Ruling

01741-20 A man v thesun.co.uk

  • Complaint Summary

    A man complained to the Independent Press Standards Organisation that thesun.co.uk breached Clause 11 (Victims of sexual assault) in an article published in 2020.

    • Published date

      26th March 2021

    • Outcome

      Breach - sanction: publication of adjudication

    • Code provisions

      11 Victims of sexual assault

Summary of complaint

1. A man complained to the Independent Press Standards Organisation that thesun.co.uk breached Clause 11 (Victims of sexual assault) in an article published in 2020.


2. The article reported on the life of a person convicted some years ago of a number of serious criminal offences. It reported on the man’s background, his crimes and life in prison. The article went on to report that “[a]ccording to a close friend [the complainant] was sexually assaulted when he was 11”.


3. The complainant said this reference identified him as a victim of sexual assault. He said that he had never spoken to any media outlet about the incident nor ever waived his legal right to lifelong anonymity; which he said was originally granted to him at the time he gave his testimony against the alleged perpetrator and, subsequently, by the Sexual Offences (Amendment) Act 1992. Therefore, he said that the publication was not legally free to identify him as a victim of sexual assault and had breached Clause 11.


4. The publication did not accept it had breached the Code. It emphasised that the complainant’s identity as a victim of sexual assault was in the public domain before the article under complaint had been published. It was first mentioned in a newspaper article of 1986 prior to the enactment of the Sexual Offences (Amendment) Act 1992, which grants anonymity to victims of sexual assault. The 1986 article referred to the complainant being “sexually molested by older boys”; information the publication alleged had come from a then-close personal advisor to the complainant. This information had also been published on the complainant’s Wikipedia page; in two books authored by third parties in 1994 and 2015 respectively; and in a 2015 article published by a different newspaper. The publication argued it had not been unlawful to identify the complainant as a victim of sexual assault prior to the enactment of the 1992 Act; that it could be inferred that the information had first been disclosed on the complainant’s behalf given that he had given the information to somebody who had been identified at the time as his advisor; and that the information had subsequently been placed into the public domain seemingly with the complainant’s acquiescence. In these circumstances, the publication argued that it was legally free to identify the complainant as a victim of sexual assault in the article under complaint. It submitted that the complaint also raised a novel point of law, namely whether the 1992 Act prevented the identification of victims of sexual assault where this information was already in the public domain prior to the Act coming into force and prior to the newspaper’s own disclosure. The publication submitted that IPSO’s Complaints Committee could not authoritatively determine such points of law.


5. On the question of whether there was an adequate justification to identify the complainant as a victim of sexual assault, the publication said that identifying him as a victim was unlikely to be intrusive given that this information was already in the public domain. The newspaper argued that the complainant had been convicted of serious crimes of significant public concern and interest. As such, it said that the discussion of the circumstances that might explain or contextualise this offending, such as his status as a victim of sexual assault, was therefore also a matter of legitimate public interest.


6. In response, the complainant said that he had neither consented to nor acquiesced to being identified as a victim of sexual assault. He said that his cooperation in the writing of the 2015 book was limited to answering some questions from its author and that the person who had been named as the original source of the information -a former friend- had never acted as his advisor as alleged by the newspaper. He disputed that the publication was legally free to identify him as a victim of sexual assault because it had been reported prior to the enactment of the 1992 Act; he said there was no basis for asserting that the 1992 Act did not cover republication. He also confirmed that he had never placed the information before a court as, say, part of his mitigation; and it had never formed any part of the legal proceedings relating to the serious crimes for which he was convicted. Further, he said that it would be wrong to rely on previous breaches of his right to anonymity to establish an adequate justification in this case.


7. The publication said it had removed the reference to the complainant being a victim of sexual assault when his concerns were first brought to its attention. During the referral period, the publication also offered to publish a footnote to the article, stating:


A previous version of this article included some additional information which [the complainant] considers to be private. It has now been removed.


8. The complainant did not accept this offer as a resolution to his complaint.


Relevant Code provisions

9. Clause 11 (Victims of sexual assault)

The press must not identify or publish material likely to lead to the identification of a victim of sexual assault unless there is adequate justification and they are legally free to do so. Journalists are entitled to make enquiries but must take care and exercise discretion to avoid the unjustified disclosure of the identity of a victim of sexual assault.


Findings of the Committee


10. It was not in dispute that the complainant had been identified as a victim of sexual assault in the article under complaint. The issue for the Committee was whether the publication was legally free to identify him as such and whether it had an adequate justification to do so. The publication needed to establish it had met both of these two tests in order to avoid a breach of Clause 11.


11. The Committee first considered whether the publication had demonstrated that it had an adequate justification for identifying the complainant as a victim of sexual assault. It noted that cases where a publication is able to establish an adequate justification are likely to be rare; anonymity for victims of sexual assault is of great importance both to victims and to society generally. The Committee noted the publication’s argument that the complainant’s status as a victim of sexual assault was already in the public domain. However, further disclosures of this information were likely to be intrusive and distressing to the complainant. Moreover, these previous disclosures were without the complainant’s consent. The Committee also noted that the reference to the complainant being a victim of sexual assault had been made in passing in the article; there was no analysis of why this information was relevant or important to understanding the complainant’s crimes. Finally, whilst the publication had argued that the complainant’s status as a victim of sexual assault might explain or contextualise his offending, the Committee noted that this information had never formed part of the prosecution or defence’s case at trial nor in subsequent appeals. For these reasons, the Committee concluded that the publication did not have an adequate justification to identify the complainant as a victim of sexual assault. On this basis, there was a breach of Clause 11.


12. Given the Committee’s finding that the publication had breached Clause 11 on the basis that it did not have an adequate justification to identify the complainant as a victim of sexual assault, it was not necessary for the Committee to decide whether the publication was legally free to identify the complainant as such. The Committee nevertheless observed that the 1992 Act granted lifelong anonymity to victims of sexual assault and did not include an express exception in circumstances where an individual had been identified as a victim before the enactment of the 1992 Act or where the information had already been placed in the public domain other than with the victim’s consent.


Conclusion

13. The complaint was upheld.

Remedial Action required

14. Having upheld the complaint, the Committee considered what remedial action should be required. In circumstances where the newspaper had breached Clause 11, the publication of an adjudication was appropriate.

15. The complaint related to material published in one online article. Therefore, the adjudication should be published on the publication’s website, with a link to the full adjudication (including the headline) appearing in the top 50% of stories on the publication’s website for 24 hours; it should then be archived in the usual way. The headline to the adjudication should make clear that IPSO has upheld the complaint, give the title of the publication and refer to the complaint’s subject matter. The headline must be agreed with IPSO in advance. The terms of the adjudication for publication are as follows:

A man complained to the Independent Press Standards Organisation that thesun.co.uk breached Clause 11 (Accuracy) in an article published in 2020. The article reported on the life of a person convicted some years ago of a number of serious criminal offences. It reported that “[a]ccording to a close friend [the complainant] was sexually assaulted when he was 11”.

The complainant said this reference identified him as a victim of sexual assault. He said that he had never spoken to any media outlet about the incident nor ever waived his legal right to lifelong anonymity; which he said was granted by the Sexual Offences (Amendment) Act 1992. Therefore, he said that the publication was not legally free to identify him as a victim of sexual assault and had breached Clause 11.

The publication mentioned that the complainant had been identified as a victim of sexual assault in an article prior to the enactment of the 1992 Act; that it could be inferred that the information had first been disclosed on the complainant’s behalf; and that the information had subsequently been placed into the public domain seemingly with the complainant’s acquiescence. In these circumstances, the publication argued that it was legally free to identify the complainant as a victim of sexual assault. It also said it had an adequate justification to do so, given that the fact might explain or contextualise the complainant’s offending and given that disclosure of this fact was unlikely to be intrusive given it was already in the public domain. In response, the complainant said that he had neither consented to nor acquiesced to being identified as a victim of sexual assault.

IPSO found that the publication did not have an adequate justification to identify the complainant as a victim of sexual assault and as such had breached Clause 11. Further disclosure of the complainant’s status as a victim of sexual assault was still likely to be intrusive regardless of whether this fact had previously been published. Additionally, previous disclosures of this fact were without the complainant’s consent. Finally, the article did not attempt to explain why this information was relevant or important to understanding the complainant’s crimes, it was simply mentioned in passing. Given the Committee’s finding that the publication had breached Clause 11 on the basis that it did not have an adequate justification to identify the complainant as a victim of sexual assault, it was not necessary for the Committee to decide whether the publication was legally free to identify the complainant as such.

Date complaint received: 10/03/2020

Date decision issued: 11/03/2021