ABC trial

The ABC Trial was a United Kingdom trial of three men for offences under section 2 (wrongful communication of information) and (as dropped during the trial) of one of these men, a scholarly journalist, for the offence under section 1 (imparting information which might be useful to an enemy for a purpose prejudicial to the safety or interests of the state) of the Official Secrets Act 1911. The men were two libertarian journalists of a similar political viewpoint as much of the Labour government, and a resigned GCHQ source seeking to heighten scrutiny of government-authorised wire-tapping and limit the work of the American agency, the CIA, in Britain. These aims were furthered in the following two decades achieved through detailed parliamentary scrutiny into and regular reports as to the work of security services, a Freedom of Information Committee and regulation of wire-tapping. Aside from very limited reportage from the Central Criminal Court, its early analysis comes in the account of one of its investigative-journalist defendants, Duncan Campbell, in the annual journal The Socialist Register.

R v Aubrey, Berry and Campbell (more often described as the ABC Trial)
The case had consequences for the vetting of jurors by the police.

It hastened scrutiny of the intelligence operations of the UK's and US security operations in the United Kingdom (UK).
CourtCrown Court (specifically sitting at the Central Criminal Court (Old Bailey))
Full case nameRegina v. Crispin Aubrey, John Berry and Duncan Campbell
Decided14 and 16 November 1978
Transcript(s)none
Case history
Prior action(s)none
Court membership
Judge(s) sittingdischarged judge and jury, followed by Mr Justice Mars-Jones and new jury
Case opinions
Decision byThe new jury

Background

London magazine Time Out in 1976, through the writings of the first and third defendants, published a two-page account of GCHQ called "The Wiretappers", this was among other evidence collected and imparted by the defendants as to how GCHQ operates from year-to-year including gathered evidence, such as photographs of radio masts, of its physical apparatus.[1]

By statute, (Labour)'s Attorney General would need to condone the prosecution for it to proceed; he did so.

The case took place from September to November 1978[2] still in an era of vital surveillance to counter Cold War and Irish and Northern Irish dissident republicans ongoing threats. Conviction of some form was assured as all parties could not deny a small amount of classified information had been communicated and no tenable argument of the law as to freedom of information such as on the basis of freedom of expression was raised.

However the case followed the importation from the USA of post-Watergate investigative journalism, which had been adopted by radical and left journalists at a considerable speed during 1975. Its popular legitimacy was outcry against the misused suppression of information on the false basis of "national security" as Congress and the Senate found was misused by Nixon and the Intelligence Agency to cover up misdeeds. What had come from the United States was a new legitimacy for the idea that the secret agencies should be capable of a certain amount of press reporting and face close democratic scrutiny.[1]

Summary

The trial was held in Court 1 of the Central Criminal Court. It was against the defendants: Crispin Aubrey,[3] John Berry and Duncan Campbell; the latter also being subject for cuttings and photographs gathered to a section 1 charge, dropped before the close of the trial, the judge stating they were "oppressive in the circumstances".[2][1] Aubrey was a journalist for Time Out, John Berry was a former Corporal in signals intelligence (SIGINT), and Duncan Campbell was an investigative journalist.[2]

One of the prosecution witnesses was an anonymous SIGINT (that is, electronic communications)[1] officer, referred to as Colonel B. Campbell's 1979 identified him as Colonel Johnstone.[1][4]

The trial found that the information came almost entirely from open publications, some of which from the USA.

The jury confirmed guilt (convicted) as to the remaining (non-dropped) section 2 offence as to disclosure of those classified matters in no way in the public domain. The only penalty imposed was against Berry and was non-custodial; but criminal records of all three would hamper certain sensitive employment.[4] In 1979 Campbell wrote an article, including the words "It ended in convictions under Section 2 for each of us, but with negligible penalty in the case of myself and fellow journalist Aubrey, no penalty at all.".[1] This added "'Colonel B' rapidly achieved the position of a national figure of ridicule.".[1] In Campbell's view many editorials mentioning the unnecessarily secretive governance of and occasionally counter-productive application of protected status to essentially all information at and concerning GCHQ largely fuelled the decision by the Liberal Party, successful in the random selection of private member's Bills via Clement Freud, to select a Freedom of Information Bill. The bill, a forerunner of the Freedom of Information Act 2000, lapsed with the end of the Callaghan ministry but achieved a wholly unopposed second Commons reading, reflecting a sea change among those dominant legislative members (British MPs).[1]

The section 1 charge "lacked the legitimation which could be provided by the existence of a subversive or hostile threat, the presentation of their evidence rapidly became ridiculous. The information [Campbell] had gathered, dealt with piecemeal, was of course readily available in pvblic. As witness after witness conceded this point, the prosecution rapidly lost any sense of purpose.".[1] The prosecution dropped this charge.

The contemporary drive of most of the security services with making themselves and their nature top secret, already widely suspected, was criticised in the centrist, libertarian 1979 article by Campbell, citing in support Tony Bunyan's 1976 book: The Political Police in Britain which opined that Official Secrets Acts, as then applied and interpreted in the courts, "represent the last resort in suppressing public knowledge of the workings of the state".[5][1]

The quickly rubbished first jury, its foreman and others having been in service with the Government, leading to an unchallenged second jury who heard and decided the case, was directly responsible for exposing extreme jury vetting, and eliciting official disclosures on the nature and previous extent of the practice - generally in the case of political or terrorist trials, or cases of organized crime. Increasing attention by libertarians to the nature of the jury system, and its preservation and strengthening, proved to be a lasting bonus of the case.[6][1]

The case indirectly raised questions of or helped to shape principles of UK law.

Timeline

  • 18 February 1977: Aubrey and Campbell (the two journalists) interviewed Berry
  • 20 February 1977: All three men were arrested and charged under section 2 of the Official Secrets Act 1911 (Berry was charged with "communicating classified information to unauthorised persons", and Campbell and Aubrey with "unauthorised receipt of classified information")
  • 24 May 1977: Further charges were added under section 1 of the Official Secrets Act
  • 9 August 1977: Additional charge under section 1 against Duncan Campbell, for collecting information
  • November 1977: Committal hearing at Tottenham Magistrates Court. First appearance of Colonel B as a prosecution witness.
  • 5 September 1978: Trial opened at the Old Bailey before Mr Justice Willis
  • 18 September 1978: Trial stopped after jury foreman was exposed as a former SAS officer
  • 3 October 1978: Second trial opened before Mr Justice Mars-Jones
  • 24 October 1978: All section 1 charges were dropped
  • 14 November 1978: Aubrey and Berry were convicted by the jury
  • 16 November 1978: Campbell was convicted by the jury
  • 17 November 1978: The only penalty imposed was non-custodial, against Berry.

Defendant's opinion of Attorney General

Campbell published in 1979 that the Attorney General "had allowed himself to be used as a patsy for the security services to try to rearrange the law of official secrecy to their choosing. Several initiatives from that quarter had become apparent during the case."[1]

gollark: ++search a
gollark: Someone on the haskell server made it. I am keeping it safe from those who would delete it to purge what they consider abominations unto Good Haskell.
gollark: ```haskellfizzbuzz ((\rec -> \case [] -> []; (x@((,) <$> (`rem`3) <*> (`rem`5) -> \case (0,0) -> "FizzBuzz"; (0,_) -> "Fizz"; (_,0) -> "Buzz"; _ -> show x -> x'):xs) -> x' : rec xs ,) -> (f, (fix f .). enumFromTo -> xs)) = xs```
gollark: !pingwhen online <@!258639553357676545> Rust.!pingwhen online <@!258639553357676545> Rust.
gollark: !pingwhen online <@!258639553357676545> Rust.

References

  1. Aldrich, Richard J. 'Unmasking GCHQ: the ABC Trial' in GCHQ: The Uncensored Story of Britain's Most Secret Intelligence Agency, Harper Press 2010
  2. Campbell, Duncan (30 September 2012). "Crispin Aubrey obituary". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 2 October 2012.
  3. Campbell, Duncan (3 August 2015). "Global spy system ECHELON confirmed at last - by leaked Snowden files". The Register. Retrieved 25 August 2015.
  4. Tony Bunyan, The Political Police in Britain, Julian Friedman, 1976
  5. Anna Coote, 'The Loyal Jury and the Foreman with Firm Opinions', New Statesman, 1978
  • Aldrich, Richard J. GCHQ: The Uncensored Story of Britain's Most Secret Intelligence Agency, Harper Press 2010.
  • Aubrey, Crispin (1981). Who's Watching You? Britain's Security Services & the Official Secrets Act (1st ed.). Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-022283-9.
  • Robertson, Geoffrey (1999). The Justice Game, Vintage Books. ISBN 0-09-958191-4
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