IPPT20120207, ECHR, Axel Springer v Germany

13-04-2012 Print this page
IPPT20120207, ECHR, Axel Springer v Germany

PUBLICATION – PRIVACY

 

Balancing interest in publishing the information about arrest for cocaine possesion against TV actor's right to respect for his private life; under the circumstances no need to preserve anonymity TV actor; no bad faith publisher
• The fact is, however, that having regard to the nature of the offence committed by X, the degree to which X is well known to the public, the circumstances of his arrest and the veracity of the information in question, the applicant company – having obtained confirmation of that information from the prosecuting authorities themselves – did not have sufficiently strong grounds for believing that it should preserve X’s anonymity.
In that context, it should also be pointed out that all the information revealed by the applicant company on the day on which the first article appeared was confirmed by the prosecutor W. to other magazines and to television channels. Likewise, when the second article appeared, the facts leading to X’s conviction were already known to the public (see, mutatis mutandis, Aleksey Ovchinnikov v. Russia, no. 24061/04, § 49, 16 December 2010). Moreover, the Court of Appeal itself considered that the applicant company’s liability did not extend beyond minor negligence given that the information disclosed by the public prosecutor’s office had led it to believe that the report was lawful (see paragraph 35 above). In the Court’s view, it has not therefore been shown that the applicant company acted in bad faith when publishing the articles in question.

 

Content, form and consequences of the impugned articles do constitute a ground for banning them

 

IPPT20120207, ECHR, Axel Springer v Germany