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    WEB TROLLS TO GET 2 YEARS IN JAIL IF CONVICTED

    Sykes
    Sykes


    Posts : 6835
    Join date : 2011-07-17

    WEB TROLLS TO GET 2 YEARS IN JAIL IF CONVICTED Empty WEB TROLLS TO GET 2 YEARS IN JAIL IF CONVICTED

    Post  Sykes Sat Oct 18, 2014 8:48 pm

    WEB TROLLS TO GET 2 YEARS IN JAIL IF CONVICTED B0QIitSIUAAnw_4

    WEB TROLLS TO GET 2 YEARS IN JAIL IF CONVICTED B0QKId4IYAAOOMa
    Sykes
    Sykes


    Posts : 6835
    Join date : 2011-07-17

    WEB TROLLS TO GET 2 YEARS IN JAIL IF CONVICTED Empty Re: WEB TROLLS TO GET 2 YEARS IN JAIL IF CONVICTED

    Post  Sykes Sun Oct 19, 2014 7:21 am

    Crackdown on the cyber-mobs poisoning Britain: Sentence for web trolls to be quadrupled to two years after shocking high-profile online abuse cases

    Maximum six month sentence for internet trolls to be quadrupled
    Comes after model Chloe Madeley received rape threats on Twitter
    Model's mother Judy Finnigan had shared view on release of Ched Evans
    Justice Secretary Chris Grayling said trolls 'poisoned our national life'

    By Glen Owen for The Mail on Sunday

    Published: 21:00 GMT, 18 October 2014 | Updated: 22:17 GMT, 18 October 2014

    The change has already been dubbed Chloe's Law after Justice Secretary Chris Grayling made reference to the case of Chloe Madeley.

    Internet trolls who subject victims to vile abuse are to be jailed for up to two years under a tough Government crackdown.

    Harsher sentences are to be introduced following a series of shocking, high-profile cases, including rape threats made against model Chloe Madeley last week.

    Justice Secretary Chris Grayling revealed to The Mail on Sunday that the maximum six month sentence for internet abuse will be quadrupled.

    Miss Madeley, who was targeted after her mother Judy Finnigan made controversial remarks about the footballer and convicted rapist Ched Evans, last night welcomed the move, saying that the most sickening comments amounted to ‘online terrorism’.

    The tougher new legislation is already being dubbed ‘Chloe’s Law’ after her public stance against the disturbing messages.

    Mr Grayling said: ‘These internet trolls are cowards who are poisoning our national life.

    ‘No one would permit such venom in person, so there should be no place for it on social media. That is why we are determined to quadruple the current six-month sentence.

    ‘As the terrible case of Chloe Madeley showed last week, people are being abused online in the most crude and degrading fashion.

    ‘This is a law to combat cruelty – and marks our determination to take a stand against a baying cyber-mob. We must send out a clear message: if you troll you risk being behind bars for two years.’

    Currently, offenders who subject their victims to sexually offensive, verbally abusive or threatening material on the internet can only be prosecuted in magistrates courts under the Malicious Communications Act, which carries a maximum prison sentence of six months.

    But the planned changes will allow magistrates to pass on serious cases to the crown courts, where offenders would face a maximum sentence of 24 months.

    Miss Madeley, 27, was targeted with what she described as ‘extremely chilling and cowardly’ threats after she defended her mother for suggesting on a TV panel show that Mr Evans’s offence was less serious because he had not physically harmed the teenager he attacked.

    Last night Miss Madeley said it was right for Mr Grayling to update the ten-year-old law, since it pre-dates Twitter.

    She told The Mail on Sunday: ‘The current law obviously needs to be reviewed. It needs to be accepted that physical threats should not fall under the “freedom of speech” umbrella.

    'It should be seen as online terrorism and it should be illegal.’

    Judy Finnigan’s comments on Evans’s case led to the trolling of her daughter Chloe.

    Her remarks come after her father, TV presenter Richard Madeley, warned the trolls: ‘Prosecution awaits you.’

    The changes will be made as an amendment to the Criminal Justice and Courts Bill currently going through Parliament.

    They would also give the police more time to collect enough evidence to enable successful prosecutions to be brought.

    Earlier this month, 63-year-old Brenda Leyland, who subjected the family of missing Madeleine McCann to online abuse, was found dead in a hotel after being confronted outside her home by a Sky News reporter.

    Mrs Leyland was one of a number of trolls who compounded Gerry and Kate McCann’s distress by abusing them on social media.

    One tweet read: ‘#mccann To Kate and Gerry, you will be hated by millions for the rest of your miserable, evil, conniving lives, have a nice day!’

    Mr McCann commented at the time: ‘Clearly something needs to be done about the abuse on the internet. I think we probably need more people charged.’

    Miss Madeley explained last week why she had gone public with the threats, saying: ‘I always ignore the disgusting troll tweets I get because I honestly do not want to give them any attention.

    ‘But the tweet in question took it to another level and I wanted to stand up against it.

    ‘There is a line where rationality ends and criminality begins. The person who threatened me crossed that line.’

    Dr Az Hakeem, consultant psychiatrist at The Priory Hospital, Roehampton, south-west London, told The Mail on Sunday: 'The sadistic pleasure derived by trolling may have an addictive quality to it and the sense of power for the troll may be difficult to resist.

    'The most useful intervention is to be reminded that the emotional pain inflicted is real and that they are not able to hide behind apparent anonymity, and to be held legally accountable for the actions for which they have mental capacity and intend to make.'

    He said that the illusion of anonymity 'facilitates for some callous and wounding attacks upon people which for the Intranet troll provides sadistic pleasure combined with the false reassurance that the attack is 'not really real' due to the lack of real face to face contact of the 'hit and run' style of encounter, often hidden behind the camouflage of the screen name.'

    The move by Mr Grayling follows the announcement he would include a measure in the Criminal Justice and Courts Bill to make it an offence to post so-called ‘revenge pornography’ online, which would also carry a maximum jail term of two years.

    Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2798573/crackdown-cyber-mobs-poisoning-britain-sentence-web-trolls-quadrupled-two-years-shocking-high-profile-online-abuse-cases.html#ixzz3GZKnDnUA
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