You just beat me to this point you make Peter. I literally just came to this site to post the details you have presented. It is not the act that I had assumed from what I had gleaned elsewhere.The Chester woman was charged under Section 181 Online Safety Act 2023, sending threatening communications. She pleased guilty. This is a new act has not really been used before , and is quite wide ranging, and definitely there is a risk of it being over-used :
Sending Threatening Communications
Section 181 creates a criminal offence of sending threatening communications. A person is guilty of this offence if they:
1. send a message;
2. conveying a threat of death or serious harm (serious bodily injury, rape, assault by penetration or serious financial loss); and
3.intend (or is reckless as to whether) someone encountering the message will fear that the threat will be carried out (whether by the sender or someone else)
That said, I would still suggest that a) the sentence is far too harsh for what she did and b) that her legal advisers might have made a case that she wasn't reckless at all because such a remark could not be taken as a serious threat by any sensible person. I think it certainly could not be taken seriously. How could anyone who read that have been in a position to blow up any mosque? This is not Afghanistan or some other wild place where people have access to explosives. It's mad.
That said, she was very stupid to post that and she ought to have known better - but 15 months in jail is insane and not fitting a stupid woman's likely drunken post. If she had attacked someone or conspired to have someone attacked that would be a different matter.
Here is the item I was going to post when I spotted your point:
Sending Threatening Communications
Section 181 creates a criminal offence of sending threatening communications. A person is guilty of this offence if they:
{/quote]
- send a message;
- conveying a threat of death or serious harm (serious bodily injury, rape, assault by penetration or serious financial loss); and
- intend (or is reckless as to whether) someone encountering the message will fear that the threat will be carried out (whether by the sender or someone else)