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Protester cleared of traffic cone attack on Sir Iain Duncan Smith

Elliot Bovill was found to have no case to answer after an incident at the Tory party conference in Manchester last year.

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A man has been cleared of assaulting former Tory leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith with a traffic cone, along with two other protesters who shouted “Tory scum” at the MP as they followed him through a city centre.

Sir Iain told Manchester Magistrates’ Court he feared for his wife and her friend when he had the cone “slammed” on to his head as they were followed by protesters hurling abuse during the Conservative Party Conference last year.

On Tuesday, the chief magistrate, Senior District Judge Paul Goldspring, said the evidence that identified Elliot Bovill, 32, of no fixed address, as the person caught on CCTV putting the orange and white cone on the 68-year-old MP’s head was “weak” and “tenuous”, and dismissed the common assault charge against him saying there was no case to answer.

The chief magistrate said the case against Mr Haslam and Ms Wood centred on the use of the phrase “Tory scum” by the pair as they followed him and the two women along Portland Street in Manchester.

Mr Goldspring said using that phrase in the context of them targeting Sir Iain as they followed him was “both insulting and pejorative, and I don’t accept that that wasn’t their intention”.

But he accepted that this behaviour was “reasonable” in the context of Articles 10 and 11 of the Human Rights Act – the rights to freedom of expression and freedom of assembly and association.

He said: “The courts do not criminalise free speech. The Crown has not shown me it is proportionate to criminalise those words.”

Earlier, Mr Goldspring told the court that Mr Bovill had been identified by a detective on the basis of poor-quality CCTV footage which was shown to the court on Monday.

The chief magistrate said: “It seems to me there are a number of difficulties with the identification that had been made.

“The fact is that what (the officer) was working with was vague and flawed in the first instance.

“In my view, the identification evidence is weak, it’s tenuous, and it is completely unsupported by any other evidence.”

Elliot Bovill court case
Sir Iain Duncan Smith leaving Manchester Magistrates’ Court with his wife Betsy and Primrose Yorke (left) (Steve Allen/PA)

He said he turned around after the cone was “smacked down” on his head and told the group “you are pathetic”.

He said he was particularly concerned for the safety of his wife and Mrs Yorke.

His wife told the court the group that followed them from the hotel “used the c-word, the f-word, they called us scum, Tory scum”.

Lady Duncan Smith said “it was getting quite nasty” as they were confronted with a “barrage of rudery”.

Ruth Wood
Ruth Wood (Steve Allen/PA)

She told the judge: “Radical was making some quite good points, I thought. I wasn’t really chanting very much. I was pretty much just drumming along.

“There was nothing particularly threatening about what we were doing, in my mind.

“Not once did he turn round or try to tell us to stop. It just didn’t seem to me as if they were concerned at all.”

Asked about the cone, Wood said: “It seemed to me at the time like a practical joke.”

Radical Haslam
Radical Haslam (Steve Allen/PA)

He said: “We saw a politician and saw an opportunity to express our political views.

“We live in a democracy where protest is legal. I was hoping for some sort of exchange.”

The defendant agreed that he shouted a series of comments at the MP, saying “shame on you”, in relation to a range of policies relating to child poverty, climate change and homelessness.

He said he was making a speech which, he accepted, ended with the phrase “Tory scum”.

Asked about the cone incident, Haslam said: “He (Sir Iain) didn’t come across as alarmed or distressed. He came across as angry that it had happened.”

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