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04 November 2016 / Dominic Regan
Issue: 7721 / Categories: Features
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Strange but true

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To catch a thief! Dominic Regan spills the beans on some infamous rogues & eccentrics

Suspicion is insufficient. Hard proof is required to prove a case. Over the years resourceful parties have secured the necessary evidence.

The playwright Joe Orton and his partner Kenneth Halliwell stole over 1,600 illustrations from library books. They also took books out and defaced the covers before returning them. For example, the dust jacket blurb of a 1930s’ detective story was slightly adjusted to say: “Read this behind closed doors and have a good shit while you are reading.”

Islington Council suspected the duo. It was a member of the legal department, Sydney Porrett, who was their undoing. He sent a provocative letter to the couple alleging, without any foundation, that they had illegally parked their car. Orton typed an indignant denial. The typeface was an exact match to the alterations made. The men were convicted of malicious damage and imprisoned for six months.

Virgin records?

Billionaire Richard Branson also got off to a rocky start. He discovered that purchase

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NEWS
A landmark Supreme Court ruling has underscored the sweeping reach of UK sanctions. In NLJ this week, Brónagh Adams and Harriet Campbell of Penningtons Manches Cooper say the regime is a ‘blunt instrument’ requiring only a factual, not causal, link to restricted goods
Fraud claims are surging, with England and Wales increasingly the forum of choice for global disputes. Writing in NLJ this week, Jon Felce of Cooke, Young & Keidan reports claims have risen sharply, with fraud now a major share of litigation and costing billions worldwide
Litigators digesting Mazur are being urged to tighten oversight and compliance. In his latest 'Insider' column for NLJ this week, Professor Dominic Regan of City Law School provides a cut out and keep guide to the ruling’s core test: whether an unauthorised individual is ‘in truth acting on behalf of the authorised individual’
Conflicting county court rulings have left landlords uncertain over whether they can force entry after tenants refuse access. In this week's NLJ, Edward Blakeney and Ashpen Rajah of Falcon Chambers outline a split: some judges permit it under CPR 70.2A, others insist only Parliament can authorise such powers
A wave of scandals has reignited debate over misconduct in public office, criticised as unclear and inconsistently applied. Writing in NLJ this week, Alice Lepeuple of WilmerHale says the offence’s ‘vagueness, overbreadth & inconsistent deployment’ have undermined confidence
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