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Facebook case: Sex offender is awarded £20,000 in damages
Local story with potentially wide ranging implications.
"Damages of £20,000 have been awarded to a convicted sex offender who took an action against Facebook and the operator of a page called Keeping our Kids Safe from Predators 2. Facebook Ireland Limited, hosted a page operated by Joseph McCloskey. The High Court in Belfast concluded the information published by Mr McCloskey "harmed the public interest, creating a risk of reoffending". The plaintiff, CG, was convicted in 2007 of a number of sex offences. He was sentenced to 10 years imprisonment and released on licence in 2012." BBC. |
Re: Facebook case: Sex offender is awarded £20,000 in damages
The Human Rights law was a good idea in theory, but sadly it has been hijacked by the **** it was meant to protect us from.
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Re: Facebook case: Sex offender is awarded £20,000 in damages
Two wrongs don't make a right.
I have recently been dealing with a case where a black man immediately punched a man with severe learning difficulties after he racially abused him in a bar. In my view, the black customer was at fault and should be punished by the law. The man with learning difficulties should be accessed and dealt with as deemed appropriate by healthcare professionals. In the end it will be for the CPS to decide. |
Re: Facebook case: Sex offender is awarded £20,000 in damages
Just because a person has learning difficulties doesnt mean they dont know right from wrong.
I have a nephew who was let down majorly by the education system and has a lot of learning difficulties which should have been caught while in primary school but he wasnt diagnosed until second year of comprehensive and he got specially tutored. At the age of 18 he landed a dream job working in Swansea on a basic wage of 40hrs earning more than his own father does. He threw it all away by making an outburst of racial comments towards a person also working there. He will tell u himself he knows he did wrong but because his mum and dad use those terms he found it funny to do so himself. Part of the reason i dont bother with a lot of my close family. |
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People with lifelong learning difficulties, such as ADHD, Aspergers Syndrome, Autism etc often get things wrong because they perceive things differently, have social boundary issues etc etc. They may behave in an immature, unusual or inappropriate way or make inappropriate jokes without even realising it. In the example that you quoted about your relative, he may have actually known it was wrong, but if he did not have learning difficulties, he may have had the capacity to weigh up the consequences of saying what he did and decide to keep quiet. It's not as straightforward as it first appears. |
Re: Facebook case: Sex offender is awarded £20,000 in damages
Whilst not in anyway justifying the assailant's actions, how did he know the person who abused him had learning difficulties?
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Re: Facebook case: Sex offender is awarded £20,000 in damages
Oh so if I get abused by someone if they have learning difficulties they get a pass what a patronising and condescending attitude. People with learning difficulties of which there is a huge range often know perfectly well what is right and wrong and certainly the vast majority know and understand racism definitely so if they say it in the correct context to a person that would be insulted by it. As for this case the guy was a sex offender and shouldn't have got a damn penny and it is cases like this that illustrate why a growing number of the public are losing faith in justice in the uk.
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If a person with learning difficulties does something wrong, efforts to resolve this should be made by those trained to do so. This may include punishment, education, training, monitoring etc. In this case, what was not tolerated was the use of extreme violence by the young black man against a much older disabled man. Proper procedures are in place to deal with verbal assaults without behaving like an animal and bringing our venue into disrepute. Whichever way it pans out, this individual and his partner are permanently barred; as, for example, what's to stop him beating up a customer with a physical disability who accidentally falls onto him? |
Re: Facebook case: Sex offender is awarded £20,000 in damages
You appear to be moving the goalposts from "punched" to "extreme violence".....
Shouldn't you, as the venue manager, be going into this with an impartial viewpoint - discover the evidence, find out all the facts, and then make a judgement? It sounds as if you have made your mind up already.... btw, if it goes to court, couldn't the person with learning difficulties also be charged with a hate crime offence? |
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Re: Facebook case: Sex offender is awarded £20,000 in damages
Thank you for the clarification.
Was John Prescott ever prosecuted for punching the protester who egged him? |
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I aren't the venue manager, I just happened to turn up to do a till audit one afternoon. I happened to arrive at the same time as the police and an ambulance. |
Re: Facebook case: Sex offender is awarded £20,000 in damages
I would agree with you - being repeatedly punched is extremely violent.
Unfortunately, this is the first time we knew it was 'repeatedly'..... |
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Re: Facebook case: Sex offender is awarded £20,000 in damages
Try it sometimes - you will find it makes a difference....
Also, in law, the difference is between Common Assault and Actual Bodily Harm / Grievous Bodily Harm (depending on the injuries caused - repeated punches are more likely to cause more injuries....). |
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The victim had already been taken away in an ambulance. What happens now is down to the CPS. I would assume that the police will want to speak to any support workers of the disabled victim. In the past blacks were badly spoken to. Thankfully not many people of sound mind would now make openly racist comments, but we have now got to the stage where this black customer felt vidicated and confident enough to physically attack a disabled man in public with a plethora of CCTV cameras present. A classic case of the pendulum swinging too far. |
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