Re the highlighted. smartcooky, do you now accept that such a post was made? You can't have this both ways. If Harrow was guilty of doxxing, do you think it's OK to do that? I notice you claim the doxxing involved Hayden's business address. The article quotes Hayden as saying it was the home address that was leaked. Where did you get the information that is was, in fact, the business address?
On 1 September 2016, Hayden incorporated a company called SRH Law Limited (company number 10355646). The sole shareholder and director was Stephanie Rebecca Hayden.
If you check the UK companies register, you will find the following
01 Sep 2016
Incorporation
Statement of capital on 2016-09-01
GBP 500,100
Here is a link to the Certificate of Incorporation (its a PDF)
https://find-and-update.company-inf.../MzE1NjI5MjU2OGFkaXF6a2N4/document?format=pdf
Note: The address given for Hayden is a residential address. i.e. his residential address,
an address that was already in the public square so Farrow did not doxx him. ANYONE could have looked up that information, just like I did. You only need to know his name and the fact that he was a lawyer (which is also information that was already in the public square). You can look that address up on Google maps and see a picture of it to confirm it is a residential address.
He was operating his law firm out of his residence until August 2017, and which point he changed his business address to a commercial location. Link below (another PDF)
https://find-and-update.company-inf.../MzE4MzA0OTY3NWFkaXF6a2N4/document?format=pdf
I will point out, yet again, that Scottow's conviction was overturned on appeal.
I will point out, yet again that this is not the issue.
The arrest of people who make social media posts that trigger snowflakes like Hayden still causes those people to have to have to expend capital, hire a lawyer, be interrogated under caution and to have to deal with disruptions to their lives
THAT THEY SHOULD NOT HAVE TO SUFFER IN THE FIRST PLACE.
I mean, what the actual **** is it going to take to get through to you that before anything gets overturned on appeal, or it goes to trial, or even if a prosecution does not even proceed -
THE DAMAGE HAS ALREADY BEEN DONE
The prospect of having to face arrest and interrogation risks dissuading people to from posting freely...
THIS HAS A CHILLING EFFECT ON FREE SPEECH!
Once again, you are quoting past incidents as if they reflect the present. They do not: none of the cases you have quoted have led to a successful prosecution.
Once again, Caroline Farrow's arrest was on 27/04/2023. Her family devices were not returned until March this year... 2024, while the investigation was ongoing.... recent enough for you!?
The tide is turning against the TRAs.
Yes, and about time!
Your frankly childish and unrealistic demand that these incidents stop right now is, well, childish and unrealistic. How do you suggest stopping TRAs from launching vexatious litigation attempts?
By declaring them vexatious litigants?
https://www.gov.uk/guidance/vexatious-litigants
Vexatious litigants are individuals who persistently take legal action against others in cases without any merit, who are forbidden from starting civil cases in courts without permission.
You stop the vexatious litigation at is source. Frankly, after over 20 lawsuits, all of which but one failed, I am astonished that Hayden has not already been declared a vexatious litigant.
Would you like the police to ignore all reports of hate crimes? Rather than clinging to a nirvana fallacy, how about some practical proposals?
Asked and answered, but I'll answer it again.
The Minister of State for Crime and Policing sends an instruction to the Commissioner of the Met which he must forward to the heads of all 45 territorial police forces and 3 special police forces in the UK, that when any Social media posts are being investigated due to a complaint from a member of the public for violation of the Public Order Act 1986 and/or its amendment, the Racial and Religious Hatred Act 2006, or any other relevant act, the police may interview the complainant, but before they contact or interview the complainee, they must first establish that the post or posts in question do indeed violate one or more acts.
Such an instruction would stop this crap in its tracks.
Now you might argue,
"how can the Police investigate the post(s) without interviewing the complainee?" The answer is as simple as it is straightforward - the complainant has provided the post(s) which is all they need to make a decision as to whether it reaches the threshold for violating a relevant law. Either it does, or it does not - there is no grey area.
If it does, an arrest and interview under caution could be warranted.
If it does not, then the investigation ends right there, and the complainee is never event spoken to.