Miles Pickering wore a shirt designed to mimic logo of banned 
Palestine Action, but officers said garment fell short of illegal 
support for group
A protester was arrested for wearing a T-shirt 
with the words “Plasticine Action” on it – on the day of a mass 
gathering in Parliament Square in London.
Miles Pickering, from 
Brighton, admitted the T-shirt was designed to look like the logo of 
Palestine Action, the protest group banned last monthafter activists 
broke into RAF Brize Norton in Oxfordshire and sprayed two military 
planes with red paint.
The Terrorism Act 2000 makes it illegal to wear anything supporting a banned organisation.
But
 on Mr Pickering’s T-shirt, inside the letter “o” was an image of the 
plasticine character Morph, and the text underneath the logo read: “We 
oppose AI-generated animation”.
Some 532 other demonstrators were arrested at the pro-Palestinian rally in Westminster on 9 August.
Mr
 Pickering, an engineer, told The Guardian that an officer had glanced 
at his top and told him: “Right, you’re nicked,” before taking him to 
Scotland Yard.
He said supporters were taking photographs of him 
and “everyone was laughing at how silly it was that I was getting 
arrested for being a plasticine terrorist”.
He claimed a senior 
officer asked the arresting officer whether he could arrest Mr Pickering
 under section 12, which could have brought a more serious charge of 
supporting a proscribed group.
“[The arresting officer] said: 
‘No, I can’t.’ And they said: ‘Why not?’ He said: ‘Because he hasn’t got
 Palestine Action written on him. He’s got Plasticine Action written on 
him.’”
He said that five minutes later, the arresting officer 
told him: “I’ve got good news and I’ve got bad news.” The “good news” 
was that he was de-arresting Mr Pickering.
“And I said: ‘What’s 
the bad news?’ He said: ‘It’s going to be really embarrassing for me.’ 
And then I walked free, while all the real heroes are the people that 
are actually getting arrested,” the demonstrator said....<<<Read More>>>...
