Yorkshire Post

HORN OF DILEMMA AT DEMOS

As the Government plans to crackdown on ‘noisy’ protests, a woman infamously arrested for blowing a toy trumpet at a Sheffield rally is speaking out. Chris Burn reports.

- Email: chris.burn@jpimedia.co.uk Twitter: @chrisburn_post

Shouting and being aggressive is not my cup of tea. I was confident I hadn’t broken any laws. The only thing I was guilty of was being annoying and that wasn’t against the law then. Andrea Stone, on her arrest in 2018 for blowing a toy trumpet at a protest against tree-felling.

“I WASN’T sure what going viral meant to be honest,” says Andrea Stone as she reflects on the furore that followed her arrest at a protest against tree-felling work in Sheffield three years ago. “I’m not one for being in the limelight.”

But back in March 2018, that is precisely where Stone found herself after being at the centre of what was quickly dubbed “Tootgate”. Footage of her being arrested for repeatedly blowing on a toy trumpet was viewed more than 300,000 times online and likened to a Monty Python sketch.

The incident on Rivelin Valley Road came at the height of the growing controvers­y about the city council’s mass tree-felling programme as part of a £2bn highways contract, with growing demonstrat­ions leading to dozens of police officers and private security guards attending tree removals on a daily basis.

There had already been multiple arrests of protesters before Stone but the incident involving her captured public attention like nothing before as South Yorkshire Police was accused of overreach. The following day, demonstrat­ors brought their own musical instrument­s in solidarity and within a week, tree-felling operations were put on hold – beginning the long process of an eventual council U-turn that has now resulted in hundreds of trees previously earmarked for removal being saved from the axe.

Stone was arrested on suspicion of causing intentiona­l harm or distress under Section 4a of the Public Order Act 1986 and spent around seven hours in a police cell. But she says the case against was eventually dropped after several months after the Crown Prosecutio­n Service decided no charges would be brought. The toy trumpet, which was confiscate­d when she was arrested, was returned to her.

Stone, a 60-year-old self-employed PA, says: “I shied away from any publicity and got on with my work and didn’t really talk about it. I didn’t really welcome or bask in any kind of public scrutiny. I was just glad they had stopped felling trees.”

However, she has now agreed to give The Yorkshire Post her first media interview in light of controvers­ial Government plans to clamp down on protests which include provisions around making “excessive noise”.

Under the new Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill 2021, which is progressin­g through Parliament, it is intended that a new public nuisance offence would be created under which “producing excessive noise” in a way deemed to obstruct the public would be criminal.

The Bill also includes provisions to enable the police to impose maximum noise levels on protests and legislates to prevent protests creating noise deemed to cause “serious disruption to the activities of an organisati­on which are carried out in the vicinity of the procession/assembly/one-person protest”. Those convicted could face a fine or a jail sentence.

The Government has cited the disruption caused by groups like Extinction Rebellion as the reason for needing to change the law.

Stone says that, while there was no legal case to prosecute her at the time of her arrest in March 2018, if these new measures had been in place at that time she would have been likely to face prosecutio­n and a potential criminal record.

“Under this law, they would have been able to charge me,” she says.

The 45-second video clip of Stone’s arrest which went viral shows a police officer, speaking over the sound of chainsaws being used on the trees, warning her that a member of the public had complained and if she continued to blow the toy trumpet she would be arrested.

She blows the horn again and the police officer says that if she does it one more time she will be arrested. As he walks away, she blows it again and he then returns to arrest under the Public Order Act.

Stone says: “I decided that if I couldn’t stop the felling, I was going to make a fuss about it and make a noise about it. I was there to protest, not to observe. Shouting and being aggressive is not my cup of tea – I would rather take an instrument.

“I was confident I hadn’t broken any laws. The only thing I was guilty of was being annoying and that wasn’t against the law then.”

She says she was far from the only source of noise on the day. “There was a big sign saying ‘Toot for trees’ so there were cars tooting their horns and the chainsaws going off.”

Part of the reason for Stone’s confidence that would be cleared came from her previous experience­s with the police.

Stone, who describes herself as an “activist” but says she is not affiliated with any political party, was first arrested in 2005 when the G8 held a summit in Sheffield and she was part of an anti-war demonstrat­ion.

“I was arrested for assaulting a police officer. He pushed me first and I pushed back. The police didn’t turn up in court and the case just disappeare­d,” she says.

On the second occasion, she was been at a demonstrat­ion when the Labour Party conference was happening in Manchester and swore at a police officer. Stone says she was initially found guilty of a public order offence after three officers gave evidence against her claiming she had also made an offensive hand gesture that had been seen by members of the public. But her conviction was overturned on appeal – thanks to evidence involving a different musical instrument.

“CCTV would have shown I had maracas in my hand and couldn’t have gestured. There were no members of the public because the road was closed off.”

The Sheffield tree protesters’ stance against the felling work has subsequent­ly been vindicated, with the council and its contractor Amey embarking on a new policy designed to save trees following lengthy mediated talks with campaigner­s.

In October 2020, the council was forced to issue an apology to the people of the city after a damning investigat­ion by the Local Government and Social Care Ombudsman found the authority had misled the public, misreprese­nted expert advice and acted with a “lack of honesty” during the saga.

Stone says: “When protests happen, often everybody demands that police do something to break up the protests, rather than demanding the Government or politician­s address the concerns. Look at past protests in history like the Suffragett­es and workers’ rights and what is happening today with women’s safety. We are facing the extinction of species and our world is falling apart and they are debating stopping noisy protests rather than looking at the problem.”

She adds that whatever legal changes come into force, she will not be prevented from demonstrat­ing about causes she feels passionate­ly about. “It won’t stop me protesting. I will think of more inventive ways within the law to get my point across.”

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 ?? PICTURES: TONY JOHNSON/GUZELIAN. ?? RINGING THE ALARM: Main picture top, Andrea Stone with her trumpet and, above, fellow protesters on Rivelin Valley Road in 2017.
PICTURES: TONY JOHNSON/GUZELIAN. RINGING THE ALARM: Main picture top, Andrea Stone with her trumpet and, above, fellow protesters on Rivelin Valley Road in 2017.
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