logo
Joey Barton to pay £200,000 of Jeremy Vine's legal costs in libel battle

Joey Barton to pay £200,000 of Jeremy Vine's legal costs in libel battle

Telegrapha day ago
Joey Barton, the former footballer, will pay more than £200,000 of Jeremy Vine 's legal costs after their High Court libel battle, a court has heard.
Vine sued Barton for libel and harassment over several online posts, including one in which he falsely called the BBC Radio 2 presenter a 'big bike nonce' and a 'pedo defender' on X, formerly Twitter.
The pair settled the claim last year after Barton posted two apologies on the same social media platform and paid a total of £110,000 in damages to Vine, as well as his legal costs.
In an agreed statement read out at the High Court in October 2024, barrister Gervase de Wilde, for Vine, said that the broadcaster 'was deeply alarmed, distressed and upset' by Barton's actions, which included a 'persistent and highly damaging campaign of defamation, harassment and misuse of private information'.
On Tuesday, a specialist costs court heard that Barton had agreed to pay £160,000 of Vine's costs from the main legal action.
Costs Judge Colum Leonard also ordered Barton to pay a further £43,172.30 arising from the negotiation of the £160,000 figure, meaning he will pay a total of £203,172.30 of Vine's fees.
Lawyers for Vine told the High Court in May last year that Barton's posts amounted to a 'calculated and sustained attack'.
Barton, who played for teams including Manchester City, Newcastle United, Rangers, and French side Marseille during his career, also began using '#bikenonce' on X, which led to it trending on the platform.
After Mrs Justice Steyn ruled that some of the posts could defame Vine, Barton apologised to the journalist in June last year, stating that the allegations he made were 'untrue'.
He said that he would pay Vine £75,000 in damages, but solicitors for Vine later said Barton would pay a further £35,000 as part of a 'separate settlement' for claims published after legal action began.
Mr De Wilde told the October hearing that Barton made four undertakings as part of the settlement, including not to harass Vine or encourage others to do so.
Vine said following the hearing that the former footballer 'needs to find himself a different hobby'.
'Excessive and disproportionate'
The court on Tuesday was told that Barton agreed to pay £160,000 of Vine's legal costs earlier this month, and that Vine was claiming around £60,000 in costs for negotiating that figure.
Suzanne Holmes, for Barton, said this was 'excessive' and 'disproportionate', and should be reduced.
Kevin Latham, representing Vine, said Barton had 'repeatedly failed to engage in proper negotiation' throughout proceedings and 'has to bear the consequences of that approach'.
Neither Barton nor Vine attended the hearing in London.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Thames Valley Police touched colleague inappropriately
Thames Valley Police touched colleague inappropriately

BBC News

time23 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Thames Valley Police touched colleague inappropriately

A police officer has been found to have touched a colleague intimately in a way that was "deliberate, unwarranted and unnecessary".PC Ben Lane, who was based in Berkshire, touched the man inappropriately over his clothing while at work in September 2024, a panel Lane, who has since quit Thames Valley Police (TVP), claimed he was trying to demonstrate an alleged sexual assault he was investigating and touched his colleague on the back of his right panel, led by TVP's assistant chief constable Dennis Murray, said that was "highly implausible". The panel heard the victim, referred to in the proceedings as Officer A, gave a "very comprehensive account" of what happened, including his "surprise and shock".Mr Murray said the attack "could be classed as criminal in nature" and amounted to a "sexual assault on police premises".Mr Lane, who did not attend Wednesday's hearing at TVP's headquarters in Kidlington, Oxfordshire, said in a statement that he used 10% of the possible pressure when he touched the Officer A scored the pain inflicted on him at four or five out of panel found that Mr Lane had committed gross misconduct and that he would have been sacked had he not already will be added to the College of Policing's barred list. You can follow BBC Berkshire on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram.

Ex-Man Utd wonderkid and Premier League star suing doctor for £7m over ‘unnecessary' op he claims cost him his career
Ex-Man Utd wonderkid and Premier League star suing doctor for £7m over ‘unnecessary' op he claims cost him his career

The Sun

time23 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Ex-Man Utd wonderkid and Premier League star suing doctor for £7m over ‘unnecessary' op he claims cost him his career

A FORMER Manchester United wonderkid is suing a doctor for £7million over an "unnecessary" operation. Sylvan Ebanks-Blake went under the knife after breaking his leg in 2013. 2 2 The retired striker never fully recovered from the injury as he did not return to top-flight football after the surgery. The 39-year-old believes that his surgeon, Prof James Calder, performed an "unnecessary" and "destructive" operation on his ankle. As a result, Ebanks-Blake says that the procedure caused his top-flight career to end prematurely. His barrister Simeon Maskrey KC told Mrs Justice Lambert at London's High Court: "If it ain't broke, don't fix it" It is also part of the footballer's case that he claims he was not asked for proper consent before the operation. However, Prof Calder's lawyers have argued that Ebanks-Blake overestimated his skills. They said he "had an overoptimistic view of his own powers of recovery". Barrister Martin Forde KC added: "Far from curtailing the claimant's career, the defendant will argue that his clinical skills prolonged the career of a professional footballer, who had suffered a very serious injury." Ebanks-Blake was a promising forward in his youth days as he represented England at the Under-21 level. He also played youth football for Manchester United before leaving the club in 2006 for Plymouth Argyle. Where are they now: The unusual careers of former footballers The striker spent two years there before joining Wolves and established himself at the club. He scored 62 goals in 193 appearances for the club, including ten in the Premier League. Ebanks-Blake helped the club reach the top-flight in 2009 and was part of the iconic strike partnership alongside Irishman Kevin Doyle. He spent five years at the Molineux before the broken fibula injury struck. Ebanks-Blake left the club at the end of that season and bounced around clubs until he retired in 2019 at Walsall Wood following another leg fracture.

Noah Smedley: Murder trial shown CCTV footage of fatal stabbing
Noah Smedley: Murder trial shown CCTV footage of fatal stabbing

BBC News

time23 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Noah Smedley: Murder trial shown CCTV footage of fatal stabbing

A murder trial jury has been shown the moment a man was stabbed through the heart before running away and collapsing in the Hartle, now 18 but 17 at the time, is accused of killing Noah Smedley, who had met him and his three friends off Heanor Road, Ilkeston, Derbyshire, to sell them cannabis on 28 Hartle, of Station Road, Stanley, denies murder but pleaded guilty to possessing a bladed article in a public place before the the jury through CCTV footage, prosecutor Adrian Langdale KC said Mr Hartle could clearly be seen lunging at the 18-year-old's chest with a knife. The trial, at Derby Crown Court, was also shown hundreds of Snapchat messages between Mr Hartle, three of his friends, his girlfriend and Mr the day of the alleged murder, Mr Hartle arranged to sleep at a friend's house where he would play Call of Duty, drink beer and smoke cannabis with two court was shown messages sent to a girl shortly after he arrived at the property in Monyash Close asking if he could bring his three friends to a house party about 10 minutes of the group arranged to buy cannabis from Mr Smedley and the four teenagers were captured on CCTV heading down Heanor Road. The jury was then shown a message from Mr Hartle to his girlfriend shortly before they met Mr Smedley, which read: "We're going to slap him up."CCTV footage showed Mr Smedley arriving on an e-scooter at about 20:15 GMT when the prosecution said the deal was made. Mr Langdale KC told the jury: "Charlie Hartle hangs back... he takes a couple of steps forward and a couple of steps back and then appears to edge forward towards the group and Noah Smedley... a small light appears in front of Noah."The pair are now facing each other... Charlie Hartle lunges at Noah Smedley's chest… he then steps back and the knife can be seen in his hand."[Mr Smedley] shouts out 'yo, yo, yo, yo, you stabbed me brother'."Noah jogs down the street and collapses on Heanor Road... this is the last time he was pictured on CCTV."Charles Hartle was then shown running from the scene while his friends appeared to linger for a few seconds before also court was told they called 999 about 30 minutes after the incident. 'Split second' stabbing In a police interview shown to the court with one of Mr Hartle's friends who witnessed the stabbing, he said there was no indication anything was amiss. "Everything was fine when we met... the transaction was made to Noah," he said."Charlie at the time was saying nothing, he was all quiet there and wasn't arguing or doing anything"And then in an instance he whipped out the knife and stabbed Noah in a split second – there was no threatening, nothing like that."We then hung around for about 10 seconds – we were scared at the time we didn't know what to do – we just went on Heanor Road and we were going back to mine."We saw Charlie and said 'why did you stab him?' He didn't want to have any conversation and we didn't want any part of him." The court was told Mr Hartle was seen on CCTV speaking to his girlfriend before he got a taxi into Derby city centre just after 21: trial, which is due to last two weeks, continues.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store