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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
National
Matt Watts

Graham Linehan has conviction for damaging trans activist's phone overturned

Father Ted co-creator Graham Linehan has had his conviction for damaging the mobile phone of transgender activist Sophia Brooks overturned on appeal.

Linehan, 57, was had been prosecuted over a confrontation with Brooks outside the Battle Of Ideas conference in Westminster on October 19, 2024.

But Mrs Justice Amanda Tipples , ruling on Friday his conviction for criminal damage should be overturned, said: “Having considered all the evidence before us, we cannot be sure that the damage to the complainant’s phone was caused by Mr Linehan on the evening of the 19th of October 2024.

“We therefore found Mr Linehan not guilty of the offence.”

Linehan, a prominent anti-transgender activist, smiled and turned to supporters sitting in the public gallery as the judge at Southwark Crown Court gave her decision.

Graham Linehan arrives at Southwark Crown Court, London (Jordan Pettitt/PA) (PA Wire)

The hearing on Thursday was shown footage filmed on Ms Brooks’ phone in the moments leading up to the criminal damage incident.

While filming outside the venue, the activist, who was then aged 17, approached Linehan and asked: “Why do you think it is acceptable to call teenagers domestic terrorists?”

On the footage, Linehan can be heard calling Ms Brooks a “sissy porn-watching scumbag,” a “groomer” and a “disgusting incel”, with the complainant responding: “You’re the incel, you’re divorced.”

Another video played in court on Thursday appeared to show Linehan grabbing or slapping the complainant’s phone out of her hands.

Linehan’s lawyer Sarah Vine KC told the judge the complainant was “determined” to see Linehan convicted as part of a “campaign” against the comedy writer for his anti-transgender activism.

The complainant, Ms Vine said, “is seeking to achieve a victory against Mr Linehan because he is a high-profile opponent, by misusing the justice system”.

Linehan said the conviction being overturned was “very welcome but this case should never have got to court”, adding he felt the “police have failed in their duty to properly and fairly investigate”.

Last November, District Judge Briony Clarke also cleared Linehan of harassing Ms Brooks with a series of social media posts before and after the incident.

She said his posts were “deeply unpleasant, insulting and even unnecessary”, but did not amount to “oppressive” conduct.

The Bafta-winning writer was accused of harassment for branding Ms Brooks a “domestic terrorist”, a “groomer” and an “incel” in social media posts.

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