Newspaper affiliations aside, a legal fact-checker must be careful not to relay any misinformation themselves. In 2018, an Irish Senior Counsel said to a jury, as part of her defence speech in a rape trial,
“Does the evidence out-rule the possibility that she was attracted to the defendant and was open to meeting someone and being with someone? You have to look at the way she was dressed. She was wearing a thong with a lace front.”
The single 650-word report of the case led to protests around the world, with doxing, vilification and serious threats for the advocate involved. A typical UK comment piece – from The New Statesman – asked “Since when did your choice of knickers equal consent?” The online mob included a good number of lawyers who ought to have known better. Others, eventually, came to her defence: the point was made that, to quote Lord Steyn’s famous line in 2001, “in law, context is everything”.
So it’s a shame to find the Secret Barrister describing the trial as “A shocking case in Ireland, in which a complainant’s underwear was reportedly paraded in court by the defence barrister”, and observing that “such behaviour [is] plainly prohibited in the courts of England & Wales”. The underwear was not “paraded”, and there is no prohibition in this jurisdiction on what she did – nor should there be. The circumstances in which that sort of point could usefully and ethically be made (with or without physically pointing to the exhibit) might be rare, but they certainly exist.
And let’s not forget: juries are discerning. I’d even say that in a single-defendant criminal trial, the cleverest person in the room will very often be a member of the jury. So even when, as will inevitably sometimes occur, Counsel make what they think is a fair point on behalf of their possibly innocent client, but is in fact on the wrong side of the line, we shouldn’t be so quick to assume it will do the defendant any good.
There is a tendency to imagine that statements we disagree with are imbued with special powers, which give them a persuasive force that for some reason can never be bestowed on statements we approve of. And this tempts us towards censorship. Better, of course, is to correct lies with facts, and unsound arguments with sound ones — as advocates in court have the opportunity to do.
When I make a defence speech in a rape trial, and a reporter new to the case wanders in, I’m not much worried about the tabloids nor their readers. But I am, sometimes, concerned at the prospect of the non-tabloid media, and non-tabloid people on social media, taking a delicate point out of context and generating a frenzy of moral outrage. Tabloid Fake Law is not the only Fake Law we should be concerned about.
Politicians, the Secret Barrister’s other target, often lie about the law, as they do about much else. But again, it’s hard to ignore a prevailing wind in the selection of examples, and also in the descriptions of the practical effect of certain pieces of legislation.
Michael Howard comes in for a dressing down over, among other things, the changes made to the right to silence more than 25 years ago. But there is in the courts today little or no sense of unfairness about those changes, even among defence-only advocates. “Instinctively,” the author writes, “the ‘nothing to hide’ mantra may be superficially attractive. But it ignores that people may remain silent for a variety of reasons unrelated to innocence or guilt.” Juries, though, are given strong warnings of precisely those possibilities (see Chapter 17-1 of the judges’ guidance) — to such an extent that in some cases a defendant might be better off than they were when the right to silence was absolute.
And when New Labour does get upbraided, there often creeps in the very sort of “confected outrage” that the book sets out to debunk. For example, until 2008, the law of self-defence was a messy patchwork of findings and phrases from appeal court judges. The Government then put it into a statute. Yes, Jack Straw disingenuously claimed that the changes would “help to make sure that the criminal justice system is firmly weighted in favour of the victim”; but to describe that useful bit of codification as “pure political conmanship” is distracting hyperbole.
The same can be said of the author’s treatment of the Tories’ slight broadening, in 2013, of a householder’s self-defence rights. It wasn’t beautifully done (Chris Grayling had a hand in it) but to call the manifesto pledge “vacuous” and the small alterations “entirely pointless” is both inaccurate and, for many, off-putting.
The Secret Barrister has become something of a venerable institution, well placed to keep up the good fight against Fake Law in the media and legislative bad faith in Government – problems which, as the Treasury Solicitor’s recent resignation over the Brexit withdrawal agreement suggests, show no sign of abating. A progressive shift over the last few years is, as per O’Sullivan’s Law, perhaps to have been expected. But more of those who need to hear the message could be encouraged to listen if a gentler and more even-handed approach were deployed.
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