Cinema & Co

17 Castle Street,
Swansea, SA1 1JF

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DavidSimpson
DavidSimpson on November 4, 2022 at 11:46 pm

Following the judgement in December 2021 Ms Redfern lodged an appeal. This was heard in part in September 2022, when the judge ordered her to produce a detailed audit trail of her personal and business finances, in order to determine whether the fine of £15,000 is at an appropriate level. This included the whereabouts of tens of thousands of pounds raised via a crowd-funding campaign set up by someone with links to the far right.

At a subsequent hearing in October 2022 the court was informed that Ms Redfern had dispensed with her barrister and legal team, and had abandoned her appeal. She had not presented the required financial disclosure, but the judge, who accepted her request to abandon the appeal, did not increase the original fine.

popcorn_pete
popcorn_pete on February 6, 2022 at 7:33 am

Didn’t really help in that one of the films screened during the restrictions was a documentary by the son of conspiracy theorist David Icke making allegations about how the NHS were dealing with COVID patients. More here: bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-59853848

DavidSimpson
DavidSimpson on December 20, 2021 at 1:58 am

The shutters had been bolted closed on 11th December. On Tuesday 14th December Ms Redfern was summoned to Swansea Magistrates' Court.

She admitted to District Judge Neale Thomas that she had been in contempt of court and also accepted two counts of failing to comply with the Coronavirus Act 2020. Defence solicitor Jonathan Gwyn Mendus Edwards asked the court to be lenient with his client, but Judge Thomas said it was clear that Ms Redfern had broken the law.

She was given a 28 day prison sentence, suspended for nine months, and a combined fine of £15,000. She also has 56 days to pay court costs of £8,940 and a victim surcharge of £190.

The judge did say that Ms Redfern was of previous good character and had worked hard to establish her business.

DavidSimpson
DavidSimpson on December 13, 2021 at 1:37 am

Cinema & Co hit the headlines in December 2021 when Swansea Council bolted the shutters after the owner, Anna Redfern, was summoned to court for allegedly defying a previous order to close. The cinema had initially been ordered to close by Swansea Council and Welsh Government officials on 19th November for alleged COVID-19 rule breaches. The venue had said it would not enforce the COVID-19 pass scheme and would “take a stand” against new measures applying to cinemas and similar venues, calling them “discriminatory and unlawful”.

The venue had been issued with a closure order and told to shut for 28 days. But it chose to re-open. Anna Redfern was taken to court on 30th November, where Judge Thomas rejected her appeal to dismiss her case - and ordered the venue to follow COVID-19 regulations, effectively meaning it had to close its doors, as per the council’s original order.

Ms Redfern was also told to pay the council’s legal costs of £5,265. But the day after the court case, Cinema and Co. apparently re-opened and hosted a Christmas film screening for people who had booked a ticket online. In response, Swansea Council confirmed a ‘contempt of court’ application will be made, alleging the business has failed to comply with its recent court order. The shutters were then bolted to the ground to prevent any further attempts to re-open.