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You can’t always get what you want...

28 April 2016 / Amber Melville-Brown
Issue: 7696 / Categories: Opinion
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Amber Melville-Brown navigates a strange new world for media lawyers

The game of King Canute is not one that the Court of Appeal was happy to play in PJS v News Group (celebrity injunction) . In the first verse of what is becoming a fairly lengthy legal ballad, the court had previously overturned a first instance decision and required that the privacy and the identity of the individuals concerned in this now highly publicised privacy case be preserved. But come verse two, and the court discharged its previously ordered privacy injunction; not because it considered that the privacy rights of the claimant were outweighed by the free speech rights of the defendant, but because the private information was now so widely talked about that it was hardly private at all (see [2016] EWCA Civ 393).

A tide of private information about the couple crashed onto our shores, in publications from over the borders in Scotland and Ireland and the US; and the Supreme Court, now asked to consider the issue, will presumably

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MOVERS & SHAKERS

Gilson Gray—Linda Pope

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NEWS
The landmark Supreme Court’s decision in Johnson v FirstRand Bank Ltd—along with Rukhadze v Recovery Partners—redefine fiduciary duties in commercial fraud. Writing in NLJ this week, Mary Young of Kingsley Napley analyses the implications of the rulings
Barristers Ben Keith of 5 St Andrew’s Hill and Rhys Davies of Temple Garden Chambers use the arrest of Simon Leviev—the so-called Tinder Swindler—to explore the realities of Interpol red notices, in this week's NLJ
Mazur v Charles Russell Speechlys [2025] has upended assumptions about who may conduct litigation, warn Kevin Latham and Fraser Barnstaple of Kings Chambers in this week's NLJ. But is it as catastrophic as first feared?
Lord Sales has been appointed to become the Deputy President of the Supreme Court after Lord Hodge retires at the end of the year
Limited liability partnerships (LLPs) are reportedly in the firing line in Chancellor Rachel Reeves upcoming Autumn budget
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