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Celebrity & Law

Celebrity & Law: What You Say On Twitter Can Now Fetch You A Criminal Liability-A Prison Sentence

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Few weeks ago, I published an article titled ‘What You Say On Twitter Can Constitute Defamation’ which looked at various individuals who have had to pay huge compensations through their noses for certain short tweets.
In that article, I mentioned that apart from being slammed with civil suits, it is increasing becoming popular for certain twitter users who ‘tweet before thinking’ to be cuffed with criminal liabilities.
At the time of my article, a British student- Liam Stacey, 21, had been arrested after allegedly tweeting a racist comment about Fabrice Muamba, the footballer who suffered a cardiac arrest and collapsed during a live match. After a court battle, Liam Stacy was jailed in March, 2012 for 56 days for posting offensive comments.
Even though case laws from jurisdictions such as England & Wales, New Zealand, Australia and U.S.A have been developing to burden twitter users with both civil and criminal liabilities, it seems the social media platform users are not fully aware of the level of seriousness courts are attaching to their tweets.
If you have read my former piece, you would surely have come across the two teenagers who were looking to have a wonderful holiday in United States recently but were shocked to have been refused entry because of a tweet they sent saying “we are going to destroy America”.
In an English High Court yesterday, an appeal by Paul Chambers, 27, who was convicted in May 2011 for sending out a tweet, threatening to blow up a Yorkshire airport was reserved. The court that convicted him held that his tweet constituted a “menacing electronic communication”.
Though Mr Chambers claims he did not think anyone would take his “silly joke” seriously, his conviction last year shows how tough the courts are getting on ordinary social media users.
The message Chambers tweeted stated; “Crap! Robin Hood airport is closed. You’ve got a week and a bit to get your shit together, otherwise I’m blowing the airport sky high!!
Mr Chambers has explained that the above tweet was something silly he sent to his 600 followers in a moment of frustration after Robin Hood Airport in South Yorkshire was closed by snow in January 2010…Continue Reading From Here…
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Law & Celebrity is a new column on GC which focuses on how the law affects our celebrities, their lifestyles, new media, entertainment, etc.
Chris-Vincent Agyapong Febiri, who will be looking at these issues holds a degree in Law (LLB), Diploma in Para Legal and also has extensive knowledge and interest in celebrity lifestyle & social media.



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0 thoughts on “Celebrity & Law: What You Say On Twitter Can Now Fetch You A Criminal Liability-A Prison Sentence”

  1. Chris i read somewhere that gentleman in question is suspended from Swansea University at present and, of course, unable to attend as he is in jail He has admitted being very drunk when he tweeted  He has admitted initially claiming that his twitter account had been hacked after realising what he had done my question is do you think the judge gave him the right sentence? Will he learn from his mistakes or do you think he needed stronger sentence for example making him work alongside black football fans while doing his community work cause i realise that young white people doing community service get super powers and make the same mistake over and over just like when both Ashley’s miss their penalty someone went and tweet similar issue again and even boosted that police want and can’t do him nothing you know more about law so fill me in whenever you get the time 

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