Jon Gaunt wins permission for high court challenge
Shock jock Jon Gaunt has won permission to bring a high court challenge against Ofcom’s decision to uphold complaints about an interview in which he called a councillor a “ignorant pig” and “health nazi”.
In May 2009, Gaunt – who had been sacked by radio station TalkSPORT in November 2008 – was censured by Ofcom for the comments made to Michael Stark in an interview about children in care.
Gaunt, backed by the human rights charity Liberty, argues that his right to freedom of expression was infringed by the Ofcom decision.
A written application for judicial review was earlier refused, a decision Gaunt’s lawyers believe was an “error”. Ofcom said it was the “correct” decision.
Following today’s court decision that Gaunt could take the challenge to the high court, a spokesperson from Ofcom said:
“The judge made it clear he was not making a decision on the case but simply referring it to a full hearing because it met the low threshold of arguability.”
Martin Howe, Jon Gaunt’s solicitor, said that the case was “ground breaking”.
“The outcome of this case will determine our understanding of the right to freedom of speech for a generation. The outcome of this case will determine if Britain’s airwaves will be allowed to remain a free and exciting medium able to engage in open and honest debate or will become a grey and timid desert.”
Background story at this link…
Similar posts:
- High court ruling ‘not a complete loss’ for Jon Gaunt, says Liberty
- BroadcastNow.co.uk: Jon Gaunt launches High Court challenge
- Independent in High Court to challenge closed court cases
- #followjourn: Jeremy Gaunt/European investment correspondent
- High Court does not collect statistics on ‘super injunctions’
July 15th, 2010 at 12:04 pm
[...] lost his appeal against the industry regulator, which censured him last year for calling local councillor Michael Stark a “health [...]