Use of s60 & TerrorAct on Mayday

This e-mail is being circulated to correct some inaccurate legal advice (see
Resources section on www.maydaymonopoly.net) going round for Mayday.  The
final version of a bust card about the effect of the Terrorism Act on your
rights - more likely to be used now than ever in the present climate of
hysteria - will be out by Thursday.  See contact details at end.


"Legal Advice: Section 60"

Contrary to information being circulated, the legal basis of the tactic of
police cordoning off demonstrations and forbidding large numbers of people
to leave from inside the cordon - as used at J18, N30 and Mayday2K - is NOT
s60 of the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994.

Police, indeed anyone, can use reasonable force to detain people to prevent
a breach of the peace where they fear one is imminent.  This was the basis
of the effective mass imprisonment at previous demonstrations.  It is not an
arrest.  The powers in s60 have been used to search people individually as
they are being released from the cordon and this is where the confusion
stems from.  S60 can be used where a senior cop reasonably suspects there
will be incidents of serious violence _or_ that people are carrying
dangerous weapons or offensive weapons in a locality (inserted by s8 Knives
Act 1997).

1. Once police have released you from the cordoned area, they can _then_
only detain you "for as long as necessary to carry out a search".  While in
the cordoned area they can detain you as long as they have reasonable (i.e.
objectively justifiable) grounds that this is necessary to prevent a breach
of the peace.

4. While performing a search they _can_ ask you to remove outer clothing,
such as coats and jumpers in public.  In addition, s60(4A) - inserted by s25
CDA 1998 - allows the police to force you to remove anything they reasonably
suspect you are wearing wholly or mainly to conceal your identity.  There is
nothing to stop you putting something else on after you have taken off a
mask or had it confiscated.

5. The s60 search is for "offensive weapons or dangerous instruments".  This
is not limited to large things such as samurai swords and stun guns (taking
examples from certain Sunday papers) but can include razor blades. They
_can_ search inside wallets, purses, small pockets for these.

6. They _can_ search personal possessions for dangerous instruments that
might be hidded inside and they can also seize prohibited articles such as
drugs *.  While it is true that Article 8 of the European Convention on
Human Rights (ECHR) contains a qualified right of respect for your private

life, and that under s6 of the Human Rights Act 1998 public authorities such
as the police will be acting unlawfully if they breach any right in the
ECHR, it is wrong to see this as doing something as absolute as assuring
your privacy.

Before police start searching through personal possessions, e.g. address
books, cards in wallet, warn them politely that if they do start trying to
read what's in your address book or on the cards in your wallet rather than
performing a cursory search, i.e. seeing if razor blades fall out onto the
ground from your address book, they will be acting outside their powers and
you will stop them.

8. Before conducting the search, an officer must take reasonable steps to
communicate their name, number, station, etc. They also have to provide you
with a written record of the search, which you should ask for.  If they
can't provide one straight away they must tell you which police station you
can get it from.  Police dislike form filling and paperwork particularly
when it leaves less time to bash anti-capitalists and then fit them up.

9. Under the Data Protection Act, anyone holding personal data relating to
other people (this includes video and photographic footage) has to provide
copies to those people for £10, as demonstrated by Mark Thomas on C4.  If
substantial numbers of people on the Mayday demonstration exercise this
right, the police will have to spend their resources on finding footage with
those individuals on, in order to collate it and send it to them, rather
than gathering intelligence and preparing for arrests.

* Anyone arrested for possession of cannabis should be aware that there is a
test case going through the courts on the compatability of cannabis
proibition with the Human Rights Act - you should seek advice from Liberty
before accepting a caution or pleading guilty.



LEGAL BRIEFING FROM LDMG

Identification
While there is no obligation to carry identification failure to do so may
delay your release if arrested.  If you do not plan to withhold your details
from the police you might as well carry things such as your bank cards.

"Human Rights"
Only a few rights are absolute, such as the right not to be tortured.
British courts have been quite stingy in interpreting rights, and the
European Court tends to have a hands off approach where there are issues of
public disorder.  It's dangerous to start saying human rights give you the
rights to do this and that as the rights have to be interpreted in their
context.  In particular UK courts and even the European Court have been very
hands-off and deferential to the police when judging the legality of
supposed breaches of the peace.

Section 60 Orders
[see above]

Public order offences
These are all from the Public Order Act 1986.  You can only be arrested for
"causing harassment, alarm or distress" (s5) if you have already been warned
by an officer.

Terrorism Act 2000
While this has only been used so far to ban 21 groups, there are enough
powers in this law to create a full-on police state.  While journalists and
anyone connected to those groups in particular should take legal advice,
anyone at the Mayday demonstration could be arrested under the Terrorism Act

even if they have not committed an offence.  You can be detained for _seven_
days and held incommunicado for the first 48 hours.  See the forthcoming
bust card for more info: you ignore this law at your peril.

Raif N.B. The text above is from me and not CATA. Conditions of use of the above text are on my website at http://get.to/raif and so is a leaflet on dealing with the police done for J18 (both in the law section).

Campaign Against the Terrorism Act (CATA)
BM Box 563
LONDON WC1N 3XX

_________________________________
tel: 0845 458 2966
web: http://go.to/ta2000
e-mail: ta2000@go.to
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