Michael Barrymore entitled to damages over wrongful arrest, court rules

Entertainer was arrested and detained in 2007 on suspicion of rape and murder

File photo dated 23/05/17 of Michael Barrymore. Photograph: Gareth Fuller/PA
File photo dated 23/05/17 of Michael Barrymore. Photograph: Gareth Fuller/PA

Entertainer Michael Barrymore is entitled to "more than nominal" damages against Essex Police over the wrongful arrest which he says destroyed his career, a High Court judge has ruled.

The comedian and TV presenter was arrested and detained in June 2007 on suspicion of the rape and murder of 31-year-old Stuart Lubbock, who was found in the swimming pool at his Roydon home six years earlier.

Mr Justice Stuart-Smith, sitting in London on Friday, ruled against the force, which had argued that Barrymore should only receive a nominal payout.

Undated handout photo of Stuart Lubboc. Photograph: PA.
Undated handout photo of Stuart Lubboc. Photograph: PA.

Barrymore (65) who was not present for the decision, values his claim at more than £2.4 million (€2.63 million).

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The judge did not decide on the sum to be awarded, as his ruling dealt only with the preliminary issue of the level of damages to be awarded to Barrymore, who brought the action in his real name, Michael Ciaran Parker.

Essex Police had admitted the arrest was unlawful, as the arresting officer did not have reasonable grounds to suspect that Barrymore was guilty.

Mr Justice Stuart-Smith ruled that the defendant — the Chief Constable of Essex Police — “has failed to prove that, if not arrested unlawfully as he was, Mr Parker could and would have been arrested lawfully”.

He added: “Mr Parker is entitled to recover more than nominal damages.”

Essex Police argued that Barrymore could have been lawfully arrested by another officer, meaning that only an award of nominal damages should be made, rather than the “substantial” sum sought by the star.

The judge ruled that there was “information available to the police that could have provided an arresting officer with reasonable grounds for a lawful arrest”.

But he added that “there was only one designated arresting officer who had sufficient information and had been sufficiently briefed to enable her to arrest Mr Parker lawfully”.

That officer was not present at the time of the unlawful arrest, said the judge, adding: “If Mr Parker had not been unlawfully arrested as and when he was, he would have been unlawfully arrested by one of a number of other police officers who were at the scene.”

Mr Justice Stuart-Smith said that arrest would also have been unlawful “because none of the police officers at the scene had sufficient information or had been sufficiently briefed to enable them to arrest Mr Parker lawfully”.

At a hearing earlier this year, Hugh Tomlinson QC said that Barrymore was never charged with any offence and the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) later made it “crystal clear” there was no basis for any charges.

He told the judge that Barrymore remained convinced that Mr Lubbock’s injuries were not caused at his home but he did not know what happened.

He added: “This arrest was made without any proper evidential foundation.

“However, the fact that it had happened, and the worldwide publicity it received, destroyed the claimant’s career.”

Mr Lubbock’s body was found in the pool after a party where drugs and alcohol were consumed. A post-mortem examination later revealed that he had suffered serious anal injuries. In 2002, an open verdict was recorded at the inquest into his death.

At the conclusion of Friday’s announcement of his decision, the judge adjourned an application by the force for permission to appeal, which is now likely to be heard in October.

PA