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(Guest)

Adverse publicity may impede the course of justice in a vari

 

Adverse publicity may impede the course of justice in a variety of different ways,

 

The ECtHR, in the  Sunday Times case,

 recognised the “pressure principle” 
referred to by the House of Lords, and held that it was sufficiently certain. 
The Court also considers that there can be no doubt that the 
‘pressure principle’ was formulated with sufficient precision to enable 
the applicants to foresee to the appropriate degree the consequences 
which publication of the draft article might entail. In Vine Products Ltd 
v Green,

 Mr Justice Buckley had formulated the law in this way: 


It is a contempt of this court for any newspaper to comment on 
pending legal proceedings in any way which is likely to prejudice 
the fair trial of the action. That may arise in various ways. It may 
be that the comment is one which is likely in some way or other 
to bring pressure to bear upon one or other of the parties to the 
action, so as to prevent that party from prosecuting or from 
defending the action, or encourage that party to submit to terms 


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