Western Daily Press (Saturday)

6 XR protesters cleared over Shell HQ ‘damage’

- HENRY VAUGHAN news@westerndai­lypress.co.uk

SIX Extinction Rebellion protesters have been cleared of causing criminal damage to Shell’s London headquarte­rs despite the judge directing jurors they had no defence in law.

Five of the six are from the Gloucester­shire town of Stroud, which is one of the environmen­tal organisati­on’s activism hotbeds.

Two of the group’s co-founders Simon Bramwell, 49, and Ian Bray, 53, were acquitted yesterday alongside Jane Augsburger, 55, Senan Clifford, 60, David Lambert, 62, and James “Sid” Saunders, 41, after a trial at Southwark Crown Court.

The six, who represente­d themselves, were also cleared of individual counts of having an article with intent to destroy or damage property, while a seventh protester, Katerina Hasapopoul­ous, 43, earlier pleaded guilty to criminal damage.

Prosecutor Diana Wilson told jurors each of the defendants deliberate­ly sprayed graffiti or smashed windows at the Shell building in Belvedere Road, central London, on April 15, 2019.

The protest, which saw activists pour fake oil, glue themselves to windows and doors, break glass, climb onto a roof and spray graffiti, was part of wider Extinction Rebellion demonstrat­ions across the capital.

Ms Wilson said that while some protesters stood outside the building holding banners or speaking through megaphones, “these defendants went further”, adding: “The seven involved caused significan­t damage.”

All those who stood trial explained they had targeted the Shell building because the oil giant was directly contributi­ng to climate change, thereby causing serious injury and death, and argued it was a “necessary” and “proportion­ate” response to the harm being caused.

Clifford quoted Sir David Attenborou­gh and former Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams in his evidence.

He said: “I believe if I don’t do whatever I can to protect our Earth, to protect life on this Earth, to stop the death and injury that is and will be happening, I’m committing a crime, a really serious crime, and I’m willing to break a window, to paint a message on a wall, I’m willing to break the glass on that emergency button, even if some say that’s a crime.

“Because this is a much bigger crime and I’m trying to stop that crime.

“I’m trying to protect life in the only way I feel I can.”

Judge Gregory Perrins directed jurors that even if they thought the protesters were “morally justified” it did not provide them with a lawful excuse to commit criminal damage.

With the exception of Saunders, who claimed in his defence that he honestly believed Shell’s employees and shareholde­rs would have consented to his criminal damage, the judge said: “They don’t have any defence in law for the charges they face.”

But the jury of seven women and five men took seven hours and four minutes to acquit them of both charges.

Some of the defendants waved at jurors, several of whom were visibly emotional, as they left court.

Before reaching their verdicts, the jury had asked to see a copy of the oath they took when they were sworn in.

Thanking jurors for their “care and attention”, the judge said: “This has been an unusual case.”

Augsburger, Bramwell, Clifford, Lambert and Saunders, who are all from Stroud, Gloucester­shire and Bray, from Holmfirth, West Yorkshire, were jubilant as they left court.

Hasapopoul­ous, from Stroud, will be sentenced later.

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