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Correcting, clarifying or commenting on media reports of family court cases
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Explaining or commenting on published judgments of family court cases
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Highlighting other transparency news
MEDIA (MIS)REPORTS OF FAMILY COURT CASES
The Daily Mail – Polly Morgan commented on inaccuracies in the Mail Online report, New ten-page online form detailing money and assets they want under plans to streamline the system. See Monetary Madness Misreporting:
Monetary Madness Misreporting by @pollyemorgan for @seethrujustice: https://t.co/KYktzPKneyhttps://t.co/SMkJFuGirR via @MailOnline
— transparency project (@seethrujustice) January 24, 2018
The Guardian – We continued our efforts to establish the facts behind a 2017 Guardian report of new measures under trial at Cafcass to prevent ‘parental alienation’, including penalties such as permanent loss of contact. See Cafcass, parental alienation and the law, and subsequent comments there (scroll down):
@MyCafcass, parental alienation and the law : https://t.co/KT2xcds4NS pic.twitter.com/B8h4uiWVP0
— transparency project (@seethrujustice) January 19, 2018
The Daily Mail – Family court judge must explain why pianist jailed, says campaigner was the headline of a Daily Mail report last week. We have made some enquiries about whether a judgment is, or will be, available and will report further when we have news.
The Times – The Times asked ‘Is there such a thing as a good divorce? (paywall). We commented in Is the law becoming meaner to the poorer spouse?:
'Is the law becoming meaner to the poorer spouse?' – @pollyemorgan responds to a recent @thetimes report here for @seethrujustice: https://t.co/CGxjVUR8pS pic.twitter.com/KZ6XzNBXCs
— transparency project (@seethrujustice) January 24, 2018
The Times – Twitter users responded to inaccuracies in two Times reports:
Mistress fights widow for share of £2.5m will – Seen by many as a misleading headline; with a report neither giving key information, nor linking to the freely available public judgment that did explain this Inheritance Act claim on behalf of a child. See this twitter thread:
Misleading headline “Mistress fights widow for share of £2.5m will” as the claim is the child’s, not the mother’s, & article doesn’t mention that Inheritance Act 1975 claim can only be made if man died domiciled in England, & this is disputedhttps://t.co/KMFPaHd4vf
— Barbara Rich (@BarbaraRich_law) January 17, 2018
Judge blocks woman’s bid to prevent elderly father marrying – Twitter commentators also questioned the suggestion in this Times report of a secret injunction. A temporary injunction was made to maintain the current position for a week while the dispute transferred to the Court of Protection, where agreement was reached to suspend the wedding until final court decision. The Transparency Guidance does not require publication of judgments from interim decisions but the first of two judgments the Times elect not to link to, references it:
A “secret court”, a woman in her 70s described as a “girlfriend”, no link to published judgment https://t.co/e0HHg6Fb4v @seethrujustice
Woman fails to stop elderly father marrying https://t.co/Y4pOGZzyTN
— Barbara Rich (@BarbaraRich_law) January 23, 2018
The Sun – Reported Serious Case Review (SCR) findings from the death of Harry House, with a headline inaccurately focused solely on social services: Social services missed chances to stop violent thug who beat two-year-old tot to death. The SCR itself found missed opportunities across multiple agencies including social services, information sharing failures, and a lack of single agency oversight. It was the Dorset Echo who provided, arguably, the most in depth and balanced report. While BBC News stood out in linking their readers to the SCR:
Good morning Dorset. Today's front page – Harry House murder – case review: 'Lost opportunities' identified in home where Harry was murdered https://t.co/QjTMgIroHm pic.twitter.com/RN6Bh30Q24
— Dorset Echo (@Dorsetecho) January 25, 2018
The Guardian and ITV News – Reported the BASW-backed Adoption Enquiry Report on social work ethics and human rights in adoption, though both inaccurately described the UK as one of only three countries allowing non consensual adoption. We saw sector responses from BASW, Suespicious Minds, Andy Elvin, Child Protection Resource, Adoption UK; Community Care; ADCS; Family Law Week; Coram; and Coram-BAAF:
Not quite right, @guardian (https://t.co/PViP5lXPWO). See my colleague Claire Fenton-Glynn at https://t.co/5nI1Hm79Gb and me at https://t.co/u8hrA4RNCz. But it’s true that adoption is heavily prioritised & difficult to stop: https://t.co/KFXvF4rb4V. pic.twitter.com/tifdxz9J4S
— Brian Sloan (@briandsloan) January 20, 2018
Do please read what we actually wrote in the report – there are important inaccuracies in this article, for example, on contact … further background literature and other materials on legal and policy contexts will be going up on BASW website very soon https://t.co/nEtSSkbIfD
— Social Work at Hud (@HudSocialWork) January 23, 2018
The Daily Mail – ITV interviewed Teddy Hodgkins parents with sensitivity and balance. Several papers then reported that interview without the contextualising information. Blog to follow on some issues about expert evidence such cases raise. Tweets including here and here:
Appalling. Surely there have been enough mistakes made in EDS cases to trigger testing right at the beginning !! I know it’s the Daily Fail but if the family really were treated like this surely they have grounds for litigation ?
— alison bushell (@AliBushell) January 17, 2018
Transparency Positives
BBC (Stories) – BBC Stories enabled a powerful voice that caught attention. I begged social services to take my children away is one woman’s story of asking for her children to be removed (leading to their adoption) at a time when she was unable to protect herself from abuse, addiction and mental distress; and of her route to recovery, through peer support, after formal substance misuse interventions had not worked for her:
This is an incredibly powerful story. Please read. Familiar story of women caught up in a cycle of loss and addiction. But a unique message too. https://t.co/usze7lhJ6l
— Isabelle Trowler (@IsabelleTrowler) January 22, 2018
Linker of the week
BBC News – Transparently linked readers directly from their own report to the Serious Case Review it was based it on. (We also saw some helpful transparency about primary sources from the Daily Mail and Guardian):
Thanks @BBCNews for linking readers to the Serious Case Review itself in this article. Not seen any other local or national publications do so:
BBC News – Harry House murder: 'Lost opportunities' in Broadmayne toddler death https://t.co/1Ds1xQKfHg— transparency project (@seethrujustice) January 27, 2018
Helpful that @LaraKeay @DailyMail explains her report is based on a judgment published yesterday by Judge Paul Matthews. A link would be even better in the future so readers could find it, and for transparency: https://t.co/tdgeNmTLhahttps://t.co/yC455PNtzx via @MailOnline
— transparency project (@seethrujustice) January 24, 2018
Helpful to readers to at least know transparently that the report this @Guardian @owenbowcott news piece is based on will follow from @VictimsComm tomorrow. Even if they can't read it yet.
Child victims let down by lack of help in court, says UK watchdog https://t.co/tCN4vFoUR1— transparency project (@seethrujustice) January 17, 2018
NEWLY PUBLISHED CASES FOR EXPLANATION OR COMMENT
Coroner’s verdict in respect of the death of Poppi Worthington – The coroner published his report, Review of the evidence, findings and conclusion and we updated our blog and time line accordingly:
Poppi Worthington – post and timeline updated in light of Coroner’s verdict : https://t.co/6ivbvi2fR1
— transparency project (@seethrujustice) January 20, 2018
A Local Authority v G (Parent with Learning Disability) [2017] EWFC B94 (18 December 2017) – Kisses and cuddles not enough… explains a legally ‘ordinary’ family court decision that prompted a BBC report and twitter debate on whether lack of reasonable support for parents with learning disabilities had lead to adoption. See also this post at Child Protection Resource by Beth Tarleton:
Kisses and cuddles not enough…a belated summary about recent case involving adoption of the children of a learning disabled mother : https://t.co/1njdzP4bFk pic.twitter.com/NOzNcqs5Nw
— transparency project (@seethrujustice) January 20, 2018
IN OTHER TRANSPARENCY NEWS
CAFCASS Open Board Meeting – The January 2018 Open Board Meeting entitled Voice of the Child: How to help children’s voices be heard loud and clear throughout the family court process was on Friday 26th January. We attended. Blog to follow.
Crisis in our courts and how to solve it – This Society of Editors Seminar took place at the Telegraph offices on18th January. We attended and reported here . See also twitter threads here and here:
Is there a Crisis in Our Courts? The @socofeduk seems to think so, but it's really a crisis in local newspaper court coverage. Three of us from @seethrujustice attended the seminar last week. This is our report https://t.co/hYTONsOlKU
— Paul Magrath (@Maggotlaw) January 21, 2018
My main takeway: many see financial support for local press as a solution for the crisis in court reporting. My view: subsidy of commercial local press won't necessarily lead to improved court access, reporting reach and quality – answer has to be broader https://t.co/5753QHZLDn
— Judith Townend (@JTownend) January 18, 2018
Fit for the future – Later the same day the Ministry of Justice and HMCTS published a public consultation in the form of an online survey on proposals to shape future decisions on the court and tribunal estate..as part of the transformation of our justice system. Transform Justice and the Times reported. See also the latest HMCTS Reform Roadshow announced in Birmingham on 29th January:
When is a consultation not a consultation? When the consultation document mentions radical proposals on flexible hours, online court processes & fully virtual hearings but no consultation questions mention these https://t.co/KOWzYtc24d
— Penelope Gibbs (@PenelopeGibbs2) January 19, 2018
Are you a legal professional with views on our reform programme? Register your interest in the #ReformRoadshows at Birmingham IET Centre on 29 January – https://t.co/hy1jGdst2A #CourtReform #Birmingham @CrimeSolicitors @TheCriminalBar @thebarcouncil @lccsa pic.twitter.com/j2D73nwB8U
— HMCTS (@HMCTSgovuk) January 23, 2018
The Care Crisis Review: Wales – We reported the Welsh roundtable, held on 10th January, within the Care Crisis Review on the reasons for, and solutions to, the rise in numbers of children in care and going through the courts. See The sector-led review into the rise in care applications and number of children in care: Wales
New from @seethrujustice The Care Crisis Review – round table discussions in Wales https://t.co/iBk9BnHT5t
— Julie Doughty (@julie_doughty) January 22, 2018
The Care Crisis Review: Surveys – The Family Rights Group launched separate online surveys for families and professionals to contribute to the Review. The deadline is Sunday 11th February:
Care Crisis Review – please give us your views https://t.co/Mmw7KMdyTo #vr4smallbiz
— Family Rights Group (@FamilyRightsGp) January 18, 2018
Publishing to Protect: When to do the counter-intuitive – A London Resolution hosted seminar touching on the recent Tower Hamlets case. Free to social workers and Guardians:
Set to be an interesting event touching on the recent Tower Hamlets case. FREE for social workers and Guardians.@seethrujustice @ResLondon @ResFamilyLaw https://t.co/6dxmS955n2
— Zoe Fleetwood (@IAmZoeFleetwood) January 18, 2018
Feature pic: Courtesy of Flickr Lauri Heikkinenon via Creative Commons licence – with thanks