... a 58-year-old former teacher at the Cothill School in Oxfordshire was charged recently with abusing a number of boys in the 1970s. But the judge, Julian Hall, declared earlier this year that "this is the stalest case I have been asked to try" and threw it out.And here's more about Julian Hall:"I think the best thing that should happen to people who behave in this way," Hall told Oxford Crown Court, speaking of the former teacher, Jeremy Malim, "is that they should get a very brisk elbow in the ribs at the time or be rejected."
Judge Hall, criticised last year for saying a 10-year-old rape victim dressed provocatively, gave a Berinsfield teenager three years' probation for molesting a five-year-old girl.And here's a story about Charles Harris:The 17-year-old - who Judge Hall banned the Oxford Mail from naming - had also abused a seven-year-old boy....
Last year, Judge Hall sent Blackbird Leys window cleaner Keith Fenn to prison for just two years after he raped a 10-year-old.
He also told a 71-year-old man who sexually abused a six-year-old to compensate her with money for a new bike....
Judge Hall told lawyers in court: "At the moment, the defendant is probably not dangerous."
The girl's mother, who was sitting in the public gallery, shouted out: "Tell that to my daughter!"
Judge Hall told the teenager: "What you did was dreadful and it is the sort of behaviour which affects people rather badly and for a long time.
"You are going to have to attend courses to help you sort out your attitude to sex and children younger than you."
He granted the teenager anonymity and said that he was too young to be identified publicly for his crimes.
A JUDGE who likened growing cannabis to tomato plants criticised Oxford City Council as he dismissed an Antisocial Behaviour Order.The city council had wanted Phillip Pledge thrown out of his home and banned from Blackbird Leys for two years after police seized £3,400- worth of cannabis from a flat in Evenlode Tower where he was temporarily living.
But Judge Charles Harris - who caused controversy last week during the Asbo hearing when he said it was no more offensive to neighbours to grow cannabis than tomato plants - threw out the case.
Judge Harris said at Oxford Crown Court: "Oxford City Council applied for the order because the defendant caused harassment, alarm or distress.
"I have considerable reservations. There is no evidence at all to show anyone had been caused alarm, had been harassed or could be distressed. "It is not appropriate to seek orders with potentially very serious consequences without producing evidence to justify them.
"It is alleged the defendant was growing and selling cannabis in his flat. This is a criminal offence and he could have been tried in the criminal courts.
"For some reason the Crown Prosecution Service has not charged Mr Pledge, although the police have reason to justify charging him.
"It is not for the local housing authority in civil proceedings, via an Asbo, to provide a substitute for criminal proceedings."
The court heard Mr Pledge was jailed in 1998 for possession of cannabis and fined in 2000 for cultivating it.
Mr Pledge, of Strawberry Path in Blackbird Leys, had been living in the flat temporarily due to an arson attack on his home.
The 38-year-old was in rent arrears of £1,479.64, but told Judge Harris he had arranged to pay that back. ...
Judge Harris did not give leave for the council to appeal against his decision against an Asbo or to evict Mr Pledge.
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