A SERIES of disputed articles alleging environmentalist Chris Packham misled the public into donating to the Isle of Wight's Wildheart Trust charity to rescue tigers are defamatory, a High Court judge has found.

The TV naturalist is suing three men for libel over nine online articles claiming he defrauded people into donating to the charity to rescue the tigers while knowing they were well looked after.

The strongly denied allegations, repeated in several tweets and videos, relate to Mr Packham’s involvement with the charity, which runs the Wildheart Animal Sanctuary in Sandown.

What do the articles claim about Chris Packham?

One of the articles on the website Country Squire Magazine said Mr Packham and his partner Charlotte Corney had “clearly not been truthful with the British public”, adding: “Money has been raised on the back of their truth-bending and they now need to come clean and tell the truth.”

The weblog’s editor Dominic Wightman, writer Nigel Bean and a third defendant, Paul Read, are defending the libel claim.

In written arguments, Mr Wightman and Mr Bean previously said: “The statements complained of are serious and would convey a defamatory tendency were they not factual and bloody well true.”

What has the judge decided about the claims in the Chris Packham libel case?

At a hearing last month, Mr Justice Johnson was asked to decide how an ordinary reader would understand some of the 19 articles, videos and tweets in the claim.

In his judgment today, the judge ruled the allegations are defamatory and “amount to statements of fact rather than expressions of opinion.”

Mr Justice Johnson said he “broadly” agreed with Mr Packham’s lawyers over the meaning of each publication.

He continued: “The essential meaning of many of them is a variation on the theme that the claimant dishonestly raised funds from the public by stating that tigers had been rescued from a circus where they had been mistreated, whereas in fact, as the claimant knew, the tigers had been well-treated and had been donated by the circus.

“Each of those meanings is defamatory of the claimant at common law. All the meanings amount to statements of fact rather than expressions of opinion.”

Mr Justice Johnson later said the three men “do not shy away” from their allegation that Mr Packham “misused his role as a BBC presenter to defraud the public into making charitable donations on the false pretext that tigers had been mistreated by a circus and rescued by a zoo”.

The three men had said that readers were told to “make up (their) own mind” over some of the allegations, with the articles containing a series of questions that highlighted “suspicions”.

However, the judge rejected this argument, finding: “The questions raised in the articles are devices that convey, in what is intended to be an engaging and emphatic manner, that the claimant has sought to raise charitable donations by telling lies.”

During last month’s hearing, Mr Packham’s barrister Jonathan Price said the articles, videos and tweets were “littered with express references to lies, deceit and fraud and Mr Packham is presented as being at the very heart of the deception”.

He said: “They attack Mr Packham’s integrity and honesty, and allege serious criminality.”

He said some of the articles accused Mr Packham of having an “obvious nastiness” and playing the “Asperger’s victim card”.

Mr Wightman, speaking on behalf of the three defendants, told the court they were “happy to robustly defend the truth of our articles and tweets”.

He said the articles were a “long-term journalistic investigation” and he was “standing on a mountain of facts”.