False rape accusers may lose right to
anonymity
Independent.co.uk Online Edition, 10 January 2007 11:28
By Robert Verkaik, Law Editor
Published: 10 January 2007
Women who falsely accuse men of sexual offences could lose their right to
anonymity, under a law reform being considered by ministers.
The proposed change follows the case of a man who spent more than three years in
prison after he was wrongly convicted of rape.
Lord Goldsmith, the Attorney General, confirmed yesterday that the Government
was "actively" considering whether the law on complainant anonymity in sex
offence cases needed amending. He told the Lords that this was being done "in
the light of the Court of Appeal judgment in the Blackwell case" and that a
decision would be reached "soon."
In that case Warren Blackwell was freed by the Court of Appeal after it was
shown that the woman who had accused him of rape had a long history of making
false accusations.
Last night campaigners against rape described any move to weaken the protection
for complainants as outrageous.
Lisa Longstaff, of Women Against Rape, said such a proposal would serve only to
discourage women from coming forward to make complaints in the first place and
urged ministers to think again. "In the context of rape conviction rates being
no more than 5 per cent it is outrageous for the Government even to contemplate
relaxing the protection. We are pushing for a tightening of the law and have
written to the Attorney General to voice our concerns."
Mr Blackwell's accuser was unmasked in the Lords last year by the Labour peer
Lord Campbell-Savours, who used parliamentary privilege to reveal her identity
and brand her a "serial and repeated liar".
Most news organisations declined to use her name, which later appeared in
Hansard, the official record of Parliament's proceedings.
Alleged victims of sexual offences are granted lifelong anonymity under the law
although in certain circumstances it can be lifted by a judge. The accuser
became known only as Miss A.
Yesterday during Lords Question Time, Lord Campbell-Savours referred to a
similar case of false accusation against Leslie Warren, who was jailed for
two years, and later freed by the Appeal Court.
Lord Campbell-Savours asked whether the Government would name the accuser in the
Leslie Warren case, and also in the case of other false accusers, where cases of
persons convicted of rape had been referred by the Criminal Cases Review
Commission to the Court of Appeal as "unsafe due to false accusations".
Lord Goldsmith told him: "Unless and until Parliament has decided to amend the
law, it is not for the Government or anyone else to name complainants in rape
cases, and by so doing remove the anonymity that Parliament has chosen to
confer. We are considering whether the law on complainant anonymity requires
amendment, in the light of the Court of Appeal judgment in the Blackwell case."
Lord Campbell-Savours replied: "I detect a slight shift in that answer. Who and
what is to stop the false accuser in the case of Leslie Warren, who has
now been released from prison, from making more false allegations against more
innocent men?"
Lord Goldsmith replied: "In the event that any further allegations were brought
by this particular complainant, then so far as is possible it would be the
responsibility of the prosecution to disclose to any defendant what had happened
before."
Ms Longstaff said that parliamentary privilege should not be used in such a way.
"The other side of the coin is that women are now being sent to prison for false
rapes while men accused of rape are going unprosecuted."
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