Release the hounds!

The British Chiropractic Association has dropped its lawsuit against Simon Singh. This is very, very good news…and to make it even better, Singh is going to go after the BCA for court costs. Drive the fools into the ground! Make them pay!

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Today is a great day. Today, British science writer Simon Singh accomplished something I would never have believed possible, given British libel laws and a very bad ruling by Sir David Eady, the presiding judge, a ruling characterized as astonishingly illiberal. Despite the long odds, Singh…
Back in May many of us in the skeptical blogosphere were alarmed to learn of what British law blogger Jack of Kent termed "an astonishingly illiberal ruling" by Sir David Eady against science writer Simon Singh. Eady was the judge presiding over another bit of legal thuggery by practitioners…
...because they blog under the shadow of the United Kingdom's insane libel laws. Witness this travesty of a ruling on the libel case against Simon Singh by the British Chiropractic Association, as related by Jack of Kent. I first learned about the UK's exceedingly plaintiff-friendly libel laws when…
I was wrong. I know it doesn't happen that often, but I'm forced to admit it. I was wrong. I predicted that Simon Singh would likely lose his appeal against an astonishing illiberal ruling on his libel case by Sir David Eady. Singh, as you may recall, is the British science writer who wrote a now…

[Homer Simpson] WOO HOO! [/Homer Simpson]

By mattand08 (not verified) on 15 Apr 2010 #permalink

I hope Simon gets a judgment that breaks their financial backs.

I'm really very glad to hear this.

However it seems the larger issues of free speech and libel tourism remain. (Simon has previously stated he plans to continue fighting for free speech, and against libel tourism, and that he will continue to support other cases similar to his own.)

Yessss!!! I've read that Simon Singh incurred horrendous debt during this fiasco. In addition, this has been so difficult for him and his family that I hope he's awarded a huge sum for loss of work time, mental anguish, etc., etc. Maybe $3,000,000?

By recovering catholic (not verified) on 15 Apr 2010 #permalink

We need some celebration music. Janine or Mr. T? (All I can think of is Coplands Fanfare for the Common Man, and no time to do a Google search. @#$%^ meetings.)

By Nerd of Redhead, OM (not verified) on 15 Apr 2010 #permalink

I hope Simon gets a judgment that breaks their financial backs.

I'd bet subluxation would have a hard time fixing that.

By mattand08 (not verified) on 15 Apr 2010 #permalink

Glad to see they admit they are scam artists!

Go Singh!

By Michelle R (not verified) on 15 Apr 2010 #permalink

Awesome.

He's gonna fuck them over big style!

By QuarkyGideon (not verified) on 15 Apr 2010 #permalink

Turns out Simon Singh had more of a spine than the BCA.

By Multicellular (not verified) on 15 Apr 2010 #permalink

This is the best news I've heard in a long time. Not only has Simon been vindicated (effectively) but he is going after costs (which, as far as I am concerned he is more than entitled to).
The best bit, of course, is that all major parties in the UK claim to be committed to libel reform. Call me a dreamer, but I think there is a possibility that this madness may never be repeated.
Ah hope, how I've missed you.

YOU GO SIMON ....adjust them GOOD!!!

I like Singh even more now that he's not just going to let bygones be bygones. Those assholes need to be taught a very expensive lesson in freedom of speech.

But really, something has to be done about the insane UK libel laws. If this case hasn't made all three major political parties aware of that, what on earth would?

By Steve LaBonne (not verified) on 15 Apr 2010 #permalink

Simon SIngh is a legend*. Fact.

Not a myth, fww, ymmv, etc.

By https://me.yah… (not verified) on 15 Apr 2010 #permalink

Hoping for it to go like Dover, eh?

Yes, those who insist on trying to make it costly to tell the truth need to find that suppressing truth can be quite costly. Maybe the wooists will learn sense from the Galileo affair eventually?

Well, no, that's too much to hope for. Most of them are sure they're the unjustly persecuted victims -- and they might even have some evidence to go on if they weren't so severely mistreated.

Glen D
http://tinyurl.com/mxaa3p

By Glen Davidson (not verified) on 15 Apr 2010 #permalink

This is very exciting. Not only has this court case gone favourably, it has woken the sleeping giant of rationality and hopefully will end in some real reform.

I'm kind of shocked that not only did they try to stifle the guy's free speech in general, but they tried to stifle accurate truth in his case. It would have been a whole different situation had he been spreading a harmful type of speech, like let's say, promising that a massage will cure asthma and then causing the harm of pain/money loss when it doesn't work, or something. :) He was just revealing that the chiropractors were the ones yelling fire in a theatre.

By Scented Nectar (not verified) on 15 Apr 2010 #permalink

Note that Simon has only "won" in the sense that the BCA has dropped their disasterous libel suit against him.

He should substantially recover his costs (£200,000), but in the best case scenario he still estimates that he will be somewhere in the region of £20,000 out of pocket. Just in costs. Not including his indirect expenses, loss of earnings over the past two years, etc, etc.

And this is just on the basis of fighting for an initial ruling on the meaning of the case. The libel case did not make it to trial. Simon has only "won" in the court of public opinion. Even though this may seem to be the most important victory of all to those of us who see Chiropractic as quackery, the most important campaign is still left.

Simon is (rightly) not entitled to damages, and there will be no judgement against the BCA other than an award of costs to Simon, since they have done nothing wrong in the eyes of the law (if not in the minds of some of the highest Justices of the land). The BCA have simply exercised their legal right to sue for defamation, and they have now discontinued that case.

Do not forget the price that Simon Singh has paid for his courage, but also remember that he was very lucky to be able to afford to take a stand. Honest critics are still being silenced because they don't have the financial means to fight libel cases. UK libel laws must be reformed.

By Bernard Bumner (not verified) on 15 Apr 2010 #permalink

And during Chiropractic Awareness Week, no less! Wow, this news has actually put a spring in my step!

Substitute "English" for "UK", for the sake of accuracy.

By Bernard Bumner (not verified) on 15 Apr 2010 #permalink

Singh will be able to recover his actual attorneys' fees and court costs by the "English rule" of loser pays. (The party that withdraws a lawsuit that it originates would, I think, be regarded as the losing party.) By contrast, in the United States each side pays its own fees and costs, even if the suit was a "strike suit" with no real factual or legal merit. So English libel law is worse than American libel law, but English civil procedure law is arguably better than American civil procedure law.

By tokenadult (not verified) on 15 Apr 2010 #permalink

This is great. And even better: according to Jack of Kent, there is a provision in the English Civil Procedure rules to make the claimant (here, the BCA) pay the costs incurred by the defendant (that would be Simon Singh) if said claimant drop their suit.

http://jackofkent.blogspot.com/2010/04/bca-drop-case-against-simon-sing…

If it can apply here, Singh would get at least a significant part of his money back.

By irenedelse (not verified) on 15 Apr 2010 #permalink

And, of course, the vile bunch that calls itself the BCA is now saying (in its press release) that Singh's statement that he never intended to suggest the BCA had been dishonest "goes some way to vindicate its position".
Wow. If they actually believe that anyone but Simon Singh has been vindicated, they have just risen to new depths of ignorance.

By Prophet Zarquon (not verified) on 15 Apr 2010 #permalink

Yes! This is great news.

By Caine, Fleur du mal (not verified) on 15 Apr 2010 #permalink

Great news!
Now its time to go after the Pope:
The Pope is a nazi, a fag and an idiot according to Google.

Another telling blow in the fight against officially sanctioned quackery.

Speaking of gangs of idiots...

Let me preface this by saying that I only read the Huffington Post because it's a great news roundup site I got hooked on before they got in with all the quacks and loonies.

However, they got one right on the health/medical front this time:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dr-mercola/agave-this-sweetener-is-f_b_53…

I don't really remember whether or not Dr. Joe Mercola is usually this sensible and well-informed, but he better watch his step.

If he keeps exposing New Agey health/medical frauds like this he's going to be out of a job.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2008/apr/19/controversiesinscie…
article is back on grauniad website

prophet zarquon- If you had just had to admit that your hasty action had brought the 'profession' that you claim to represent to its knees, with a quarter of its members being investigated by the GCC (General chiropractic council, the 'regulatory' body for chiroquacks) for making the same claims that you did. As a result you have almost bankrupted yourself and the GCC as well as bringing all of the rest of the alt med comunity into a situation where they will find it almost impossible to use the same legal tactics in the UK again.... ( breathe )

wouldn't you be a little pissy too?

By jameslawrence01 (not verified) on 15 Apr 2010 #permalink

Good to see Singh vindicated. the BCA can stuff it.

@eyespy #26
'DR.'Joe Mercola is a fine quackmaster, one of the wooiest. Orac routinely servers him heaping helpings of not-so-respectful-insolence.

"'DR.'Joe Mercola is a fine quackmaster, one of the wooiest. Orac routinely servers him heaping helpings of not-so-respectful-insolence."

That's what I thought. He's the guy who was talking nonsense about us never dying but living on as some sort of electro-spirit essence, right?

You have to admit, though, that he's spot on in that piece.

The visually-impaired Sciurus is living large on a cashew tonight.

The only problem is that it will take a lot of back quacking to pay off the bill.

the BCA can stuff it.

Let's hope they snuff it too.

By geoffmovies (not verified) on 15 Apr 2010 #permalink

Flea @25:

I believe you have just insulted a lot of perfectly respectable homosexuals. While that isn't libel in any legal sense, please, there's quite enough that the Pope has actually done wrong to use against him.

--Vicki

By v.rosenzweig (not verified) on 15 Apr 2010 #permalink

I have nothing to add to the discussion; I just like saying "The BCA happily promotes bogus treatments."

The BCA happily promotes bogus treatments.

Booooooooooooooooo-gus.

I believe you have just insulted a lot of perfectly respectable homosexuals. While that isn't libel in any legal sense, please, there's quite enough that the Pope has actually done wrong to use against him.

You're missing the joke. Go to www.google.com and type "The Pope is a" in the search field and see what Google suggests. Or follow the link that was provided.

I was going to say something xkcd-esque, but there wasn't enough space in the margin.

:)

By cdesignproponentsist (not verified) on 15 Apr 2010 #permalink

@Eyespy:
Yeah, he makes a valid point that agave isn't good for you. All I can say is - duh! I personally like agave syrup for a)it's taste and b)Makes some great Pulque. There's nothing healthy or even healthier than any other sugary syrup. Anyone who thinks otherwise is delusional.

Good news on both sides of the pond!!
(The "National Day of Prayer" has been declared unconstitutional in US federal court.)

By Rick Miller (not verified) on 15 Apr 2010 #permalink

@39: Hooray!

@40: I lost faith in Discovery quite a while ago; I generally stick to Nova or re-watch Cosmos for the five hundred billionth time.

-Chris

By Chris Hegarty (not verified) on 15 Apr 2010 #permalink

@DavidCT#31

The only problem is that it will take a lot of back quacking to pay off the bill.

I just thought that deserved to be said again. It left a pungent odour in the air. Well done to you, Sir!

By jidashdee (not verified) on 15 Apr 2010 #permalink

They still need to reform UK libel law, as the risk of a similar claim by others who criticize quackery is still there.

I hope Singh will at least have a big career boost out of this and can make some bucks off a book or something.

Just some background information on the issue of "costs" (I'm an Australian lawyer and so am pretty familiar with the British system, upon which the Australian system is based).

Britain and Australia do indeed have a "loser pays" system. "Costs follow the event" - that is, usually, the loser in a legal action pays the winners "costs".

However, "costs" are measured in a special way so that the winner does not usually get all of his or her legal expenses back. Costs are usually ordered on the "ordinary" or "party-party" basis. This is a system where the winner gets his or her costs according to a court imposed scale of fees. If the winner's lawyers charged more than that (and they usually do), the winner will be out of pocket for the difference. As a rule of thumb, party-party costs usually come out to between two-thirds and three-quarters of the real costs.

However, in exceptional cases, a court may order the loser to pay the winner's costs on the "indemnity costs" or "solicitor and client" basis. This means that the loser has to reimburse the winner for all the costs actually incurred (in some jurisdictions there is an "out" for patently unreasonable costs). Indemnity costs are usually only awarded for misconduct in the running of the case or for bringing a case that the loser should have known had no reasonable chance of winning.

(There's also a rather nasty system to encourage pre-trial settlement under which if, before the verdict, the loser offered the winner a settlement figure that was actually better for the winner than the amount eventually awarded 9i.e. if the winner would have been better off accepting the settlement than going to trial), the loser only has to pay the winner's costs up until the time he or she made the offer; after that point, the winner has to pay the loser's costs on the indemnity basis.)

From the reports, it seems to me that Simon has only been awarded costs on the ordinary basis. There doesn't appear to be anything here which would justify an order for indemnity costs. It's a sad comment on the British (and Australian) law of libel that the BCA's case *did* have reasonable prospects of success. Indeed, had the trial judge's preliminary rulings stood, I think the BCA would have won at trial.

By Atticus_of_Amber (not verified) on 15 Apr 2010 #permalink

That'll straighten 'em out.

By randydudek (not verified) on 15 Apr 2010 #permalink

Bono is god...

By whippersnapper9 (not verified) on 15 Apr 2010 #permalink

Singh is a superstar for rationality and in the long run he will have the last laugh even if he doesn't get adequate costs. Better still I am confident he will use the fame he has garnered wisely.

And now everybody knows that the BCA promotes bogus treatments.

Hehehe; the BCA are still crying that they've been defamed (but have given up hope of being able to prove it). Just don't forget that chiropracty is alive and well in the USA as well; in fact it's been growing. Maybe it's just the environment I grew up in, but when I was a kid everyone poo-pooed chiropracty.

By MadScientist (not verified) on 15 Apr 2010 #permalink

Anyone know (Atticus?) if he could/would/should go after the BCA for lost earnings, or somesuch?

By Charlie Foxtrot (not verified) on 15 Apr 2010 #permalink

It does seem ridiculous that Simon Singh gets taken to task for making a perfectly obvious statement about the BCA and specific chiropractic procedures in particular. If a big pseudo-medical group claim that their members can cure all manner of diseases that they manifestly cannot, then there really ought to be a penalty on them, not on the journalist who calls them on it. But they aren't libelling or defaming anyone, they are "just" telling pork pies about their products and services, with potentially disastrous results for the patients.

In Australia (good Atheist Convention in Melbourne BTW, that's one T-shirt I did buy!), health insurance companies and some GPs are too quick to push the "complementary medicine" button. Why on Earth do health insurance companies waste money on complementary medicine?

By Donald Oats (not verified) on 16 Apr 2010 #permalink

Simon Singh isn't "going after" the BCA for costs.

The Claimant has filed a Notice of Discontinuance. When this happens the Notice is either by consent, in which case the parties will already have agreed what is going to happen about costs, or if it is not by consent then by the Civil Procedure Rules a costs order against the discontinuing party automatically follows.

You know, if people writing about law fucked up the science they wrote about as often and hopelessly as bloggers and commenters fuck up the law, the blogosphere would choke under the pressure of the all flapping.

I suppose it is because lawyers are the more humble and likely to recognise their own areas of ignorance - whereas every idiot thinks he understands without effort the complexities of every arcane area of law.