By Order of Mr Justice Sycamore Declan resubmits his claim for judicial review
This afternoon Declan ran into the Administrative Court Office (ACO) of the High Court of Justice Administrative Court in a major way. They made out that Mr Justice Sycamore did not order Declan to resubmit his claim for judicial review (see the Judge's order here). Only after Declan threatened to put the Judge's order before ACO Court Manager David Brupbacher did they seal the resubmitted application against the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions. Declan's entire case is summarised in the one paragraph contained in Section 5, "Detailed Statement of Grounds" (click to enlarge):
Just to cheer Declan up, tonight he has come home to his fifth TV in this our first tenancy off the street - after four TV blow-outs in the first ten months - only to discover that it is fit for the skip. Now we can't even get BBC1 from the outside aerial (see blog of 14 August Declan pays £100 to be linked to the cable TV network in the house; this blog contains stunning photos of MI5 whistleblower David Shayler who lived for a couple of years in one of the rooms below us). Our live-in landlady is human rights activist Belinda McKenzie. This is a video of Belinda speaking in July outside the High Court in solidarity with Anne and Hollie Greig, a case of paedophilia that threatens to rock the British criminal justice system:
It would appear the writing is on the wall. Bottom line here is that if the High Court and the Court of Appeal throw out Declan's case, he will be once again making an application to the European Court of Human Rights pursuant to Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights protecting the right to respect for family and private life (see blog of 21 October 2008 European Court of Human Rights declares application inadmissible).
Click to see full ECHR letter of dismissal:
True to form, Declan has already cracked open his appeal pack for the Court of Appeal.