NOTES TO EDITORS:
1. The panel of Assessors was appointed by the Prime Minister for their expertise in the range of issues being considered by the Inquiry. Their job was to advise Lord Justice Leveson in those areas of expertise rather than on findings of fact which are purely a matter for the Judge. Contrary to some media reports, Shami Chakrabarti remained in Liberty's employment and neither she nor Liberty have taken any remuneration or expenses for her role on the panel.
2. Whilst the Report acknowledges that whether an industry body meets the criteria triggering legal benefits will ultimately be a matter for the courts, it suggests that a “recognition body” should initially decide whether a press regulatory group meets the statutory standards. Liberty regards this as unnecessary bureaucratic intervention and believes that this “recognition” should be left to the Courts not a quango.
3. The report also proposes changes to the Information Commissioner’s Office. For example it recommends making the ICO a Commission with increased resources and to expand prosecution powers to cover any offence that is in breach of privacy principles. It also proposes increasing the penalty for breach of section 55 of the DPA (unlawfully obtaining, disclosing or procuring the disclosure of personal information without the consent of the data controller) – to include a custodial sentence. Compensation would also be extended to individuals who have suffered distress but not financial loss, as a result of a breach of the DPA requirements. In discharging its functions, the ICO would take into account whether newspapers were members of a regulatory group. Liberty supports these suggestions.
4. The national newspapers have been understandably unanimous in their rejection of state regulation but have generally agreed with the need for effective, independent regulation. In Liberty’s view they should all be able to support and implement the principal (if not the last-resort) proposal in the Leveson Report:
“There is scope for a new, tougher self-regulator – one with the power to proactively investigate and to fine”
The Independent, 27th Nov 2012
“The proposals for a new voluntary regulator are extremely severe on wrongdoers… Nobody can call such a regime toothless”
Mail on Sunday, 25th Nov 2012
“The crucial question to any journalist advocating independent regulation over statute is this: is the new regulator proposed by the press sufficiently tough, independent and enduring to command widespread public support?”
The Guardian, 26th Nov 2012
“How would a belligerent press behave if they saw a powerful, self-regulated industry behave as badly as journalism sometimes has over the last ten years?”
The Observer, 25th Nov 2012
“No one defends the PCC, the toothless self-regulator of the press for the past two decades…”
Independent on Sunday, 25th Nov 2012
“…we need to move to a system of independent regulation with a judicial, not statutory, backstop”
The Times, 27th Nov 2012
“...a new self-regulatory structure…should have the power to summon editors and journalists to answer for their actions, and to punish newspapers with substantial fines if they breach the code of good practice. It should also have a duty to report suspected crimes to the police. It must offer a fair, fast and forceful solution when issues arise. Public confidence in it will depend on its ability to hold newspapers firmly to account”
Daily Telegraph, 28th Oct 2012