Skip to main content

Finally, the ridiculous “Twitter joke trial” saga ends in acquittal

Paul Chambers taken by Gavin RogersCommon sense has prevailed in the UK High court today, as Paul Chambers won an appeal to overturn his 2010 conviction, where he was accused of sending a “message of menacing character” over an “electronic communications network.”

That network was the Internet, the medium was Twitter, and the menacing message was “ Cr*p! Robin Hood Airport is closed. You’ve got a week and a bit to get your sh*t together, otherwise I’m blowing the airport sky high!!”

Recommended Videos

His tweet went out to 600 followers, and his outburst was due to the unexpected closure of the Birmingham airport, which interrupted his plans to fly to Northern Ireland and visit his girlfriend.

A few days after his tweet, Mr. Chambers was arrested at his work by anti-terrorism police, who had been alerted to the “threat” following a chain of events that started with an employee at the airport discovering the tweet while searching online.

To their credit, the police realized the tweet was a joke and didn’t charge him, but the Crown Prosecution Service didn’t agree, and instead charged him with the aforementioned crime.

Conviction

Amazingly, Mr. Chambers was subsequently convicted in May 2010, and this was upheld again in November. As a result he lost his job, but gained a £2000/$3100 fine, a criminal record and the dubious honor of being one of the very first people to be prosecuted for a message sent over the Internet.

Now, two-and-a-half years later, Mr. Chambers’ lawyer, David Allen Green — who was granted permission to tweet from court — has confirmed that the appeal has been won, and the conviction overturned.

Chambers had amassed considerable support over the past few years from some high-profile Twitter users, including IT Crowd creator Graham Linehan, who after offering his congratulations tweeted “Taken 2 years for British judges to hear a definition of Twitter that they understand. Welcome to the 21st Century chaps.”

MP Louise Mensch, who recently started her own social network, added that it was “a shameful prosecution that should never have been brought.” Comedians Stephen Fry and Al Murray had accompanied Mr. Chambers to a previous hearing, as seen above with Chambers in the center.

Mr. Chambers has always maintained that the tweet was nothing more than a “silly joke,” and following this morning’s win, the BBC quotes him as saying “I am relieved, vindicated — it is ridiculous it ever got this far.”

Indeed it is. How a facetious tweet made under the author’s real name but with no specific recipient, containing ripe language and too many exclamation marks, that was evidently dismissed by almost everyone who saw it — including airport security and the police — became a terrorist threat worthy of conviction, is not only unfathomable, but as much of a joke as the tweet that started it all.

Topics
Andy Boxall
Andy is a Senior Writer at Digital Trends, where he concentrates on mobile technology, a subject he has written about for…
Twitter finally gives up on cropping image previews
The Twitter app on the Sony XPeria 5 II.

Twitter has launched full-size image previews so you'll no longer have to guess what's hiding in the rest of a cropped picture in your feed.

Twitter launched the new full-size previews for iPhone and Android on Wednesday, May 5.

Read more
Final tweet by Chadwick Boseman’s Twitter account breaks record for most likes
Black Panther

The final tweet on Chadwick Boseman's Twitter account has broken the record for most likes on the social media platform in less than 24 hours.

Boseman's death due to colon cancer at the age of 43 years old shocked the world on Friday night, as the Black Panther star did not make his diagnosis public. His family announced his passing on Twitter, where they said it was "the honor of his career to bring King T'Challa to life in Black Panther."

Read more
I paid Meta to ‘verify’ me — here’s what actually happened
An Instagram profile on an iPhone.

In the fall of 2023 I decided to do a little experiment in the height of the “blue check” hysteria. Twitter had shifted from verifying accounts based (more or less) on merit or importance and instead would let users pay for a blue checkmark. That obviously went (and still goes) badly. Meanwhile, Meta opened its own verification service earlier in the year, called Meta Verified.

Mostly aimed at “creators,” Meta Verified costs $15 a month and helps you “establish your account authenticity and help[s] your community know it’s the real us with a verified badge." It also gives you “proactive account protection” to help fight impersonation by (in part) requiring you to use two-factor authentication. You’ll also get direct account support “from a real person,” and exclusive features like stickers and stars.

Read more