Thursday 23 June 2022

Pound Shop lawyer Jamie Bryson Loses Another Appeal Over Belfast Bonfire Legal Challenge Ruling

POUND SHOP lawyer Jamie Bryson has lost another legal challenge against being denied permission to judicially review two Stormont Ministers behind a failed legal attempt to force police into removing a contentious bonfire. 
    Jamie Bryson tried to challenge the             ministers' moves but lost the case                on the contentious bonfire site. 

He had returned to the court in a renewed attempt to secure a declaration that Sinn Féin’s Deirdre Hargey and former SDLP representative Nichola Mallon unlawfully acted without consent from their Executive colleagues. 
But with the case about an 'Eleventh Night' bonfire in north Belfast last July already held to be academic, senior judges rejected  his fresh bid to hear the challenge in full. 

Lord Justice Treacy confirmed: "The unanimous view of the court is that the application is refused." 

Ms Hargey, the Department for Communities Minister, and Mrs Mallon, the Infrastructure Minister at the time, took emergency legal action last summer to have the PSNI/RUC compelled to intervene at the UVF's Tigers Bay bonfire site. 

.   UVF: (youth wing) YCV Young Citizen                               Volunteers 

AT the time police had refused to step in due to concerns about potential disorder and risk to the public, including (YCV) young children in the Adam Street area. 
The two Ministers' joint action was thrown out, along with similar litigation by a nationalist resident in the neighbouring New Lodge district. 
Mr Bryson represented the Tigers Bay Bonfire Group as a notice party in those cases. 

He then issued judicial review proceedings against the two Departments, claiming a breach of the Ministeral Code. 

Under Stormont rules, any issues regarded as significant, controversial and costcutting must be tabled for consent by the full power-sharing cabinet. 

Mr Bryson contended that the two ministers acted illegally and sought to have them restrained from mounting any future "solo runs". 
   The Tigers Bay Bonfire at Adam Street,                     Belfast. Presseye

In January this year the High Court dismissed his challenge on the basis that it had become academic. 

But counsel for the pound shop lawyer, former *orthern Ireland Attorney General John Larkin QC, disputed that finding at a fresh hearing today where he insisted the two Ministers had no power to act as they did. 

He told the Court of Appeal: "On behalf of Mr Bryson, if the proposed respondents either accepted the correctness of his legal analysis or indeed simply indicated that no proceedings against the police would be initiated without securing the agreement of the Executive Committee then these proceedings could be properly be characterised as unnecessary. 

"But the proposed respondents have done neither of those things."

Mr Larkin added: "There is still a fog over the legality of these Ministers' actions."

"There is no public interest in continuing to pour over what happened and whether what happened should be the subject of censure," she argued. 

At one point it was pointed out to her that Mr Bryson was the one who alerted the Ministers to the legal requirement contained in the 1998 *orthern Ireland Act. 

However, the barrister submitted: "This smacks very much of being about disciplining Ministers for actions that were taken in a particular legal landscape which no longer exists." 

Dismissing the appeal, Lord Justice Treacy said reasons for the decision will be given in due course. 

Outside court Mr Bryson claimed his substantive legal point has been accepted, and that the Ministers have had a "shot fired across their bows". 

He added:  "The Ministers defence was basically 'don't humiliate us in public'. They should be decent enough to put their hands up now." 

With many thanks to: UTV News for the original story. 









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