Jamie Bryson acquitted on false statement charges
Loyalist activist Jamie Bryson has been acquitted on charges of making a false statement to the UK's private security industry regulator.
The case against him was formally dismissed after no evidence was offered in the prosecution over door staff operating in the north Down area.
A judge at Belfast Magistrates' Court also awarded him more than £500 legal costs in defending the long-running proceedings.
Mr Bryson later declared himself fully vindicated and hit out at the Security Industry Authority (SIA) for taking the case against him.
He stated outside court: "I have put manners on them, and trust they will learn a lesson."
The high-profile loyalist has been locked in a legal battle with the regulator for the last seven years.
In 2018 the SIA issued a private summons against him for allegedly providing false information to the authority.
A £450 invoice allegedly created by JJ Security Services Ltd, a company where Mr Bryson was a named director, formed part of the inquiries.
Previous courts heard it detailed five men being provided for six hours, at a rate of £15 per hour, at a bonfire event.
As part of the probe an SIA investigator wrote to Mr Bryson requesting information about the company.
In his reply the high-profile loyalist stated that JJ Security Services Ltd has never traded and he does not hold any relevant information.
Mr Bryson faced two charges of making a false statement to the authority.
Denying any wrongdoing throughout the process, he argued that the SIA's powers did not extend to Northern Ireland.
Central to his defence was a further contention that the chair of the body had no right under the Private Security Industry Act 2001 to delegate authority to investigators who examined his alleged activities.
In August 2023 Mr Bryson initially succeeded in having the summons dismissed at a preliminary stage focused on legal issues about the validity of the process.
However, the Court of Appeal ruled that decision was wrong in law and remitted for rehearing.
At Belfast Magistrates' Court it was confirmed that no evidence was being offered by the prosecution.
Following the outcome Mr Bryson sought costs of just over £1,000 against the SIA.
Describing the case as "certainly out of the ordinary", District Judge Steven Keown decided that he was entitled to a payout.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
3 days ago
- Yahoo
Jamie Bryson denies leaking secret messages to newspaper
Loyalist activist Jamie Bryson has denied leaking secret messages he exchanged with a Sinn Féin politician to a newspaper to try to cause political embarrassment. At his trial at Belfast Crown Court, he said he did not know how private messages on Twitter with Sinn Féin's Daithí McKay in 2015 ended up being published in The Irish News a year later. Mr Bryson also rejected the accusation that he broke the law in his dealings with Mr McKay who was the chair of the finance committee at Stormont at the time. "It was entirely the cut and thrust of politics," he said. "There are many things that go on in the world of politics, day in day out, that would make your hair curl, but they're not criminal offences." Mr Bryson, 35, from Rosepark, Donaghadee denies a charge of conspiracy to commit misconduct in public office in September 2015. Mr McKay, 43, from Loughan Road, Dunnamanagh, denies a charge of misconduct in public office. The Crown's case is that Mr McKay and Mr Bryson manipulated how evidence was presented to a committee meeting on 23 September 2015. At the committee, Mr Bryson spoke about how Northern Ireland property loans were handled by the National Asset Management Agency, known as Nama. He made an allegation about the then leader of the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), Peter Robinson, which was later denied and described by the politician as "scurrilous". The prosecution say Mr Bryson and Mr McKay were involved in an attempt to subvert the rules of the committee, in order to cause "considerable political embarrassment" to a number of people including Mr Robinson. At the centre of the case are screenshots of direct messages said to have been exchanged on Twitter between Mr Bryson and Mr McKay before the committee meeting in question in 2015. News of their existence first emerged almost a year later when the Irish News published a story by journalist Allison Morris claiming that Sinn Féin had "coached" Mr Bryson before the committee hearing. Prosecution barrister Toby Hedworth KC pressed Mr Bryson on how the Irish News learned of the Twitter messages which were detailed in the newspaper article. Mr Bryson responded: "I did not provide those messages to Allison Morris." He insisted there was nothing untoward about his contact with Stormont politicians, on all sides, on issues of interest. He told the court it was "standard political procedure". Mr McKay was a high-profile member of Sinn Féin in 2015. Mr Bryson has admitted sending him private messages but denied making any deals with him. The court was told that in a police interview during the investigation into the case, Mr Bryson described the screenshots of the messages as "potentially doctored images on social media". In court, Mr Bryson said he accepted that he exchanged messages, the screenshots at the centre of the case were "not a complete transcript, not a complete picture". Another man, who was a Sinn Féin member at the time, is also on trial. Thomas O'Hara, 41, from Lisnahunshin Road, Cullybackey, faces a charge of conspiracy to commit misconduct in public office, which he denies. The Crown alleges he, like Mr McKay, was involved in an exchange of messages with Mr Bryson in the run up to the committee meeting. Mr Bryson told the court that Mr McKay then put him in contact with Mr O'Hara. It was suggested that Mr O'Hara's role as a Sinn Féin worker meant he operated as a "back channel" to Mr McKay, but Mr Bryson rejected this. The non-jury trial, in front of Judge Gordon Kerr KC, began last month. The judge has told Mr Bryson to focus on answering the questions which he is asked and not to give speeches. The trial continues.
Yahoo
3 days ago
- Yahoo
Jamie Bryson denies leaking secret messages to newspaper
Loyalist activist Jamie Bryson has denied leaking secret messages he exchanged with a Sinn Féin politician to a newspaper to try to cause political embarrassment. At his trial at Belfast Crown Court, he said he did not know how private messages on Twitter with Sinn Féin's Daithí McKay in 2015 ended up being published in The Irish News a year later. Mr Bryson also rejected the accusation that he broke the law in his dealings with Mr McKay who was the chair of the finance committee at Stormont at the time. "It was entirely the cut and thrust of politics," he said. "There are many things that go on in the world of politics, day in day out, that would make your hair curl, but they're not criminal offences." Mr Bryson, 35, from Rosepark, Donaghadee denies a charge of conspiracy to commit misconduct in public office in September 2015. Mr McKay, 43, from Loughan Road, Dunnamanagh, denies a charge of misconduct in public office. The Crown's case is that Mr McKay and Mr Bryson manipulated how evidence was presented to a committee meeting on 23 September 2015. At the committee, Mr Bryson spoke about how Northern Ireland property loans were handled by the National Asset Management Agency, known as Nama. He made an allegation about the then leader of the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), Peter Robinson, which was later denied and described by the politician as "scurrilous". The prosecution say Mr Bryson and Mr McKay were involved in an attempt to subvert the rules of the committee, in order to cause "considerable political embarrassment" to a number of people including Mr Robinson. At the centre of the case are screenshots of direct messages said to have been exchanged on Twitter between Mr Bryson and Mr McKay before the committee meeting in question in 2015. News of their existence first emerged almost a year later when the Irish News published a story by journalist Allison Morris claiming that Sinn Féin had "coached" Mr Bryson before the committee hearing. Prosecution barrister Toby Hedworth KC pressed Mr Bryson on how the Irish News learned of the Twitter messages which were detailed in the newspaper article. Mr Bryson responded: "I did not provide those messages to Allison Morris." He insisted there was nothing untoward about his contact with Stormont politicians, on all sides, on issues of interest. He told the court it was "standard political procedure". Mr McKay was a high-profile member of Sinn Féin in 2015. Mr Bryson has admitted sending him private messages but denied making any deals with him. The court was told that in a police interview during the investigation into the case, Mr Bryson described the screenshots of the messages as "potentially doctored images on social media". In court, Mr Bryson said he accepted that he exchanged messages, the screenshots at the centre of the case were "not a complete transcript, not a complete picture". Another man, who was a Sinn Féin member at the time, is also on trial. Thomas O'Hara, 41, from Lisnahunshin Road, Cullybackey, faces a charge of conspiracy to commit misconduct in public office, which he denies. The Crown alleges he, like Mr McKay, was involved in an exchange of messages with Mr Bryson in the run up to the committee meeting. Mr Bryson told the court that Mr McKay then put him in contact with Mr O'Hara. It was suggested that Mr O'Hara's role as a Sinn Féin worker meant he operated as a "back channel" to Mr McKay, but Mr Bryson rejected this. The non-jury trial, in front of Judge Gordon Kerr KC, began last month. The judge has told Mr Bryson to focus on answering the questions which he is asked and not to give speeches. The trial continues.

Yahoo
03-06-2025
- Yahoo
Pair charged following high-speed police chase from Hooksett to Franklin
Two people were taken into custody following a police chase involving speeds over 100 mph on Interstate 93 late Monday that began in Hooksett and ended in Franklin, State Police said. Phillip Bryson Phillip Bryson At 10:59 p.m. Monday, State Police were notified to be on the lookout for a vehicle whose driver, later identified as Philip Bryson, 53, of Somersworth, had allegedly fled from a Hooksett Police officer during an attempted traffic stop. The vehicle, a 2015 white Ford Escape, was reported to be traveling northbound on I-93 from the Hooksett Welcome Center at speeds over 100 mph and with no taillights, State Police said in a news release Tuesday. A state trooper reported spotting the Ford traveling northbound near Exit 12 in Concord — still at a high speed and with no taillights — and attempted to pull the SUV over but the driver failed to stop and a chase ensued. State troopers deployed spike strips, which deflated one of the Ford's front tires, officials said, but the driver continued north until exiting I-93 at Exit 17. The chase continued onto Route 4, through Boscawen and Salisbury, where the driver eventually turned onto Route 127, according to the report. Roxanne Quaile Roxanne Quaile After crossing the border into Franklin, State Police say, the Ford turned onto a small dirt road and stopped about a half-mile later in front of a mobile home. A male driver, identified as Bryson, exited the vehicle and entered the home, police said, while a female passenger, identified as Roxanne Quaile, 38, of Franklin, was taken into custody on an unrelated arrest warrant. Troopers and officers from the Franklin Police Department set up a perimeter around the mobile home, and after 'a period of negotiations' Bryson exited the home and was taken into custody, the report said. Bryson was charged with operating as a habitual offender, disobeying an officer, resisting arrest, reckless conduct and reckless operation. He was held at the Merrimack County Jail pending arraignment June 3 in Franklin District Court. Anyone with information about this incident is asked to contact Trooper Ben Olmstead at 603-223-3831 or