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UK court sends message: tweeted threats will land you in jail

A British man who tweeted threats to a member of Parliament over her support for putting Jane Austen on the 10-pound banknote will serve 18 weeks in jail. The judge said his 'campaign of hatred' caused the MP to feel deeply threatened. 

By Michael Holtz, Staff writer

While Jane Austen has become the new face of Britain's 拢10 note, a British man who tweeted threats to express his outrage over that choice has become a poster child for the seriousness with which the courts are confronting such speech.

On Monday, a London judge sentenced Peter Nunn to 18 weeks in jail for threatening via Twitter to rape Stella Creasy, a member of Parliament who backed the campaign last summer to put the 19th-century author on the banknote. Mr. Nunn also branded her a 鈥渨itch鈥 in his barrage of abusive tweets.

Nunn launched what the prosecution called a 鈥渃ampaign of hatred鈥澛燼fter the Bank of England decided to replace Charles Darwin's image with Austen's, the Guardian reported, a choice that sparked heated and often hostile debate.

But Nunn鈥檚 guilty verdict may serve as a cautionary note to Internet trolls across the United Kingdom 鈥 and as sign of hope for victims of online threats. 鈥淭oday鈥檚 sentence for Peter Nunn is a step forward in recognizing the distress and fear online harassment can cause,鈥 Ms. Creasy said, according to reports in British media.

District Judge Elizabeth Roscoe found Nunn guilty of sending indecent, obscene, and menacing messages after his trial earlier this month at the City of London Magistrates鈥 Court, which handles low-level criminal cases. In addition to the jail sentence 鈥 which began Monday 鈥攖he judge also imposed a restraining order on Nunn, banning him from contacting Creasy or feminist activist Caroline Criado-Perez, the Guardian reported.聽Ms. Criado-Perez, who launched the Jane Austen campaign, also received online threats for pushing to keep a woman on a British bank note.

The Guardian reported that the Twitter messages from Nunn deeply disturbed Creasy, leading her to install a panic button in her home. Prosecutor Alison Morgan told the paper that Creasy felt 鈥渋ncreasing concern that individuals were seeking not only to cause her distress but also to cause her real harm which led her to fear for her own safety.鈥

Nunn鈥檚 lawyer told the court he felt great remorse for the stress he had caused, the BBC reported. But the judge said Nunn had appeared 鈥渆vasive鈥 during the trial.

Nunn鈥檚 sentence is the third handed down in the currency decision. Earlier this year, Isabella Sorley and John Nimmo were sentenced to 12 weeks and eight weeks, respectively, for making similar threats to Creasy and Criado-Perez on social media, the UK Criminal Law Blog reported.

The author of the Law Blog was unsurprised by Nunn鈥檚 longer sentence because of the nature of the offense and the seriousness with which social media cases are treated. The Crown Prosecution Service released 聽a set of comprehensive prosecution guidelines in late 2012 following a series of high-profile cases involving Twitter and Facebook 鈥 of which聽Nunn鈥檚 case was simply the latest.聽