Next Digital Loses Court Bid Over Seized Documents

"); jQuery("#212 h3").html("

Related News Programmes

"); jQuery(document).ready(function() { jwplayer.key='EKOtdBrvhiKxeOU807UIF56TaHWapYjKnFiG7ipl3gw='; var playerInstance = jwplayer("jquery_jwplayer_1"); playerInstance.setup({ file: "https://newsstatic.rthk.hk/audios/mfile_1595281_1_20210610180605.mp3", skin: { url: location.href.split('/', 4).join('/') + '/jwplayer/skin/rthk/five.css', name: 'five' }, hlshtml: true, width: "100%", height: 30, wmode: 'transparent', primary: navigator.userAgent.indexOf("Trident")>-1 ? "flash" : "html5", events: { onPlay: function(event) { dcsMultiTrack('DCS.dcsuri', 'https://news.rthk.hk/rthk/en/component/k2/1595281-20210610.mp3', 'WT.ti', ' Audio at newsfeed', 'WT.cg_n', '#rthknews', 'WT.cg_s', 'Multimedia','WT.es','https://news.rthk.hk/rthk/en/component/k2/1595281-20210610.htm', 'DCS.dcsqry', '' ); } } }); }); });

2021-06-10 HKT 17:43

Share this story

facebook

  • Police officers conducting a search at Apple Daily's offices in August last year.

    Police officers conducting a search at Apple Daily's offices in August last year.

Next Digital has lost its bid for a court order to get back documents seized by the police during their national security investigation into the company's founder Jimmy Lai.

Scores of officers descended on the company's offices in Tseung Kwan O last August after the pro-democracy media tycoon was arrested on suspicion of colluding with foreign forces, as well as fraud.

Police took away about 30 boxes of documents.

Next Digital, which publishes Apple Daily, had hoped the High Court would order the return of any privileged legal and journalistic materials seized during the raid, as well as paperwork not covered by the police's search warrant.

But handing down his ruling on Thursday, High Court judge Wilson Chan said any challenge to the lawfulness of the warrant could only be done by way of a judicial review, and not through civil proceedings.

"To permit a recipient of a search warrant to mount a public law challenge of the lawfulness of the warrant almost a year after the issuance and execution of the same would wreak havoc to law enforcement in Hong Kong," the judge wrote.

The court was also asked to grant an injunction order to stop the police looking at the documents seized.

But the judge said this request "does not get off the ground." He said there is already a protocol in place for Next Media and the police to review the materials, to balance the interests of the two sides.

Having benefited from this protocol, Next Digital cannot at the same time bring everything to a standstill by way of an injunction. "They simply cannot have their cake and eat it," the judge said.

RECENT NEWS

ZA Bank Brings Nasdaq Data To Hong Kong, Expanding US Stock Access And Investor Education

ZA Bank and Nasdaq have announced a collaboration aimed at enhancing digital wealth management in Hong Kong and interna... Read more

Hong Kong To Study One‑Stop Infrastructure For Equities, Bonds And Digital Assets

The Hong Kong Monetary Authority’s (HKMA) CMU OmniClear and the Hong Kong Exchange (HKEX) are set to begin a study on... Read more

Hong Kong To Issue First Stablecoin Licenses In March, Expand Crypto Regulation

Hong Kong will issue its first licenses for fiat-referenced stablecoin issuers in March and introduce new legislation l... Read more

MSIG Joins US$6B IFC Credit Insurance Facility To Boost Emerging Market Lending

MSIG USA and Mitsui Sumitomo Insurance (MSI Japan), together referred to as MSIG, have joined a new insurance-ba... Read more

Why The $2 Trillion Stablecoin Prediction Is Too Low

McKinsey estimates the stablecoin market will hit $2 trillion by 2028. But according to Sam Lin, COO of dtcpay, even th... Read more

RedotPay Eyes US IPO With Potential US$1 Billion Raise

RedotPay is reportedly exploring an IPO in the US that could raise more than US$1 billion, according to people famili... Read more