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Mosley takes privacy law challenge to Strasbourg



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Published Date: 08 October 2008
Motorsport boss Max Mosley plans to challenge the UK's privacy laws in the European Court of Human Rights, he said yesterday.

Earlier this year he won a record £60,000 in privacy damages against the News of the World for the "probably unprecedented" distress and indignity he suffered over the paper's "sick Nazi orgy" story.

He now wants newspapers to have to notify someo
ne before publishing private information about them.

His solicitors will argue that without such a requirement the UK has no "real or effective" protection for the right of privacy.

Dominic Crossley, of Steeles Law LLP, said: "Whilst we all have a theoretical right to privacy this right can be and is violated before we can do anything about it. Mr Mosley's experience is testament to this."

He denied that the ruling sought in Strasbourg would have a "chilling effect" on journalism in cases where the exposure of private material had a "legitimate purpose or is genuinely in the public interest".

He said that because Mr Mosley did not know about the News of the World's article before it was published, he had no opportunity to seek an injunction.

The newspaper had printed photographs of Mr Mosley taking part in sadomasochistic activities with five women and claimed the session had a Nazi theme.

It also put secretly-filmed footage on its website, which attracted at least 3.5 million hits.

Mr Mosley, president of the FIA (Federation Internationale de l'Automobile), said the role-play at a rented Chelsea basement was harmless, consensual and private, with no Nazi overtones.

Mr Mosley, 68, who is the son of the 1930s' Fascist leader Sir Oswald Mosley, told the High Court that Jean, his wife of 48 years, was unaware of his sexual tastes and she and their two adult sons had been devastated.



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  • Last Updated: 08 October 2008 8:41 AM
  • Source: n/a
  • Location: Yorkshire
 
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Claudius,

Hedon 08/10/2008 11:32:19
Did Mr Mosley ever take up the "trusty sword of justice" on behalf of anyone else; for example, on behalf of some ordinary citizen who lacked the resources to instigate court action - or did he only become concerned when this kind of intrusion affected him?
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