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This video examines how legal conclusions are reached in Street Video Reviewer’s (SVR) analysis of auditing specifically on his review of Pure Audits visit to a location in Witney. It is not about whether auditing is good or bad, and it is not legal advice. The focus is on legal method: whether conclusions properly follow from statute and established principles, rather than from intent, reaction, speculation, or personal objection. This video gets into legal detail, so if that’s not your thing it may be about as exciting as watching paint dry. If you don’t fancy watching the whole thing, here’s the spoiler: SVR names various offences in his review of Pure Audits, but when you dig into the legal tests and compare them to what’s actually on the footage, he doesn’t demonstrate unlawful behaviour. References ________________________________________ Trespass • Bernstein of Leigh (Baron) v Skyviews & General Ltd [1978] QB 479 • Anglo International Upholland Ltd v Wainwright & Persons Unknown [2023] EWHC 1314 (KB) • MBR Acres Ltd v Curtin [2024] EWHC 331 (KB) — height matters; visual impression ≠ trespass without evidence • R v Jones & Another (2 Cr App R 375) — aggravated trespass requires specific intent to obstruct/disrupt ________________________________________ Harassment • Protection from Harassment Act 1997 • Majrowski v Guy’s & St Thomas’s NHS Trust [2006] UKHL 34 — requires conduct that is “oppressive and unacceptable”, not mere annoyance or upset • R (on the application of Mengesha) v Westminster Magistrates’ Court [2013] EWHC 3055 (Admin) — filming from a public highway lawful absent obstruction/threats; “annoyance” alone insufficient for s.5 POA • DPP v Orum [1989] — disorderly behaviour and context ________________________________________ Public Order • Public Order Act 1986, s.5 • Police Reform Act 2002, s.50 • Anti-social Behaviour, Crime and Policing Act 2014 (CPNs / CPWs) • Harvey v DPP [2011] EWHC 399 (Admin) — s.5 POA and “harassment, alarm or distress” • Redmond-Bate v DPP [1999] — lawful behaviour, audience reaction, and the “heckler’s veto” • Dehal v CPS [2005] — reaction of others does not determine criminality • Ziegler v DPP [2021] UKSC 23 — proportionality and public order powers • Beggs et al., Public Order: Law and Practice ________________________________________ Additional legal references • Data Protection Act 2018, including Schedule 2, Part 5 (journalistic exemption) • UK GDPR, Articles 6 and 85 • Percy v DPP [2001] — offence analysis must follow statutory elements • Clarkson & Keating, Criminal Law: Text and Materials • Tom Bingham, The Rule of Law ________________________________________ Police & Media Guidance ACPOS (2010) – Guidance on Photography and Filming in Public Places (Recognises that photography and filming in public places is generally lawful and not, of itself, suspicious or criminal.) NPCC (2021) – Guidance on Policing the Media, Bloggers, and Social Media Content Creators (Acknowledges citizen journalists and online publishers, and the importance of freedom of expression and public interest considerations.) ________________________________________ Use of Third-Party Content This video includes short clips from Street Video Reviewer and Pure Audits for the purpose of criticism, review, and comment. Such use is made in accordance with section 30 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 (fair dealing for criticism and review). All clips are used proportionately and only to the extent necessary for analysis. ________________________________________ Important clarification These references are provided for context and general legal principles only. This video is not legal advice and does not attempt to determine the legality of any specific individual’s conduct. ________________________________________