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Her writ states that she had refused to give the film crew permission to enter the flat but was deceived when the bodycam footage was used by Channel 5.
She said that the clip used of her in her pyjamas was a deeply humiliating ordeal .
Ms Zarghune s is now seeking up to £100,000 in damages and a gagging order to prevent footage being aired again.
MailOnline has contacted Channel 5, Brinkworth Films and DCBL for comment.
Her lawyers claim that the footage was used without her consent when it was shown on Channel 5 as part of the the popular fly-on-the-wall programme and watched by nearly 1.5 million viewers (bailiffs during a separate episode of Channel 5 s Can t Pay? We ll Take It Away!)
Tuesday, February 2, 2021
US company Celgard, LLC has secured an interim injunction against its rival, Chinese company Shenzhen Senior Technology Material Co Ltd (“Senior”), that prevents Senior from importing or supplying its battery accessory products into the UK. The Court found there was a likelihood that Senior had misused Celgard’s confidential information and trade secrets, and that the UK was the most appropriate forum to try the dispute. This is the first injunction under the relatively new UK Trade Secrets Regulations 2018 based on the EU Trade Secrets Directive. The judgment, which has now been confirmed on appeal to the Court of Appeal, contains a number of helpful clarifications on the approach that the UK courts will take to the protection of confidential information, particularly on a cross-border basis.
A divorced mother-of-two who was sued for trespass by her banker ex-husband after she refused to leave his £6million home after they split today won her court battle over his demand for £600,000 in rent.
Jayne Richardson Derhalli, 57, and Kerim Derhalli, 58, enjoyed the spoils of his stellar finance career, having two children during their 27-year marriage.
They shared a five-bedroom home in one of London s most exclusive streets, St Mary s Place, Kensington, as well as an 18th century estate in Devon.
But he moved out in 2014 and, as part of a divorce settlement in 2016, agreed to pay her £6.4million and millions more on the sale of their former home, which was in his name.
Supreme Court to consider costs orders against regulators
27 January 2021
Supreme Court: Permission granted
The Supreme Court is to consider whether costs should only be awarded against regulators in unsuccessful cases where there is good reason to make an order, it announced today.
The issue arose in a case involving the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) but the Court of Appeal referenced by analogy the position with solicitors in ruling last year that the starting point should be no order for costs where the unsuccessful regulator was acting purely in its regulatory capacity.
There could be good reason to depart from this, the appeal court said, but the mere fact that the regulator has been unsuccessful was not enough.