Dorset anti-vivisection protestor to be sentenced after Contempt of Court ruling

Michael Maher and another protestor is accused of entering an exclusion zone of a company that breeds animals for research

Author: Brian Farmer, PA Published 18th May 2022

A Dorset protesters involved in anti-vivisection demonstrations which featured singer Will Young is awaiting sentence after a High Court judge made contempt of court rulings.

Bosses at MBR Acres, which breeds animals for research, had accused Michael Maher who lives near Dorchester, Dorset and Sammi Laidlaw of entering an exclusion zone at a company site in Wyton, Cambridgeshire, in breach of a judge's order.

Maher and Laidlaw, who are part of a Camp Beagle protest group, had initially denied contempt.

But they had told the judge during a hearing that, having seen evidence, they may have breached an injunction.

They said they had not meant to breach an injunction.

Mr Justice Nicklin said, in a written ruling published on Monday, that Maher and Laidlaw were both guilty of contempt because they had admitted breaching an injunction by entering an exclusion zone.

The judge had considered evidence at a High Court hearing in London in April. He said he would consider arguments about penalties at a future hearing.

Mr Justice Nicklin was told that pop star Young had been involved in a demonstration outside the Wyton site in November.

Maher, who is in his 40s and lives near Dorchester, Dorset, and Laidlaw, who is in her 30s and lives near Southend, Essex, are among a number of protesters against whom MBR has taken legal action.

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