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60 years since the first edition, McNae’s Essential Law for Journalists remains the definitive media law guide. These pages include links to accompanying online resources, including regular updates on media law and regulation.
Update
Councils face legal obligation to be transparent
Local authorities are being made to be more open about how they spend profits from parking, as well as rubbish collections and how they clamp down on fraud under the terms of a new version of the Local Government Transparency Code.
The Code is aimed at strengthening the public’s ability to scrutinise local councils by ensuring they get the data they need to play a bigger role in the local democratic decision making process.
The new extended transparency code will become a legal requirement for councils, in order to help taxpayers scrutinise their work, the Government said.
Unveiling the code on October 3, Local Government Minister Kris Hopkins said: “Greater power for local government must go hand in hand with greater local transparency and local accountability.
“Therefore it is only right we give Council Tax payers the data they deserve to play a bigger role in local democracy.
McNae's Success
Court victory for weekly over defendant address details
News editor of weekly newspaper the Reading Post, Sarah Hamilton, recently turned to her copy of McNae's to help her win a Crown Court challenge. Read on for full details.
A weekly newspaper has won a court victory after challenging a judge’s attempt to prevent court officials disclosing a defendant’s age and address to the press.
An usher at Reading Crown Court refused to supply the details to the Reading Post following a direction by Judge Nicholas Wood.
As reporter Linda Fort asked the the usher for defendant Leigh Peppiatt’s address and date of birth, his barrister John Simmons intervened and told the usher he shouldn’t give it to her and told her to apply to the judge.
Judge Wood then told her: “I can’t stop the press publishing the address . But an officer of the court, be it a clerk or an usher, is not obliged to reveal that if it has not been said in open court.”
However the paper’s news editor, Sarah Hamilton, then wrote to the judge asking him to review the decision and citing case law in support of her argument.
Judge Wood has now ruled in the Post’s favour following discussion with some of the court’s other judges.
Commented Sarah: “Despite this being a routine method of getting defendant details from the court since time immemorial, the judge said he wouldn’t allow it.”
“If the detail was read out in court then fine, but we couldn’t ask for it from a court clerk or admin staff from their court papers.”
In her letter, Sarah pointed out a 2009 protocol which says court staff are “encouraged to cooperate with local newspapers when they make enquiries.”
Here is the letter in full:
Your Honour,
We submit to you today a challenge to your direction in the above case yesterday that court clerks should not be allowed to supply the press with identification details of defendants if not said in open court. We respectfully invite you to consider our arguments and review the decision you came to yesterday.
As you know, defendants’ names, dates of birth and addresses are needed to avoid implicating someone else with the same details. A name and date of birth is simply not enough to meet our legal obligations to avoid defamation and prevents us reporting this trial as it currently stands.
Indeed, a protocol issued by the Courts Service in 2009 says: ‘Court staff are encouraged to cooperate with local newspapers when they make enquiries’ and we would say this would include providing defendant’s details from court documents.
Throughout our responsible attendance and reporting of court matters over the years at this and other courts, we have never had any problems or judge interception of obtaining information from the court office or clerks and staff have always provided the details we have needed.
This is why we suggest we should be allowed to be given this information in the Peppiatt case and in any further cases Your Honour presides over. We suggest not doing so would frustrate open justice and the contemporaneous reporting of a case – for we cannot report this trial until the defendant’s full details are known.
If you are not mindful to grant our request, could you please advise us of your reasons and on what legal basis.
If you have any further questions, reporter Natasha Adkins will be in court to address any points.
Yours faithfully,
Sarah Hamilton,
News Editor,
Reading Post
Testimonials
This is the law book that's essential for any journalist. It cuts through the legal waffle and is a vital reference tool whether you work in print, broadcast or digital media. Andy Cairns, Executive Editor, Sky Sports News
A must-have for students wishing to succeed—
it successfully manages to convey detail with clarity David Penman, Senior Lecturer in Journalism, De Montfort University
Read all about it!
Journalism –
A Very Short Introduction
Second edition
Ian Hargreaves
August 2014
£7.99
Oxford Dictionary of Journalism
Tony Harcup
May 2014
£12.99
Essential Public Affairs for Journalists
Third edition
James Morrison
February 2013
£23.99
The current authors are:
Mike Dodd, Legal Editor at the Press Association and member of the NCTJ Media Law Examinations Board. He is a qualified lawyer
with nearly 40 years’ experience as a working journalist.
Mark Hanna is Senior Lecturer in Journalism at the University of Sheffield and chair of the NCTJ Media Law Examinations Board.
He was an award-winning crime and investigations reporter.



