Last month McCann and her husband Gerry
handed police an 80-page dossier
containing hundreds of tweets, Facebook
messages and posts from online forums
abusing them and accusing them of being
involved in the disappearance of their
daughter. Some of the messages were
directed at their other children,
nine-year-old twins.
In September, a man who sent a string of
abusive messages to Creasy was jailed.
She said: “We need to send a clear
message that it isn’t for anyone to put
up with being harassed via any medium —
this is an old crime taking a new form
online.”
The Communications Act 2003 bans online
messages that threaten violence or cause
stress or alarm to their targets. But
the harshest sentence that magistrates
can impose is six months in prison.
The government is to introduce
amendments to the Criminal Justice and
Courts Bill, which will be debated in
the House of Lords this week, to allow a
maximum penalty on conviction of two
years in prison.
The period in which prosecutions can be
brought against people for using the
internet, social media or mobile phones
to send menacing messages will be
increased from six months to three
years.
“The sending of abusive messages or
material online can cause absolute
misery for victims and we need to make
sure that people who commit these awful
crimes are properly punished,” Grayling
said.
Creasy said that police had to ensure
that victims were given proper support
when they came forward. “Otherwise
longer sentences will be little comfort
to those still too often being told that
because they are being harassed online
it’s not serious,” she said. |