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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Miller v Associated Newspapers Ltd [2010] EWHC 700 (QB) (31 March 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2010/700.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 700 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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ANDREW JAMES MILLER |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ASSOCIATED NEWSPAPERS LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Mark Warby QC and Adam Speker (instructed by Reynolds Porter Chamberlain LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 18 March 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Eady :
"(1) The Claimant corruptly exploited his friendship with Sir Ian Blair to obtain an improper payment of a five-figure sum from public funds;
(2) The Claimant, on behalf of his company, agreed to act as Sir Ian Blair's image consultant under a 'vanity contract' knowing that his company had no relevant knowledge or experience, thus improperly obtaining payment for work that his company was not competent to carry out."
"Sir Ian Blair used public money to pay a close friend a five-figure sum to sharpen his image, it emerged last night.
The beleaguered Scotland Yard chief employed Andy Miller to advise him on how to 'make the transition' when he took over as Britain's top officer three years ago.
Mr Miller's company briefed Sir Ian, then Deputy Metropolitan Police Commissioner, on his communications strategy, leadership style and the key messages he should hammer home. But incredibly, no other company was invited to bid for the so-called 'vanity contract', understood to be worth more than £15,000.
Details of the image makeover deal surfaced during an inquiry into a series of contracts awarded by the Met to Mr Miller's company, Impact Plus, during Sir Ian's time in office.
In all, Impact Plus has received more than £3million of police work from Scotland Yard over a six year period. The awarding of contracts to Mr Miller, a skiing partner and close friend of Sir Ian for 30 years, is being examined by a team of officers led by HM Chief Inspector of Constabulary, Sir Ronnie Flanagan.
Sources said that Mr Miller's colleague in Impact Plus, Martin Samphire, acted as Sir Ian's 'image consultant' under the terms of the contract.
It is understood that Sir Ian's predecessor, Sir John Stevens, who stepped down in January 2005, was unaware of the arrangement. Details of the payment to Impact Plus were disclosed to key members of the Metropolitan Police Authority yesterday By Sir Ronnie.
The meeting was called at short notice after the Daily Mail submitted a series of questions about the contract.
Last night the Metropolitan Police Authority was under mounting pressure to suspend Sir Ian. Never before in modern times has the head of the Met suffered the indignity of being forcibly removed from office.
Last month Sir Ian effectively suspended the country's top Asian policeman, Assistant Commissioner Tarique Ghaffur, for holding a press conference to outline his racial discrimination claims against the Met.
The allegations that Sir Ian faces are potentially far more serious, yet so far he has not been suspended from his post.
Insiders said nervousness around the contracts issue reflected the desire to keep Sir Ian in post until the end of the year to take the fall-out from the Stockwell shooting inquest.
A number of influential police figures would prefer Sir Ian to quit at the end of the inquest rather than face disciplinary proceedings over his links to Miller.
Home Office sources say senior investigators believe the Met chief has displayed 'very poor judgment'. The Flanagan inquiry team is checking whether internal procurement rules – or 'good practice' – were broken.
Legal experts say that given Sir Ian's personal relationship with Mr Miller, there should have been at least three bidders for the 'vanity contract'. One said: 'Despite this being a relatively small contract, Sir Ian should have gone the extra mile to ensure that procurement procedures were fully transparent'.
Investigators are also said to be baffled as to why Sir Ian sought the advice of Mr Miller's firm.
Scotland Yard has a highly regarded public affairs department, yet he called in Impact Plus, an IT consultancy with no specialist knowledge of public relations and communications strategies.
One source said: 'There was a great deal of surprise when this contract came to light. It was basically to advise Sir Ian on the messages he should put out and what he should do in his first few weeks in power.
'You could say it was about advising him on how to enhance his image. Given what has happened since, you can't help thinking it was a complete waste of money'."
"The question is, however, whether to say of a person that he has been the beneficiary of such a system, with the capacity to be used to favour the less well qualified candidates, defames the candidate.
In Renouf [(1977) 17 ACTR 35] (supra), Blackburn CJ accepted that it was defamatory of a senior public servant,
(42) ' … to say that he publicly demonstrated his sympathy with a political party with a view to receiving a higher appointment from the Government formed by that party'.
That imputation was accepted as defamatory by reason of the implication that the plaintiff had attempted to openly demonstrate his political acceptability to the Government. That allegation assumed, of course, that the Government in question made such appointments on the ground of political acceptability.
In the present case, the article depicts the plaintiff as a favoured recipient of preferment. It is not suggested he improperly sought it, as was the defamatory allegation in Fairbairn v John Fairfax & Sons Ltd (1977) 21 ACTR 1.
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The article did not over-state the role of the Prime Minister in the plaintiff's career advancement, but it did not impute any unfair or improper conduct to him nor suggest he did not merit such advancement. It did not convey the imputation pleaded. That would require the article to assert that the plaintiff's qualifications and experience were less important than the favour of the Prime Minister. It clearly does not do that."