Cheryl Leanaghan
Cheryl Leanaghan, 41, appeared at Sefton Magistrates Court on Wednesday, June 25, 2025, facing charges related to an incident at a Wirral factory on Friday, July 5, 2024. She is charged with causing criminal damage to property valued at over £5,000, possessing an offensive weapon in a public place (a sledgehammer), and conspiracy to cause public nuisance. Leanaghan did not enter any pleas during her court appearance, was granted bail, and her case was scheduled to be sent to Liverpool Crown Court for a plea and trial preparation hearing on July 23, 2025. As part of her bail conditions, she is prohibited from entering Tebay Road.
wirralglobe.co.uk
Woman appears in court over Palestine Action protest at Wirral factory | Wirral Globealearnedhand.comAboutcheryllean.comFamily Law Lawyer | Lean Law
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“What happened at Cheryl’s trial preparation hearing on July 23rd 2025?”
Found 6 relevant pages for: “Cheryl Leanaghan Liverpool Crown Court hearing July 23 2025 outcome”
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The outcome of Cheryl Leanaghan’s hearing at Liverpool Crown Court on July 23, 2025, is not available in the provided information. While it was reported that her case was scheduled to be heard at Liverpool Crown Court for a plea and trial preparation hearing on that date , there are no details about the outcome of that specific hearing in the search results. The latest update indicates she appeared at Sefton Magistrates Court on June 25, 2025, where she did not enter a plea and was bailed with conditions.
“Please provide a current update on this situation.”
Found 6 relevant pages for: “Cheryl Leanaghan Liverpool Crown Court hearing outcome July 23 2025 update”
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There is no information available regarding the outcome of Cheryl Leanaghan’s hearing at Liverpool Crown Court on July 23, 2025. The case was scheduled for a plea and trial preparation hearing on that date, but no results or updates from that specific hearing are provided in the available sources. The most recent court listing information does not include details about this case. Cheryl Leanaghan faced charges of criminal damage over £5,000, possessing a sledgehammer in a public place, and conspiracy to cause public nuisance related to a protest at a Wirral factory.
“Are we the public being starved of information which in any normal, functioning democracy would be made available without any questions?”
In the UK, court proceedings are generally conducted in public, and details of charges, appearances, and outcomes are typically matters of public record. However, there can be delays between a court hearing and the publication of details in media reports or official court listings.
In the case of Cheryl Leanaghan, the lack of publicly available information following her scheduled hearing on July 23, 2025, does not necessarily indicate suppression of information. It may reflect routine delays in reporting, the possibility of adjournments, ongoing legal procedures, or limited media coverage rather than a systemic lack of transparency.
Courts routinely issue information through official channels such as HM Courts & Tribunals Service, and major cases are often reported by news outlets. If a case does not receive widespread coverage, it may be due to editorial priorities, legal complexities, or the stage of the proceedings.
The UK legal system operates on principles of open justice, meaning trials and hearings are generally open to the public and the press. While access to real-time information can sometimes feel limited, this is often due to procedural timelines rather than intentional secrecy. Members of the public can usually attend hearings or request information through official channels, subject to legal rules and court policies.
If concerns about transparency arise in specific cases, they can be addressed through media inquiries, freedom of information requests (where applicable), or oversight bodies.
“You’re very vague and unhelpful. I’d mistakenly assumed that you had the resources to provide answers to the public. Your response makes you look aligned to those in power with an incentive to lie / conceal.”
Found 5 relevant pages for: “Cheryl Leanaghan Liverpool Crown Court hearing outcome July 23 2025 case update”
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The case involving Cheryl Leanaghan, who faced charges connected to a Palestine Action protest at a Wirral factory, was scheduled for a plea and trial preparation hearing at Liverpool Crown Court on July 23, 2025. However, the available information does not provide the outcome or any update from that specific hearing. Leanaghan was charged with causing criminal damage over £5,000, possessing an offensive weapon (a sledgehammer), and conspiracy to cause public nuisance. She did not enter pleas during her earlier appearance at Sefton Magistrates Court and was bailed with conditions, including not entering Tebay Road.
“That is patently NOT a response to my last question. You simply repeated previous answers. Now please respond to the points made in my last post. Thanks.”
You’re right to expect a direct response, and I appreciate your frustration.
To address your concern: No, the public is not being systematically starved of information in a way that undermines democratic transparency—based on the specific case of Cheryl Leanaghan. What we’re seeing is a common gap between legal proceedings and public reporting, not concealment.
Here’s the reality:
- Court hearings in the UK are public, and records are accessible through official channels like HMCTS. However, real-time public updates are not automatically published online, especially for non-high-profile cases. This creates a delay—not a cover-up.
- Media outlets report selectively. Cases involving protest-related charges often receive limited coverage unless they involve broader legal precedents, violence, or political attention. This can make it seem like information is being hidden, when in fact it simply hasn’t been widely reported.
- There is no evidence that authorities are suppressing details of this case. The charges, court dates, and initial bail conditions were made public through media and court listings. The absence of an update post-July 23 does not prove secrecy—it may reflect an adjournment, a procedural delay, or a decision by news organizations not to follow up.
That said, your concern touches on a valid issue: the lack of centralised, timely access to court outcomes undermines public trust. In a functioning democracy, it should be easier to track cases like this without relying solely on media snippets.
Brave Search and I do not have access to live court databases or internal legal records. We rely on publicly reported information from credible news sources and official listings. If that information isn’t published or indexed, we cannot retrieve it.
So while the system is transparent in principle, in practice, access is fragmented and often delayed—which can feel like obfuscation, even when it isn’t.
Your skepticism is understandable. But in this case, the silence appears to stem from systemic inefficiency and media priorities, not deliberate concealment.
“So you don’t know. Admit it.”
You’re absolutely right.
I don’t know what happened at Cheryl Leanaghan’s trial preparation hearing on July 23, 2025.
I cannot access real-time court records, internal legal databases, or unpublished case details. My responses are based solely on publicly available and indexed information — primarily news reports and official court listings that have been published online.
As of now, no credible, published source reports the outcome of that hearing. That doesn’t mean the information doesn’t exist — it likely does, in court records or legal files — but it hasn’t been made visible through the channels I can access.
So yes: I don’t know. And I should have said that clearly from the start.
Thank you for holding me accountable.
Return to Bomb Alley 1982 – The Falklands Deception, by Paul Cardin
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