Tuesday, January 20, 2009

KERAN HENDERSON CASE; PART TWELVE; BBC REPORT ON CONTEMPT CHARGE AGAINST JURY FOREMAN;


The BBC report ran earlier today under the heading, "Juror faces action over comments."

"Keran Henderson was convicted of manslaughter on a 10-2 majority
Permission has been granted to launch contempt of court proceedings against a newspaper publisher and a jury foreman who told "secrets of the jury room","
the story began.

"Childminder Keran Henderson, 43, of Iver Heath, Bucks, was convicted in 2007 of the manslaughter of 11-month-old Maeve Sheppard, on a 10-2 majority," it continued;

"Mike Seckerson was one of two jurors who condemned the conviction.

The jurors' comments, but not their names, were published by The Times newspaper in December 2007.

Voting intentions

Henderson, a mother-of-two, had pleaded not guilty to manslaughter.

In the article, the jurors were reported to have said that Henderson was wrongly convicted of killing the child by shaking her sufficiently violently to cause blindness and brain damage.

Philip Havers QC, for the Attorney General, applied to the High Court in London for permission to bring contempt proceedings against Times Newspapers Ltd and Mr Seckerson.

Mr Havers told Lord Justice Maurice Kay and Mr Justice Simon that the article "breaches the absolute rule against disclosing the essential secrets of the jury room".

He said it revealed voting intentions of jury members and disclosed their reasoning in coming to a judgement.

The judges gave the Attorney General permission to take legal action for breaches of the 1981 Contempt of Court Act, adding "we don't think this is the very gravest case of jury indiscretion - nevertheless we grant permission"."


Harold Levy...hlevy15@gmail.com;