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NATIONALIST WEEK No.101 30th September
2006
The Weekly Online e-zine of the British People’s Party“The
important thing is this: To be able at any moment to sacrifice what we
are for what we could become.” SIMON SHEPPARD AND LUKE O'FARRELL RACE CASE UPDATE Simon and
his co-defendant appeared at Beverley Magistrate's court on Friday
September 29th. The need for this appearance was for pre-trial
committal to a higher court for, as the Prosecution said (a strange
sounding gentleman who for some reason kept putting his hand down the
back of his trousers - perhaps nerves over this travesty of a trial?) -
because only a higher court could impose the new maximum penalty of
SEVEN YEARS for Race Trial cases! Submission
to Beverley Magistrates Court on 29 September 2006 1. The
Defendant believes that the primary purpose of this action is to harass
him and his Co-defendant simply because they are saying things the
puppet-masters in London do not like. The intent of this unprecedented
prosecution is to cause maximum disruption to the Defendant’s normal
and lawful activities as a publisher. Use of the
police and courts to accomplish this goal is an abuse of process. The
police have acted improperly because they are being exploited for
political ends, which is not their legitimate role. 2. The
1984 Police and Criminal Evidence Act stipulates that a warrant for
search and seizure under the Act is to be issued when the offence is a
serious, arrestable one. The instigators of this prosecution seem to be
unusual in their opinion that publishing a comic book and running an
eclectic website constitutes a serious offence. Interpretation of the
term "serious" is clarified by a recommendation of the Royal Commission
that "a compulsory power of search for evidence should be granted only
in exceptional circumstances and in respect only of grave offences."
This point alone may be sufficient to render the raids endured by the
Defendant unlawful. 3. In the
police raid of 30 March 2005 the police acted beyond the authority of
the search warrant issued by this court in seizing a large quantity of
materials unrelated to the information on the warrant. According to the
1984 Police and Criminal Evidence Act, a constable may only seize and
retain anything of relevance to that for which the search has been
authorised. Among the articles seized during that raid were: The entire
stock of the ‘Suppressed Science’ series of scientific papers first
published in 1998, two of which relate to medical matters; The entire
stock of Forged War Crimes by Udo Walendy, which has been officially
published in Britain since 1996; The entire
stock of Did Six Million Really Die? published by the Historical Review
Press, which has been in print in Britain since 1974; Approximately
500 copies of a humorous music CD, which has been distributed since
2001; A computer
base unit devoid of data, plus many items of proprietary computer
software; Numerous
file copies of publication notices and miscellaneous records. I am
quoting the judgment in the Queen’s Bench Divisional Court, Regina v
Chesterfield Justices and Others, Ex parte Bramley, made on 5 November
1999. This judicial review specified that the relevance of items seized
must be established at the time of the search. It was stated that "if a
police officer seized items which were later found to be outside the
scope of the warrant, then under current provisions of the 1984 Police
and Criminal Evidence Act, there was no defence to an action of
trespass to goods based on unjustified seizure." I have not
detailed here the materials seized, only those I can recall for which
there can be no question of their legality. The Heretical Press may be
a publisher of unorthodox material, but all its publications are
officially registered through the proper channels in the normal way. If
the police wished to obtain details of the publisher’s list all they
had to do was go to a suitably equipped bookshop, such as their local
branch of Waterstones, to obtain it. 4. Shortly
after the first raid, on 1st April 2005 (U.S. time), the Defendant’s
on-line payment account was entered and tampered with. This action
could only have been undertaken by the police or some agency to whom
the police had passed information contained on the Defendant’s
computers. 5. The
second raid of 12 April 2006 was unlawful on the following grounds: Firstly,
the police again acted beyond the authority of the search warrant,
issued by a Justice of the Peace at Goole Magistrates Court, in seizing
a large quantity of materials, which were outside the scope of the
warrant. Those items included: Empty
computer cases; A computer
base unit containing no data; A further
collection of blank hard discs and items of proprietary computer
software, and; Bank
statements and other records. Among the
items on the seized computer was a summary of several weeks’
investigations into Freud’s cocaine addiction and a data file listing
printer memory specifications, the result of two months’ work. Secondly,
since this was the second raid endured by the Defendant, it was
inevitable that among the material searched and seized were items of
privileged correspondence between the Defendant and his solicitor. That
privileged material existed both in hard copy and as data on a seized
computer. Search and seizure of material which includes items subject
to legal privilege is covered under Schedule 1 of the 1984 Police and
Criminal Evidence Act, and requires the authority of a circuit judge,
not a magistrate. Thirdly,
the nature of the Internet is that practically anyone can become a
journalist, and thereby express their opinions without dishonest
filtering by a Marxist media seeking to establish a false consensus.
There are thousands if not millions of so-called blogs, or web logs,
which are really just on-line diaries, which people are free to read.
The website of the Heretical Press, being moderately popular, and
featuring an irregular opinion column on political affairs, qualifies
as a form of journalism. Professor Michael Zander on page 35 of his
book The Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 states that "Journalism
includes any form of publication and is not confined to publication for
reward nor to full-time or even professional journalists." Among the
material searched and seized on 12 April 2006 (and on 30 March 2005
also) were press cuttings, notes and letters from correspondents
acquired and created for the purposes of journalism. This is
journalistic matter, which is specified in the 1984 Police and Criminal
Evidence Act as "special procedure material." Search and seizure of
such material also requires the authority of a circuit judge under
Schedule 1. Section 15(1) of the Act states that an entry on or search
of premises under a warrant not complying with its requirements is
unlawful. The
Defendant submits that more evidence exists for the unlawful activity
of the police than does for him. 6. Lists
of the items seized have been requested from the police. These lists
are required to discover how far they have acted improperly, to give
them an opportunity to return those items which have been seized
unlawfully, and to determine which of the remaining materials are
required by the Defendant for his defence. 7. The
Defendant has suffered considerable inconvenience and distress as a
consequence of these two raids, which is believed to have been the
intention. Three working computers are still held by the police, with
all their data, plus two spare computers, a large amount of book stock,
records and other items. The
Defendant’s activities as a publisher have been greatly disrupted. Many
titles which should normally be supplied from stock are out of print
and orders for these publications are either cancelled or placed in
back order. Many of these publications, such as the science papers,
cannot be obtained anywhere else. Goods that have been seized
unlawfully must be returned. 8. In
summary, having regard to: a) The
improper and unlawful nature of the raids; b) The
obligation of the police to provide lists of the materials seized; c) The
obligation of the police to return those items which have been
unlawfully seized, and; d) The
prejudice to the Defendant in mounting a full and proper defence when
so much of his essential equipment and records have been removed; the
Defendant requests an adjournment with sufficient time to prepare a
further submission on the conduct of this case. REMEMBER THESE POLTICAL PRISONERS OF
CONSCIENCE
ENGLAND FIRST PARTY – BLACKBURN BY
ELECTION RESULTS – 28th September 2006
IND 209 TORY 201 England First Party 99LIB 91 LAB 75 BNP 70 IND gain
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