few years. Ann Widdecombe for instance has suggested there’s a “legal question mark” […]
Carl Gardner
October 15, 2009
In all this week’s discussion of Trafigura, relatively little attention has been paid to other legal stories – but HMIC’s review of the lessons learned from the Greengate-Galleygate affair deserves closer attention, I think, than it’s had. And Jacqui […]
Carl Gardner
October 15, 2009
There’s been a lot of Trafigura traffic on the internet, for obvious reasons – and a lot of legal questions have been raised. I want to try to cut through some of that and shed some legal light if I […]
Carl Gardner
October 13, 2009
Remember Geert Wilders? Back in February the Home Secretary Jacqui Smith excluded him from the UK because of his views on Islam. I wrote at the time that the decision was unlawful; an afterthought simply confirmed my view. […]
Carl Gardner
October 13, 2009
Charon QC interviewed me this afternoon about the “Guardian gag” affair – the attempt by Carter-Ruck solicitors to prevent publication of reports of a parliamentary question by Paul Farrelly MP.
I think some blogger’s references to the […]