Ho, Cyd Sau Lan 何秀蘭

HKSAR v Albert Ho Chun Yan & others: reasons for sentence
HK District Court, 15-Sep-2021
For 12 defendants who pleaded guilty to unauthorised assembly or incitement thereof on 4-Jun-2020, the anniversary of the Tiananmen Square killings. The other 8 have pleaded not guilty.
HKSAR v Figo Chan Ho Wun & others: reasons for sentence
HK District Court, 1-Sep-2021
For an unauthorised procession on 20-Oct-2019 from Salisbury Garden in Tsim Sha Tsui.
HKSAR v Figo Chan Ho Wun & others: reasons for sentence
HK District Court, 28-May-2021
10 defendants pleaded guilty to various charges of inciting, organizing and participating in an unauthorised assembly on 1-Oct-2019, permission for which had been refused by the Police.
HKSAR v Jimmy Lai Chee Ying & others: reasons for sentence
HK District Court, 16-Apr-2021
For an unauthorised procession on 18-Aug-2019.
HKSAR v Jimmy Lai Chee Ying & others: reasons for ruling
HK District Court, 1-Apr-2021
In relation to an alleged unauthorised procession on 18-Aug-2019, an expert witness report by Professor Clifford Stott advanced by the defence is ruled inadmissible.
HKSAR v Jimmy Lai Chee Ying & others: reasons for verdict
HK District Court, 1-Apr-2021
Regarding an unauthorised procession on 18-Aug-2019. 2 of the 9 defendants, Leung Yiu Chung and Au Nok Hin, pleaded guilty before trial.
David Perry QC withdraws from prosecuting pan-dems
HK Government, 20-Jan-2021
4 days after we queried how he proposed to get to HK given the ban on travel from the UK, Mr Perry withdraws, partly because of "the exemption of quarantine". By the way, this case involves alleged offences under the Public Order Ordinance, not the National Security Law. UK Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab was wrong on that point, but it's an easy mistake to make given that over 50 pan-dems were arrested under suspicion of NSL offences 2 weeks ago.
Re David Perry QC
HK Court of First Instance, 12-Jan-2021
Mr Perry is approved to visit HK and prosecute leading pan-democrats for unauthorised assembly. Trial begins 16-Feb, but all arrivals from UK are currently banned - will the Govt exempt him, or is he already here? Like HK residents stranded in the UK, he could go somewhere else for 21 days and then do 21 days quarantine in HK, but that's 42 days of taxpayers' fees before he starts, not before 24-Feb.
Webb on "Backchat" re HK budget
RTHK, 26-Feb-2009

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