Man Jailed for 3 months over Facebook Jokes

Recommended Videos

Tenbob

New member
Sep 12, 2011
12
0
0
Bertylicious said:
Tenbob said:
Bertylicious said:
Those 50 people should have been charged with disturbing the peace, irrespective of anything else that happened in this incident.

Was the facebook comment made on Wood's own page?
I wouldn't be surprised if the 50 were charged, but received a lesser punishment- likely a warning or a fine. From what I can tell, they didn't do any property damage and all they did was show up, then the mitigation would be the public nature of the statement.

The big struggle that the UK law is having with social media at the moment is that people trolling/harassing are breaking laws or committing public speaking offenses working out the middle ground is proving tricky to find in our current law.

That being said, there is information missing here- It doesn't matter if it was made on his own page/wall as comments on Facebook can rightly be considered "in the public domain" particularly if there are hundreds of "friends" who simply happen to be a friend-of-a-friend-of-a-friend.

My opinion: I don't agree with imprisonment for facebook comments, but if they are enough to incite public outrage and there is a sufficient audience for those comments, then anything said on Facebook should be considered public.

I think this case (and other similar recent cases) are in a big grey area of UK law right now. However, there are parts that fall firmly into existing laws, so it really is working it out as it goes along.
Yes, I was going to talk about the whole 'public domain' thing. In the past it has been very easy to consider whether or not something was in the public domain. No longer.

I think the nub of this comes down to the definition of incitement. If I, say, were to use any form of communication to implore people to rise up and commit harm to Liverpool fans then that would be wrong and socially problematic. If I were to say that Liverpool fans have bad breath and a bunch of people then tried to burn my house down, I don't think that should count as overt action.

You seem a knowledgabe fellow; if someone calls me a **** in the street is that breaking the law?
I'm not a law expert, so please don't take my musings as that, this is me joining the dots of what I DO know and applying a bit of common sense (No offense intended to anyone).

If someone calls you a **** in the street, however, they could be accused of disorderly conduct or something similar. It's a lesser crime that tends to be met with an ASBO (Anti-social behavior order) which can enforce a curfew or restrict movement (to memory) or other minors things.

The problem with your example would be that if they just yelled "Yer a ****!" and moved on then there's likely little that -can- be done by law, but that would change if they're yelling at passers by. Where the law would kick in would be if they were provably intimidating or harassing you (Or passers by in general).
 

Vivi22

New member
Aug 22, 2010
2,300
0
0
Jamash said:
It's not prosecuting people for bad humour, it's prosecution people for breaking the law, specifically the 2003 Communication Act.
So you're going to argue semantics now? Doesn't matter that it's illegal or what law makes it so if that law is wrong. I don't care how offensive what he said was, unless he was making a threat to an individual or trying to incite others to harm someone he shouldn't be convicted under any law. Of course the sad truth is that the US, for all of it's problems, bad laws and gross miscarriages of justice over the years, is still the only country that at least seems to try and take free speech as seriously as it should be taken.

Saying that he was prosecuted for bad humour is like saying that someone who was arrested for doing 150mph on the motorway was arrested for having a bit of fun with their own private vehicle.
Poor analogy. Driving 150mph puts others in direct physical danger of injury or death. Making a tasteless joke hurts some people's feelings. Equating the two is disingenuous.

It's also worth noting that he was taken into protective custody, arrested for his own safety, because what he posted was so offensive that an angry group of 50 people had descended on his house. If the police had ignored his posts and let him face the consequences of his bad humour, then a lot more funds would have been spent in combating and clearing up after the riot he caused, not to mention the pursuit and prosecution of every member of the mob he incited.
So the man who made a tasteless joke that angered a decent number of people should be punished instead of the people who were likely trespassing in his yard or who may have been threatening violence for all we know (seems a reasonable assumption if the police felt the need to protect him)? You know, the people committing actual crimes.

Bad humour and tasteless jokes on their own aren't against the law, but when you use a communications network to broadcast that offensive material to everyone with an internet connection, you're breaking long established laws and inciting public order offences.
More people should break those laws because they are unjust. Like it or not, somebody simply saying something offensive doesn't cause real harm to anyone. The idea that it's against the law to hurt people's feelings with speech the government has decided is unacceptable is appalling. That people defend the government having that power is mind boggling.
 

suitepee7

I can smell sausage rolls
Dec 6, 2010
1,273
0
0
fuck that shit. i completely disagree with what he said, the joke was (if i found the right one) incredibly tasteless and offensive.

BUT THAT DOESN'T MEAN YOU CAN ARREST HIM FOR IT. freedom of speech should not be overridden by people being offended by something, as offense is fucking subjective. this is bullshit
 

Treblaine

New member
Jul 25, 2008
8,682
0
0
Tenbob said:
A person may speak freely publicly, as long as they do not break any other laws.
No shit. The law says not to break the law.

Or is it that if someone am accused of ANY crime... then their Freedom Of Speech is void??!? That is the one time when they need it MOST to defend their case!

You could liken it to saying the same thing, but over a megaphone in the streets
No. More like speaking quietly amongst friends and some outside agent copies what you've said and repeats it publicly. Remember, facebook is extremely obscure and deceptive about what is public and what is private, this is like a joke amongst your friends being published by one of your traitorous friend selling the story to a tabloid.

The family and friends of the bereaved WOULD NEVER EVEN HAVE KNOWN OF THESE COMMENTS had people not made a huge fuss about them. They were made hundreds of miles away from where the crime was committed.

How different is this REALLY from the whole "drawings of Muhammed" anger? We tell the Muslims far away that they need to be tolerant of freedom of speech even if it offends them to the very core of their existence... but clearly our courts are hypocrites.

Frankly "inciting hatred" should be prosecuted under conspiracy laws, as a violent riot or other "direct action" is a crime if you are inciting it then you are guilty of conspiracy whether you do it in a private back room or at an open rally, one is only worse than the other by the breadth of the conspiracy.

And if you can't get them for conspiracy because they are shouting in the street for with no one agreeing with them, then you can get them for disturbing the peace.

So agree or disagree you can get them for the EFFECT of their words directly leading to crimes, not the words themselves. Like how if a mob boss verbally ask an assassin to kill an informant, that is not protected by freedom of speech.
 

WoW Killer

New member
Mar 3, 2012
962
0
0
Jailtime isn't the worst consequence of posting offensive comments on Facebook. These days employers will check stuff like that out before offering you a job. Posting anything on the internet with your real name attached is something you need to be really careful about, and that's something the Facebook generation hasn't cottoned on to yet. It doesn't help that Facebook's privacy policies lean towards the ambiguous.

So while I don't think such comments should ever justify a criminal sentence, if it teaches people a little bit of sense then so be it.
 

xDarc

Elite Member
Feb 19, 2009
1,333
0
41
Thank god I live in 'merica and not the UK.

I understand where people who want to put these chavs and street urchins behind bars for their minor offenses are coming from; UK youth are literally a lost generation it would seem and leading to your nation's doom...

But becoming oppressive and enforcing good taste and respect by law is only going to work against you.
 

idarkphoenixi

New member
May 2, 2011
1,492
0
0
I fucking KNEW this was from the UK! Remember, we tried to arrest someone else for joking about blowing up some airport for the poor service.

Although I have no idea what he said, I honestly don't care. You can't have freedom of speech if someone is arrested simply because he hurt other peoples feelings.
So what if it upset people? Don't they know what that little 'x' sign in the corner of the page is for?

Seriously, who the hell calls the police based on a Facebook post??
 

Zombiefish

New member
Sep 29, 2012
58
0
0
MrDeckard said:
Now I want to know what the joke was...

As many others have said, someone getting jail time for a joke is flat wrong. It doesn't matter how bad the joke was.
Ive posted the joke already on an earlier page of this topic.
He did make other comments on his facebook page however this was the particular joke that one of his friends print screened and posted to a 'find april' facebook page and therefore the one that led to his arrest.

I dont wanna repeat the joke as technically i can be arrested for doing so :p
 

AngloDoom

New member
Aug 2, 2008
2,461
0
0
Sleekit said:
AngloDoom said:
Frankie Boyle, as many people have pointed out, has made much worse jokes than this on national television in a way that practically ensures those involved will, at least, hear the joke.
Frankie Boyle, in case you hadn't noticed, doesn't get to on national television anymore.

that was over a joke on mock the week about the queen being so old she had cobwebs in her fanny...

if you go see him live now he tries to come up with a joke that will ensure his permanent retirement from mainstream "show-bushiness".
Of course, but he was removed from that job by producers and and not police officers. Frankie Boyle, at least to my knowledge, didn't come under fire from the law for his jokes.
It's the difference between leaving a party because no-one wants you there and being forcibly removed - surely, Frankie's jokes on national television were even more public than on one person's Facebook page, so you'd expect and equal if not greater punishment.

That's what I don't get in all of this, the seeming lack of standardised punishment.
 

Sebass

New member
Jul 13, 2009
189
0
0
Jamash said:
It's not prosecuting people for bad humour, it's prosecution people for breaking the law, specifically the 2003 Communication Act.
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2003/21/section/127

127Improper use of public electronic communications network

(1)A person is guilty of an offence if he-

(a)sends by means of a public electronic communications network a message or other matter that is grossly offensive or of an indecent, obscene or menacing character; or

(b)causes any such message or matter to be so sent.

(2)A person is guilty of an offence if, for the purpose of causing annoyance, inconvenience or needless anxiety to another, he-

(a)sends by means of a public electronic communications network, a message that he knows to be false,

(b)causes such a message to be sent; or

(c)persistently makes use of a public electronic communications network.

(3)A person guilty of an offence under this section shall be liable, on summary conviction, to imprisonment for a term not exceeding six months or to a fine not exceeding level 5 on the standard scale, or to both.

(4)Subsections (1) and (2) do not apply to anything done in the course of providing a programme service (within the meaning of the Broadcasting Act 1990 (c. 42)).
Wow, this law actually exists and it's is fucking stupid.

"grossly offensive or of an indecent, obscene or menacing character"

Completely subjective.

"Subsections (1) and (2) do not apply to anything done in the course of providing a programme service"

Even worse. You can say whatever the fuck you want if you're on national TV but say the same thing on your own personal facebook profile and you get charged.
 

Tenbob

New member
Sep 12, 2011
12
0
0
Treblaine said:
No. More like speaking quietly amongst friends and some outside agent copies what you've said and repeats it publicly. Remember, facebook is extremely obscure and deceptive about what is public and what is private, this is like a joke amongst your friends being published by one of your traitorous friend selling the story to a tabloid.

The family and friends of the bereaved WOULD NEVER EVEN HAVE KNOWN OF THESE COMMENTS had people not made a huge fuss about them. They were made hundreds of miles away from where the crime was committed.

How different is this REALLY from the whole "drawings of Muhammed" anger? We tell the Muslims far away that they need to be tolerant of freedom of speech even if it offends them to the very core of their existence... but clearly our courts are hypocrites.

Frankly "inciting hatred" should be prosecuted under conspiracy laws, as a violent riot or other "direct action" is a crime if you are inciting it then you are guilty of conspiracy whether you do it in a private back room or at an open rally, one is only worse than the other by the breadth of the conspiracy.

And if you can't get them for conspiracy because they are shouting in the street for with no one agreeing with them, then you can get them for disturbing the peace.
Again, it depends on information we don't have. If the guy has 300 people that are able to see everything he posts, that's not speaking quietly with friends, that's actually a very open and public communication which is where this grey area comes in. The BBC article doesn't give us the information which is something that would have been considered in court.

I repeat- the UK (And a large part of Europe) does not enshrine freedom of speech anywhere near as much as the USA does- it is valued, but there are limits between "Freedom of Speech" and speech that may incite or disturb the peace. As much as I hate using Wikipedia as a source, you can see it as much here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freedom_of_speech_by_country#United_Kingdom
 

Vivi22

New member
Aug 22, 2010
2,300
0
0
Tenbob said:
I repeat- the UK (And a large part of Europe) does not enshrine freedom of speech anywhere near as much as the USA does- it is valued, but there are limits between "Freedom of Speech" and speech that may incite or disturb the peace. As much as I hate using Wikipedia as a source, you can see it as much here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freedom_of_speech_by_country#United_Kingdom
And that's kind of the problem here though because laws like this shouldn't exist. Unless speech could be reasonably believed to lead to actual physical harm (such as making a threat) it shouldn't be restricted by government ever. In fact, I'd flat out argue that any government which restricts speech doesn't value free speech at all, even if they might want people to believe otherwise.
 

Smeatza

New member
Dec 12, 2011
932
0
0
I say we turn this thread into an April Jones jokes thread.
Let's see how many of us get arrested.

I'll give you a hint - none, because the British police are that lazy they'll only go after people who have already provided their full name, a photograph and probably don't have good solicitors.

Don't believe me? then why is Kenneth Tong not in jail?
http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2012/08/09/kenneth-tong-tweets-gary-barlow-baby-stillborn_n_1759341.html
I'll tell you why, because he has money.

I love black/dark humour and to think I might be arrested and thrown in jail for that is sickening.
 

Treblaine

New member
Jul 25, 2008
8,682
0
0
Tenbob said:
Treblaine said:
No. More like speaking quietly amongst friends and some outside agent copies what you've said and repeats it publicly. Remember, facebook is extremely obscure and deceptive about what is public and what is private, this is like a joke amongst your friends being published by one of your traitorous friend selling the story to a tabloid.

The family and friends of the bereaved WOULD NEVER EVEN HAVE KNOWN OF THESE COMMENTS had people not made a huge fuss about them. They were made hundreds of miles away from where the crime was committed.

How different is this REALLY from the whole "drawings of Muhammed" anger? We tell the Muslims far away that they need to be tolerant of freedom of speech even if it offends them to the very core of their existence... but clearly our courts are hypocrites.

Frankly "inciting hatred" should be prosecuted under conspiracy laws, as a violent riot or other "direct action" is a crime if you are inciting it then you are guilty of conspiracy whether you do it in a private back room or at an open rally, one is only worse than the other by the breadth of the conspiracy.

And if you can't get them for conspiracy because they are shouting in the street for with no one agreeing with them, then you can get them for disturbing the peace.
Again, it depends on information we don't have. If the guy has 300 people that are able to see everything he posts, that's not speaking quietly with friends, that's actually a very open and public communication which is where this grey area comes in. The BBC article doesn't give us the information which is something that would have been considered in court.

I repeat- the UK (And a large part of Europe) does not enshrine freedom of speech anywhere near as much as the USA does- it is valued, but there are limits between "Freedom of Speech" and speech that may incite or disturb the peace. As much as I hate using Wikipedia as a source, you can see it as much here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freedom_of_speech_by_country#United_Kingdom
But does he even know how many could read what he posted? Facebook quietly and confusingly change public-ness of it's network always, many of its "private" chats are deliberately public. Remember, just because people can come in and listen doesn't mean it is forced into the faces of hundreds of people. That's not a broadcast or shouting in the streets, that's like writing a letter correspondence and leaving the letters in a public place that anyone can read them.

But the UK talked so much of Freedom of Speech when defending the publication of that is offensive to other cultures.

Is Freedom of Speech in Europe nothing but code-word for "Establishment Supported Speech"?
 

DarkishFriend

New member
Sep 19, 2011
265
0
0
Zombiefish said:
I believe the joke he was arrested for was 'whats the difference between mark ( the father) and santa? Mark comes in April (the kid)
I'm going straight to hell, that made me laugh so hard I spit my drink up.
 

MrBenSampson

New member
Oct 8, 2011
262
0
0
So Woods says something non-threatening on the internet and then an agry mob went to his house because they were offended, possibly with the desire to cause harm to Woods, and Woods was the one who was charged? Reguardless of how many people are offended, it should not be illegal to offend people.

I wonder what would have happened if that "Innocence of Muslims" video was made in the UK.
 

Khazoth

New member
Sep 4, 2008
1,227
0
0
The words of Jean-Luc Picard would be applicable here no matter what he said. When you draw a line in the sand of what is and is not okay to say, then you've set a very dangerous precedent. Sooner or later the line will move, and move, and move, and in the end what will be left that will be okay to say? I leave the video itself here below. I personally don't even care what he said, I don't know what it was but unless he's the dragonborn he didn't hurt anything other then sensibilities.



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fjJN08uqt70