HKSAR Administrative Appeals Board 香港特別行政區行政上訴委員會
Jeff Cheung Moon Hoi v Administrative Appeals Board
HK Court of Appeal, 22-Jul-2016
Leave to appeal to the Court of Final Appeal is refused.
HK Court of Appeal, 22-Jul-2016
Leave to appeal to the Court of Final Appeal is refused.
Jeff Cheung Moon Hoi v Administrative Appeals Board
HK Court of Appeal, 2-Jun-2016
The court rules that Mr Cheung, who seeks to appeal out of time, does not have any reasonable prospect of success, so it rejects the application.
HK Court of Appeal, 2-Jun-2016
The court rules that Mr Cheung, who seeks to appeal out of time, does not have any reasonable prospect of success, so it rejects the application.
Cheung Moon Hoi v Administrative Appeals Board
HK Court of First Instance, 11-Nov-2015
Mr Cheung fails in his application for judicial review of the AAB's decision to award costs against him for frivolous or vexatious conduct in his appeal of a PCPD decision. The same Deputy Chairman had also presided in an appeal by Mr Cheung's wife, Jessie Yung Mei Chun.
HK Court of First Instance, 11-Nov-2015
Mr Cheung fails in his application for judicial review of the AAB's decision to award costs against him for frivolous or vexatious conduct in his appeal of a PCPD decision. The same Deputy Chairman had also presided in an appeal by Mr Cheung's wife, Jessie Yung Mei Chun.
AAB rejects Webb-site appeal of redaction order
In a chilling decision for media freedom in HK, the AAB has rejected our appeal of the Privacy Commissioner's order to remove from Webb-site Reports information obtained from published judgments, ruling that "reporting and publication for general use" is not an allowed purpose. Constitutional aspects, such as the necessity of a restriction on free speech that does not apply to overseas online publishers, were barely covered. We look at the consequences and options. (30-Oct-2015)
In a chilling decision for media freedom in HK, the AAB has rejected our appeal of the Privacy Commissioner's order to remove from Webb-site Reports information obtained from published judgments, ruling that "reporting and publication for general use" is not an allowed purpose. Constitutional aspects, such as the necessity of a restriction on free speech that does not apply to overseas online publishers, were barely covered. We look at the consequences and options. (30-Oct-2015)
HK privacy watchdog’s order to remove names from website would create an ‘Orwellian memory hole’, says market analyst
South China Morning Post, 13-Jul-2015
South China Morning Post, 13-Jul-2015
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