Belfast Telegraph

Linehan ‘proud’ to damage activist’s phone, court told

- MATHILDE GRANDJEAN Crime · Law · Society · Domestic Violence · Justice · Violence and Abuse · City of Westminster · Arizona · Twitter, Inc. · Picaboo · Southwark · Graham Linehan · London Borough of Southwark

TV writer and activist Graham Linehan was “proud” to have damaged a trans activist’s mobile phone during a dispute outside a conference, a court has been told.

Linehan (57) snatched the phone off Sophia Brooks and threw it to the ground outside the Battle of Ideas conference in Westminste­r on October 19, 2024.

The Irish comedy writer, who helped to create shows including Father Ted and Black Books, flew in from Arizona to attend an appeal hearing against his conviction for criminal damage at Southwark Crown Court yesterday.

Prosecutor Julia Faure Walker, opening the case before Mrs Justice Amanda Tipples, told the court Linehan gained “a sense of personal superiorit­y” from the incident, and expressed it in a post on X (formerly Twitter) on October 22, 2024.

The post — in which Linehan refers to Ms Brooks as male — read: “I’m quite proud that I grabbed his phone and threw it across the road. He was furious.”

“Clearly, Mr Linehan was pleased by gaining a sense of personal superiorit­y over a transgende­r activist,” Ms Faure Walker said.

She further told Mrs Justice Tipples the court was “not being invited to take sides in an ideologica­l debate”.

“Whilst earlier events provide context, the prosecutio­n would invite the court to focus primarily on what happened immediatel­y before Mr Linehan took the phone out of Ms Brooks’ hands,” she added.

The hearing yesterday 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 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 “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 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 is “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”.

“The background to the matter before the court is the ongoing debate about the legal and social status of sex and gender,” she added.

“The defendant subscribes to the view that human sex is not only universal, binary and immutable, but that it is a key organising category in society, which should not be subordinat­ed to the subjective assertion of gender identity.

“It is the case for the defendant that the allegation before the court is a part

of, effectivel­y, a campaign by a number of trans-rights activists — of whom the complainan­t is one — to discredit gender-critical activists as individual­s for political ends.”

Linehan was cleared by a judge at Westminste­r Magistrate­s Court last November of harassing Ms Brooks with a series of social media posts before and after the incident.

But he was convicted by District Judge Briony Clarke of criminal damage over his actions with the mobile phone.

In her verdict, Judge Clarke said Linehan’s social media posts may have been “annoying” and were “deeply unpleasant, insulting and even unnecessar­y”, but they did not amount to “oppressive” conduct.

Turning to the criminal damage charge, the judge dismissed Linehan’s case that he had grabbed the handset and threw it away to prevent Ms Brooks from committing a criminal offence, and said he could reasonably have known that it would be damaged.

He was “angry and fed up”, said the judge, before imposing a £500 fine on Linehan.

The writer was also ordered to pay costs of £650 and a court fee of £200.

The appeal hearing at Southwark Crown Court is expected to continue today.

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