Former UK foreign minister Boris Johnson's bid to succeed Theresa May as prime minister received a big boost Friday when a London court quashed his summons to answer charges that he lied during the Brexit referendum campaign.
His lawyers claimed that the private prosecution was "politically motivated" and had no precedent in common law.
The two-judge High Court panel said it was persuaded by their case.
The ruling was issued after nearly four hours of hearings into whether Johnson knowingly mislead the nation while arguing in favour of Britain's split from the European Union during the 2016 referendum campaign.
Johnson was both a member of parliament and mayor of London in the run-up to the highly contentious vote.
His most famous claim was that Britain would no longer have to make weekly payments of 350 million pounds (USD 445 million, 395 million euros) to Brussels.
The case against him argued that he had committed the criminal offence of misconduct in a public office by using his position to knowingly make a false claim.
A district judge at the lower Westminster Magistrates Court in London, after hearing the arguments, decided to summons Johnson to court.
The former minister successfully appealed to England's High Court to overturn the decision.
"We are quashing the decision of the district judge to issue the summonses," judge Michael Supperstone ruled.
The decision left Marcus Ball -- a 29-year-old businessman who crowdfunded to pay for the proceedings against one of Britain's most famous politicians -- bitterly disappointed and contemplating an appeal.
"We've just given the green light to every politician to lie to us about our money for ever. That's a terrible idea that I refuse to accept," Ball told reporters outside the court in London.
"Mr Johnson MP, you do not have the right to lie to the public about how their money is being spent. Go on television and tell everybody what the truth is."
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