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From left, Rosemary Webster, Lucy Porter, Zoe Cohen and Sophie Cowen outside Southwark crown court in London where they were sentenced.
From left, Rosemary Webster, Lucy Porter, Zoe Cohen and Sophie Cowen outside Southwark crown court in London where they were sentenced. Photograph: Kirsty O’Connor/PA
From left, Rosemary Webster, Lucy Porter, Zoe Cohen and Sophie Cowen outside Southwark crown court in London where they were sentenced. Photograph: Kirsty O’Connor/PA

Climate activists guilty of smashing Barclays HQ windows spared jail

This article is more than 1 year old

Women were found guilty of causing £100,000 damage to building in Canary Wharf, London

Seven climate change activists who were found guilty of causing more than £100,000 of damage by smashing windows at the headquarters of Barclays Bankwere spared jail by a judge.

Zoe Cohen, 52, Carol Wood, 53, Sophie Cowen, 31, Lucy Porter, 48, Gabriella Ditton, 28, Rosemary Webster, 64, and another protester, who cannot be named for legal reasons, were charged with criminal damage and pleaded not guilty.

They were convicted and given suspended sentences on Friday.

The women had used chisels and hammers to break glass panels on the exterior of the building in Canary Wharf in London on 7 April 2021, Southwark crown court heard.

They wore patches that read “better broken windows than broken promises” as they placed stickers stating “in case of climate emergency break glass” on the windows of the bank.

Diana Wilson, prosecuting, said: “We have spoken to Barclays and they do seek compensation.”

Owen Greenhall, representing Wood and the unnamed protester, said: “The trial process is something that has had a significant impact on both my clients and is not something they would want to go through again.

“There is no evidence of any serious distress caused in this case.”

All the other protesters represented themselves.

Rosemary Webster said: “I don’t feel that I am a criminal. I want to protect future generations. I do not call myself a protester, I call myself a climate defender.”

When giving evidence during the trial, Zoe Cohen said she came from a Jewish family that escaped fascism, which partly inspired her climate activism.

She told the court: “I am of Jewish origin. Today [Friday] is Holocaust Memorial Day. I can imagine what it must be like to be a teenager today and know what awaits.”

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In his sentencing remarks, Judge Alexander Milne KC said: “You appear to be proud of what you have done. You sought to justify what you have done by referencing your beliefs.” He warned the protesters: “You risk alienating those who you look to for support.”

Milne acknowledged they had compared themselves to the suffragettes, but said: “Votes for women were not won just by breaking windows. I regard what you did as a stunt, a gimmick to attract attention.

“Your primary mitigation is that you did take steps to ensure that no one would be physically injured during the protest and your sincerely held beliefs.”

Ditton, Porter, Webster and the defendant who cannot be named were each given an eight-month suspended sentence. Wood and Cohen were each given a seven-month suspended sentence, and Cowan a six-month suspended sentence.

All the sentences will be suspended for two years. Each defendant will have to pay £500 in prosecution costs, but no compensation costs were imposed.

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