I read the article which states:
"This confusion appears to have contributed to Gina Martin’s distressing encounter with the criminal justice system, when her immediate report to the police of a man ‘upskirting’ her at a festival was met with a shrug that, “There’s not much we can do”.
This analysis is incorrect – based on Ms Martin’s account there would have been ways to prosecute this conduct. Typically, offences of upskirting are prosecuted under the common law offence of “outraging public decency”. This is an old and wide-ranging offence which has been held to cover, amongst other things, masturbating in public, disinterring a corpse for dissection, urinating on a war memorial and exhibiting a sculpture consisting of a human head with freeze-dried human foetuses as earrings."
and
"....... the definition of “voyeurism” was extended in Scotland in 2010 to explicitly cover the non-consensual recording of images, beneath clothing, of a person’s genitals, buttocks or underwear, for sexual gratification or causing humiliation, alarm or distress. There is no good reason why a similarly-drafted provision could not be enacted in England and Wales."
I've highlighted the parts that uphold my original Post (i.e. that no new law is required) and all of my arguments to support my original Post.
Incidentally, the article headline ("Why a new law is needed to stop mobile phones being shoved up women’s skirts.") is not supported in the article itself so I again refer the reader to my original Post which states:
"Demand for yet another new law ....
... when we already have a law that covers the offence!"
So according to the link you gave, the law is already there, the subject is already there and all that is necessary is to redefine the term "voyeurism"; just like they have done in Scotland. This will not be a "new law" it will be an amendment to the Sexual Offences Act of 2003 an existing law!
Many thanks! :thumb: