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09 January 2026 / Lawrence McNamara , Lauren Schaefer
Issue: 8144 / Categories: Features , Contempt , Criminal , Media
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Contempt of court: drawing the line

What can be said when criminal proceedings are active? Lawrence McNamara & Lauren Schaefer set out the Law Commission’s recommendations on contempt of court
  • The Law Commission recommends keeping contempt by publication laws largely unchanged but delaying the point at which proceedings become ‘active’ from arrest to charge, giving authorities more flexibility to counter misinformation without risking contempt.
  • Once proceedings are active, the existing ‘substantial risk of serious prejudice’ test should remain, with no fixed categories of information deemed always safe or unsafe to publish—context must determine whether publication risks contempt.
  • The commission rejects a broad public-interest defence but proposes clarifying the existing ‘merely incidental’ defence, stressing that fair-trial rights must not be undermined.

The Law Commission recently published Part 1 of its report on contempt of court laws. The commission addresses a question that became especially contentious after the murders of Elsie Dot Stancombe, Alice da Silva Aguiar, and Bebe King in Southport in July 2024 and the public disorder that followed: what

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NEWS
A High Court ruling involving the Longleat estate has exposed the fault line between modern family building and historic trust drafting. Writing in NLJ this week, Charlotte Coyle, director and family law expert at Freeths, examines Cator v Thynn [2026] EWHC 209 (Ch), where trustees sought approval to modernise trusts that retain pre-1970 definitions of ‘child’, ‘grandchild’ and ‘issue’
Fresh proposals to criminalise ‘nudification’ apps, prioritise cyberflashing and non-consensual intimate images, and even ban under-16s from social media have reignited debate over whether the Online Safety Act 2023 (OSA 2023) is fit for purpose. Writing in NLJ this week, Alexander Brown, head of technology, media and telecommunications, and Alexandra Webster, managing associate, Simmons & Simmons, caution against reactive law-making that could undermine the Act’s ‘risk-based and outcomes-focused’ design
Recent allegations surrounding Peter Mandelson and Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor have reignited scrutiny of the ancient common law offence of misconduct in public office. Writing in NLJ this week, Simon Parsons, teaching fellow at Bath Spa University, asks whether their conduct could clear a notoriously high legal hurdle
A landmark ruling has reshaped child clinical negligence claims. Writing in NLJ this week, Jodi Newton, head of birth and paediatric negligence at Osbornes Law, explains how the Supreme Court in CCC v Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust [2026] UKSC 5 has overturned Croke v Wiseman, ending the long-standing bar on children recovering ‘lost years’ earnings
A Court of Appeal ruling has drawn a firm line under party autonomy in arbitration. Writing in NLJ this week, Masood Ahmed, associate professor at the University of Leicester, analyses Gluck v Endzweig [2026] EWCA Civ 145, where a clause allowing arbitrators to amend an award ‘at any time’ was held incompatible with the Arbitration Act 1996
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