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Abu Hamza must pay £1m for trial | Abu Hamza must pay £1m for trial |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Jailed radical Islamic cleric Abu Hamza al-Masri has been told to pay back more than £1m in legal aid spent defending him against race-hate charges. | |
The cleric was jailed for seven years in February 2006 for soliciting to murder and inciting racial hatred. | The cleric was jailed for seven years in February 2006 for soliciting to murder and inciting racial hatred. |
A judge at the Old Bailey said Abu Hamza might not be able to pay, but the decision would allow the Legal Services Commission to seize his assets. | |
He accused the London-based cleric of lying about his financial interests. | |
Lord Justice Hughes made the order for the recovery of the full costs of the defence. | |
Private school costs | Private school costs |
This will allow the Legal Services Commission to apply to seize a £220,000 house in Greenford, west London, which Abu Hamza had claimed belonged to his sister. | This will allow the Legal Services Commission to apply to seize a £220,000 house in Greenford, west London, which Abu Hamza had claimed belonged to his sister. |
The judge, however, said he did not believe him. | The judge, however, said he did not believe him. |
Abu Hamza told the Old Bailey, via video link from prison, that since his disability benefits had been stopped in 2003, he had no assets and no access to money. | |
He said he had been living off handouts from family and friends. | He said he had been living off handouts from family and friends. |
But the court heard that Abu Hamza, whose wife and six children live in a council house, was still contributing to private school fees of £9,000 a year. | But the court heard that Abu Hamza, whose wife and six children live in a council house, was still contributing to private school fees of £9,000 a year. |
We must ensure that legal aid is spent on the most vulnerable people in society and those who can afford to pay, do so Richard Shand, Legal Services Commission | |
An investigation was carried out by the Legal Services Commission last February after Abu Hamza was ordered to disclose his financial circumstances. | |
The judge said that his failure to declare his interest in the Greenford property back then demonstrated that "the story I have been told today is simply not true". | |
The court was told that Abu Hamza's defence solicitors were seeking to recover costs of just over £1m but the judge warned that sum could rise. | |
Legal Services Commission spokesman Richard Shand welcomed the judgement. | |
"We must ensure that legal aid is spent on the most vulnerable people in society and those who can afford to pay, do so," he said. | |
Abu Hamza, a former preacher at Finsbury Park Mosque, in London, was convicted of 11 of the 15 charges he faced. | |
During a later appeal that failed, lawyers argued his case had been prejudiced by "unique" world events and a media hate-campaign. |