Thursday, July 24, 2008

Court Rules in Favour of Mosley

Well.

Mosley, the 68-year-old president of the International Automobile Federation, won £60,000 ($120,000) in damages from the tabloid News of the World for a report about Mosley’s sex session with five prostitutes. One of the women secretly filmed the bondage and caning encounter, which featured some of the participants in prison-style uniforms and was said by the newspaper to have a Nazi theme. However, the High Court judge ruled that there was “no public interest or other justification” for the publication of the pictures and the story, and he also dismissed the paper’s suggestion that there were Nazi overtones to the session. Mosley, the son of fascist pro-Hitler British politician Oswald Mosley, welcomed the ruling as proof that his sexual behavior is a private matter. “I hope that my case will help deter newspapers in the U.K. from pursuing this type of invasive and salacious journalism,” he said.

The impact on the downmarket British tabs remains to be seen. However, the decision underscored the fact that Britain, which has no formal privacy laws, is now subject to the more rigorous privacy protections in the European Convention on Human Rights.

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Posted by Owen at 2008 hrs
Foreign Affairs + Law