@JennaSaeed2000@ToryFibs I think you miss the point, it's not about his relatives, it's that one reaction is full of humanity the other is full of hate. Left for you to choose which you prefer
Sentencing, jury verdicts, and the problem of “terrorism connection” findings in criminal damage cases
The case Head, Corner, Kamio and Rajwani, who were jailed after causing extensive damage at an Elbit Systems site, has sparked debate about how far sentencing can go when the conviction itself is for criminal damage.
All four were convicted of criminal damage following a retrial linked to an incident in August 2024, where they broke into the site and caused significant damage. One of the defendants, Corner, also admitted a separate assault on a police officer, which the court treated as an aggravating factor in sentencing.
What has drawn wider attention, however, is not only the seriousness of the conduct but the way the case has been described afterwards. It is reported that this is believed to be the first time criminal damage convictions have been treated as having a terrorism connection. That detail matters, because it sits in an uncomfortable space between what was actually charged and what appears to have been inferred at sentencing stage.
The central legal concern is straightforward. These defendants were not tried for terrorism offences. They were not convicted of terrorism offences. The jury’s verdict was criminal damage, alongside assault in one case. That verdict defines the legal boundary of what has been proven. Everything that follows in sentencing is supposed to sit within that boundary.
Judges are entitled to consider context. Courts regularly take account of motivation, planning, level of disruption, and harm caused. In protest related cases especially, the background can be relevant to understanding seriousness. But there is a difference between considering motive as context and effectively treating a case as terrorism related when that label has not been tested or proved as an offence.
That distinction is important because terrorism is not just another descriptive label. It carries legal meaning and serious consequences. Once a case is framed in those terms, even indirectly, it can affect not only the sentence but how the public understands the conviction itself. That is why many legal systems are cautious about expanding terrorism related findings beyond the offences actually charged.
The concern raised by critics is that when sentencing begins to reflect uncharged or unproven allegations, even implicitly, it risks shifting punishment away from what the jury actually decided. In this case, the conviction was criminal damage. Whatever one thinks of the conduct, the legal question at trial was limited to that offence. If a more serious terrorism charge was appropriate, the expectation in a fair system is that it should have been brought and tested in open court.
This is not to minimise what happened at the site the damage was substantial, reportedly in the region of £1.2 million, and an assault on a policeman.
But proportionality is not only about severity. It is also about legal coherence. The punishment must clearly follow from the offence that was actually proved. When sentences start to be discussed in terms of terrorism connections without a corresponding conviction, it can create uncertainty about where the line is drawn between protest, criminal damage, and terrorism.
That uncertainty matters because public confidence in the justice system depends on clarity. People may disagree with sentences, but they should be able to understand exactly what has been decided and why. If the impression grows that sentencing is doing the work of uncharged offences, even in difficult or politically sensitive cases, it risks weakening that clarity.
Ultimately, the issue is not whether the courts should take criminal damage seriously. They should. It is whether the legal system maintains a clear separation between what a jury has found beyond reasonable doubt and what a judge may later infer about broader context. In a system built on jury verdicts, that separation is not a technicality. It is a safeguard.
The result of the dirty trick that Judge Johnson's was allowed to play on the defendants, jury, the legal profession & anyone who still believes in justice - is that judges are dishonest & can't be trusted.
Please RT this until this travesty of justice is rectified.
Thank you
@DavidW63@RichardM8422@lancelachlan My daughter works full-time at Asda and still gets UC and needs it to live. Asda is just an example of many more businesses paying the same and the state subsidises them. I suppose the people in boats crossing the channels fault though.
@RangoTheGrump@seumasabheinn@Ibrahim_Zabad@RespectIsVital I think anyone who goes along with and approves of laws that are extremely authoritarian has fascist tendencies. Most people can see the unjust nature of this law the fact that you seem to be a cheerleader for it says a lot about you.
@PeterKelma65741 Central and South America are generally considered football "continents" population of approaching 500M, indeed countries from this area have won the world cup several times. I think they are quite happy with KO times.
@RangoTheGrump@seumasabheinn@Ibrahim_Zabad@RespectIsVital Mitigation would usually be things that have come up in the trial or things that may prejudice the jury such as previous convictions, in order the defendant gets a fair trial. This mitigation was deliberately withheld from the jury. You are displaying fascist tendencies btw.