Tommy Sheridan calls on judges to reject newspaper group appeal

the former MSP says he has notes to put forward in submission that some evidence had been "illegally obtained" and was therefore "inadissable".

Published 11th May 2016

Former MSP Tommy Sheridan has urged judges to reject an appeal brought by the owner of the now-defunct News of the World against his defamation victory a decade ago.

News Group Newspapers is attempting to have the 2006 civil jury verdict set aside at a hearing at the Court of Session in Edinburgh.

Mr Sheridan won the high-profile defamation case over the newspaper after it printed allegations about the then-Socialist MSP's sex life, which included claims he visited a swingers' club.

The paper was ordered to pay £200,000 in damages but weeks later a police investigation was launched into allegations of perjury and Mr Sheridan was charged.

He was jailed after being found guilty in December 2010 of lying under oath during the successful defamation action and was freed from prison after serving just over a year of his sentence.

Mr Sheridan, 52, has always denied the allegations and launched an unsuccessful attempt to appeal against his conviction. He has also lodged an application with the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission.

The case has returned to the courts as the publisher of the newspaper, which closed down in 2011, now wants three civil appeal court judges to overturn the 2006 decision.

Alastair Duncan QC, representing the newspaper group, has already told the court the verdict should be set aside as it was "unsafe'' because of the 2010 perjury conviction.

He also said the verdict could not stand because it was "contrary to the evidence''.

However, during the second day of proceedings on Wednesday, Mr Sheridan, who is representing himself, said it was his submission that the argument was "irrelevant''.

He told judges Lady Paton, Lord Drummond Young and Lord McGhie: "In any event, the appeal ground on the verdict being contrary to the evidence has no relevance.

"My conviction was not and could not have been evidence led before the jury in 2006.''

Mr Sheridan said he had ten notes of argument to put before the court in his submission, including that some evidence had been "illegally obtained'' and was therefore inadmissible''.

The hearing continues.