Top barristers and rappers unite to challenge use of rap lyrics in criminal trials

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By Legal Cheek on

15

Concerns over conflating ‘art with evidence’


More than 60 senior legal and cultural figures have backed a push for clearer statutory safeguards on the use of music lyrics as evidence in criminal trials, amid concern about how rap and drill are being interpreted in court.

As it stands, prosecutors can rely on lyrics written by defendants (and even appearances in music videos!) as evidence of gang affiliation or involvement in criminality. Campaigners argue that the practice disproportionately targets young black men and risks criminalising creative expression.

A proposed amendment to the Victims and Courts Bill, tabled by Labour peer Baroness Shami Chakrabarti, is due to be debated in the House of Lords this week. Supporters say the change would introduce statutory guardrails around when creative material can be admitted in evidence, ensuring it is used only where it is genuinely relevant, reliable and probative.

Signatories to the letter include rapper Giggs and DJ Semtex, senior academics from the universities of Oxford, Manchester and the London School of Economics, as well as 18 King’s Counsel, including Riel Karmy-Jones KC, chair of the Criminal Bar Association.

Commenting on the amendment, Chakrabarti asks: “Does my love of The Godfather trilogy make me a gangster?” She continues: “If not, why should young Black men in particular be stereotyped and criminalised for their taste in music? This amendment will protect freedom of expression and strengthen the integrity of fair trials.”

Concerns about the use of rap lyrics as evidence were thrown into the spotlight with the ‘Manchester 10’ case, where prosecutors pointed to defendants’ interest in drill music — alongside their postcode and social circles — as evidence of gang involvement. One defendant’s conviction was later quashed on appeal, but only after he had served three years in prison.

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The push for reform comes amid growing concern about the reliance on this type of evidence in criminal cases. Research cited by The Guardian suggests that appeals involving the use of lyrics or music videos have tripled in recent years, with London and Manchester emerging as particular hotspots where this type of evidence is commonly relied upon.

The amendment was put together by Keir Monteith KC of Art Not Evidence, a coalition of lawyers, academics and creatives working to combat the prejudicial use of creative expression in criminal trials. The group has long argued that lyrics are frequently performative, exaggerated or fictional, and should not be read literally in court. In an open letter to the Justice Secretary, campaigners urged him not to “[conflate] art with evidence.”

The group stresses that the proposal would not amount to a blanket ban as genuinely incriminating creative material could still be used, but only where it has a clear and direct link to the alleged offence.

15 Comments

Anonymous

I suppose it hasn’t struck all these bien-pensants that “performative” lyrics about murdering and robbing people are an objective social vice which encourage and facilitate degenerate criminality, and which should be discouraged as much as practically possible. But I suppose they’re not the ones who are going to be knifed as part of some idiotic “postcode war” that the mouth-breathing perpetrators will “performatively” rap about afterwards.

Mooise

Nah, but iz freedom o’speech, innit?

realist

The beauty of publishing rap songs of your criminality is that it is entirely optional. If you cannot seriously foresee that singing about your lifestyle of murder, robbery, burglary and so on could be used as evidence if you were actually accused of doing any of those things it is probably for the best you spend a few years in a cushy Cat D.

Get real

Rather than helping criminals by blaming the high rates of convictions of black men for knife and gun crime on this nonsense, maybe the better approach is to accept the higher rates of conviction are because there are higher rates of criminality within the cohort. Community responsibility is more important than this sort of inane blame and excuse culture. The rates of convictions are nothing to do with rap lyrics and everything to do with those who carry and use lethal weapons.

Toad

But violent video games aimed at white incels are acceptable.

Roe Cade

“The group stresses that the proposal would not amount to a blanket ban as genuinely incriminating creative material could still be used, but only where it has a clear and direct link to the alleged offence.”

“Clear and direct” link to the alleged offence. Right-e-o. Hopefully this is a case of clarifying the obvious.

Mc street Stabber (artistic only)

Some of these videos have millions of views and are made by known criminal gangs where they openly admit to specific murders albeit in street lingo. You can’t actually get better evidence.

The police used to ignore this evidence for years. Probably scared of racism. Maybe unaware of the videos. Maybe unsure of the meaning of the words used.

The purpose of the videos is to let people on the street know what’s what. If the authorities ignore it then they are facilitating gang rule through terror. From an evidential point of view the gangs are very stupid but they know the system covers for them and as stated above there are reasons for the open bragging.

I strongly suspect that the left wing protestors simply do not like seeing their clients and vassals jailed.

But the same left wingers would happily use a song lyric (unlikely to happen in real life) or a flag or a Facebook post to jail their enemies or association with people deemed dangerous. As has happened to many people jailed for thought crimes or protesting or even just getting into a fight where they did not necessarily start it.

In those situations they are more than happy to potentially smash a few innocent eggs to get the overall result they want.

Basically justice has to be Impartial to be justice. Two tier is not just.

Wigan Joe

Rapping your criticism of the government and mass migration is the one easy trick that Kier Starmer hates

Jim Bob the poet

In a lot of these songs you will hear confessions to actual murders that we know took place. In some cases they are not rap groups as such but criminal gangs rapping. Some videos have millions of views.

For years the police ignored them. Now they are having success securing convictions it feels like the establishment is trying to scare them away.

If someone brags about a murder in a video that seems like a confession.
If a group revels in the murder in a way which implies they did it then that is an indication one or some of them may be connected with it.
If someone appears in these videos then that is evidence that they may associate with the gang.
If someone listens to rap that is not really evidence of anything.

I’m not sure what the campaigners are complaining about. It feels a bit off to me.

Joint enterprise is a separate matter. It does seem unfair in cases. But if a gang chases someone and one of them stabs him to death you can see why the authorities might apply it rather than letting them all get off. There’s a certain likelihood that they were all part of the hunt.

Does he know it?

The demise of joint enterprise was a win for gang members and a loss for society. Bleeding heart liberalism at its worst.

Swiftie Justice

I’ve always been against the use of music that the defendant merely listened to as evidence, but lyrics they write and videos they appear in are a different matter.

Simply listening to music as evidence is preposterous. If a defendant had a secret love of Taylor Swift among all his rap and drill, no court would take it as evidence that he has an interest in wearing flowing dresses and falling in love with handsome men.

But it is undeniable that some genres of music have always had connections to genuine gangs. If there is evidence the defendant has ties to those gangs, then appearing in those videos or writing lyrics about events that appear to be plausible gang activity should be allowed to bolster the case as long as it is not solely relied on.

Baroness Chakrabarti is making an extremely disingenuous point to compare such activity to enjoying The Godfather. First of all The Godfather was a complete work of fiction, and not to my knowledge in any way intended to reflect the activities or beliefs of anyone involved in its production. Then secondly, as I have already addressed, mere enjoyment of such a thing is evidence of nothing- involvement in gang activities is the crux.

Heston

Nobody suggested that Bob Marley actually shot the sheriff
But if he had done, the song would have been relevant

Services

Especially if he was also charged with killing the deputy.

Sam

How quaintly woke.

Minted Senior Clerk and nothing you can do about it

They smelt of pubs and wormwood scrubs and too many right wing meetings?

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