In this blog I will give the key themes in all of our sessions so far. This should be helpful for revision on our law test for the 1st December.

The main difference between them is whether they are criminal or civil. The diagram to the left is the hierarchy of the courts and how they correspond to each other.
Criminal courts deal with cases of murder, theft, fraud etc and this where the cases are bought to be heard in front of the state, the DPP. (Director of Public Prosecutions) Since 2008 Keir Stammer QC has been the DPP of England and Wales.
Civil law covers divorces and consumer, agricultural and employment laws, etc. The Court of Appeal where criminal and civil law converge.
The courts are different between England and Wales (being one system) and Scotland. Scotland have a lot of different laws. They are able to vote on most of our laws but England and Wales have no say on any of their laws which makes it very one sided and also does not help England and Wales vey much. The only court that covers England, Wales, Scotland and Ireland is the Supreme Court which is at the very top of the chain.
Being prejudice means, writing an article that may not be in the defendants favour and giving the readers an opinion. They have to have a fair trial and and being prejudice in an article is when anything mentioned contaminates the trial or the defendant.
Contempt of court is what happens when you actually are prejudice in your article. Contempt of court can allow a person to go free from the crime they may have committed as they will not be given a free trial. The person who wrote and published the article could then face jail themselves.
When a case becomes ACTIVE legally, is as soon as an arrest has been made. As soon as this happens you can be in contempt of court. You can also be in contempt of court if any of the following have been done. When the police make an arrest, when an arrest warrant has been issued, a summons has been issued by a magistrate and of course, when the person has been charged with the crime.
Before the trial begins you may report on any of the following seven points.
* Charges faced or a close summary,
* Names of the solicitors or barristers present,
* Any arrangement of bail,
The key stages of the trial are:
* Key prosecution witnesses,
* Defence opening,
* Key defence witnesses,
The categories of offence are, indictable only, which is a possible sentence of five years plus. Either-way can go to Crown or Magistrates court. Summary, stays with the Magistrates court. The powers of the Magistrates are 6 months jail, fines up to £5000, suspended sentences, conditional charge, community orders or ASBO's.
Fair Dealing
This is when you are allowed to use a small amount of footage from a film, music video, game etc for free. As long as you credit the company and the person you are allowed to use this. Just make sure it is only a few seconds and no longer. A great example of fair dealing is in Ewan and Grahams game piece where they are reviewing games and have a small amount of footage from the games in the review.
FOI Requests