By Sarah Phillimore and Rob Jessel writing for the Critic

Harry Miller was visited by one of Humberside Police’s to “check his thinking” after an anonymous complainant reported him for tweeting.
The Judge in Fair Cop’s first High Court challenge agreed that the “chilling effect” of being visited by the police for expressing political views, and their recording as a “non-crime hate incident” (NCHI), was sufficiently serious to be a disproportionate interference with Harry’s Article 10 rights, and hence unlawful.
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