Tina Malone – when sharing a picture can have you sent to prison

Posted by edelegal | March 19, 2019 | Blog

The murder of James Bulger in 1993 shocked everyone. That the killers who committed such a violent crime were only ten years of age was astounding.

 

Many people, rightly, felt they should be punished to the full extent of the law. But some people think that the punishment should go further.

 

As a result, Jon Venables and Robert Thompson were in danger of being hunted by vigilantes who thought that they should suffer the same fate as their victim.

 

This led the High Court to take the extraordinary step of imposing an injunction, a ban, in the case of the two boys.

 

Nothing about them, except for some specific pictures and details, can be published by anyone. Ever.

 

Anyone who breaches the order commits a ‘contempt of court’ and faces a prison sentence of up to two years.

 

Some people, including Tina Malone, who has appeared on TV in Shameless and Brookside, share pictures anyway. She was lucky to avoid prison, being given an eight-month suspended sentence and ordered to pay £10,000 costs.

 

She is not the only person to be prosecuted. In 2001, the Manchester Evening News was fined £30,000. In 2010 a man received a three-month suspended sentence. Earlier in 2019, two people were given twelve and eight-month suspended sentences.

 

Broadly, the ban is on:

 

  1. any depiction, image in any form, photograph, film or voice recording made or taken on or after 18 February 1993, which purports to be of Jon Venables or Robert Thompson or any description which purports to be of their physical appearance, voices or accents at any time since that date.

 

  1. any information purporting to identify any person as having formerly been known as Venables or Thompson; or any information purporting to describe their past present or future whereabouts, including alleged residential or work addresses and telephone numbers.

 

The list of things that can be published is short. Their real names, pictures taken at or before their arrest, the detention centres where they were held as youths, Jon Venables other convictions, and the fact that before he was returned to prison in 2010, he was living in Cheshire. Nothing more.

 

Anything else, even if the pictures are not actually of either of them, is banned. This is to protect people who are wrongly identified from harm. In 2010, a man had to install a panic button in his home after he was mistakenly identified as Venables.

 

Breaches of the injunction are taken very seriously. Contempt of Court proceedings are brought in almost every case.

 

How we can assist

 

If you need specialist advice, then get in touch with Hashmita Patel and Stephanie Brownlees on 01902 275 042 and let us help. We can advise on a plea, defences and potential sentences in a wide range of circumstances.