How a historic case accusing two men of spying for China dramatically fell apart
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Christopher Berry (left) and Former parliamentary researcher Christopher Cash (right).
10/10/2025
Friday briefing:

How a historic case accusing two men of spying for China dramatically fell apart

Aamna Mohdin Aamna Mohdin
 

Good morning. It was meant to be a high-stakes trial that could have led to a first in legal history: Britons being convicted of spying for China. Instead, weeks before it was due to begin, the case collapsed.

The two men at the centre of the case – Christopher Cash, 30, and Christopher Berry, 33 – categorically deny accusations that they provided information about Westminster to China’s politburo, in breach of the Official Secrets Act, between December 2021 and February 2023. Last month, the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) unexpectedly dropped the charges, initially saying only that the “evidential standard” was “no longer met,” a month before a high-profile trial had been due to start.

For weeks, the precise reason for the collapse remained opaque. Vague statements from the CPS and the government only deepened the mystery. Then Stephen Parkinson, the director of public prosecutions, sent a damning letter to parliament alleging the case fell apart because prosecutors could not obtain critical evidence from the government that Beijing represented a “threat to the national security of the UK.”

With the blame game now in full swing, I spoke to Dan Sabbagh, the Guardian’s defence and security editor, to unpack why the case collapsed, and what it reveals about the UK’s already fraught relationship with China. That’s after the headlines.

Five big stories

1

Israel-Gaza | Israelis and Palestinians celebrated on Thursday night as Hamas and Israel’s government began preparations to implement a ceasefire deal that promises a durable end to a bloody two-year conflict that has killed tens of thousands, destabilised much of the Middle East and prompted protests around the world.

2

UK news | The former BBC Radio 1 DJ Tim Westwood has been charged with sexual offences against seven women, including four counts of rape. The Metropolitan police said the 68-year-old had been charged with offences dating from 1983 to 2016. Officers said their investigation remained open and urged anyone with further information to come forward.

3

Politics | Nigel Farage has claimed teachers would go on strike within weeks of a Reform UK election win, and accused them of “poisoning our kids” by telling them that black children are victims and white children oppressors.

4

Ukraine | Kyiv suffered a “massive attack” last night, said the Ukrainian air force, as Russia targeted the capital’s infrastructure, cutting off water and energy supplies and triggering a fire in a high-rise apartment building.

5

France | A man who had appealed against his conviction for raping Gisèle Pelicot after she was drugged unconscious by her husband has been found guilty a second time – and had his prison sentence increased by 10 years.

In depth: ‘This came as a complete surprise’

The Houses of Parliament.

Before we get into the political ramifications of this case, it’s worth drilling into the legal issues at play.

Christopher Cash, one of the men who was accused of spying for China, worked as a parliamentary researcher and was director of the China Research Group. He was closely linked to senior Conservative MPs then in government, including the former security minister Tom Tugendhat and Alicia Kearns, who served as chair of the Commons foreign affairs committee.

Cash was accused of providing information to his friend Christopher Berry, a researcher based in China. Berry was himself accused of compiling reports about British politics from his conversations with Cash for a Chinese intelligence officer. The Guardian understands that the CPS suspected the ultimate recipient of these reports was Cai Qi, a member of China’s ruling politburo and one of China’s top five leaders. He is widely regarded as a protege of Xi Jinping.

Cash and Berry did not have to defend themselves in court after the case collapsed. Dan Sabbagh told me both deny all allegations and maintain their innocence. Allies of Cash said he had not passed on anything sensitive, only open-source information, political gossip or personal opinions, and that no money changed hands, nor was he blackmailed. Berry’s defence was expected to argue he believed he was writing reports for a Chinese corporate client seeking to expand its business in the UK.

“So the assumption was that this case was going to go ahead in October,” Dan said. “And then on 15 September, the CPS says we’re going to withdraw the case. This came as a complete surprise. Weeks before, witnesses to the case had been told their services would be required and then suddenly the cops ring them up and say the order to drop the case has come from the top.”

But who exactly did the police mean when they said it came “from the top”?


Why did the case collapse?

Cash and Berry were charged under the Official Secrets Act, which states a person is guilty of espionage if they act in a manner “prejudicial to the safety or interests of the state” and pass on information that might be “directly or indirectly useful to an enemy.”

Here is where it gets complicated. The 1911 Act was repealed and replaced by the 2023 National Security Act, which broadened the definition of espionage by replacing the term “enemy” with “foreign power.” The new legislation came into force in December 2023, while the alleged offences by Cash and Berry took place while the older Act was still in effect.

According to Stephen Parkinson, the director of public prosecutions, in order to successfully charge someone under the old act, China had to be described as a threat to national security. This interpretation emerged during a separate espionage case earlier this year, in which six Bulgarian nationals were convicted of spying for Russia under the same 1911 legislation.

In that case, the court clarified that an “enemy,” for the purposes of the 1911 Act, “includes a country which represents, at the time of the offence, a threat to the national security of the UK,” says Parkinson – in a ruling handed down some weeks after Cash and Berry were charged in April 2024.

To proceed with the prosecution, the CPS needed the government to confirm that China constituted such a threat. This posed a dilemma.

“On the one hand, China is a major economic power that the government wants to trade with,” Dan said. “But China is also an authoritarian communist regime that has become more authoritarian under the current president. It sees itself in opposition to the West.”

In the end, the government’s failure to provide information led to the case collapsing.

“It’s extraordinary because the CPS is saying ‘we asked again and again for this help, but it was not forthcoming.’” said Dan. He also makes clear that, while Parkinson didn’t name, specifically, who was being asked for information, that the person giving evidence in this case ultimately answered to Number 10.


What does the government say?

Sources told the Guardian that government lawyers believed it would not have been possible to designate China as a threat to national security to accommodate the new case law, because the UK has never formally done so.

“Labour is trying to pin this on the Tories. Keir Starmer’s line as a former lawyer is that you can only prosecute people under the law as it stands, which is true,” Dan said. He told me that one of the things highlighted by this case is the prevailing national security strategy at the time.

“In 2021, China was described as a ‘systemic competitor’ under Boris Johnson. In 2023, under Rishi Sunak, it was described as an ‘epoch-defining and systemic challenge’. And even Labour’s own review in 2025 used similar language.”

Dan added that the designation has always been nuanced and never described China as a straight-up threat. “So Labour might say this was simply the policy at the time, but it is also the policy now. Which raises the question: are we effectively saying it would be impossible to prosecute anyone under this legislation, given that China has never been formally defined as an enemy?”


What happens now?

Dan told me the trial raises other tough questions. He broke them down for me, one by one.

“Question number one: when the judge in the Bulgarian case was trying to define what ‘enemy’ meant, they were not really raising the threshold. If anything, they were lowering it,” Dan explained. “A lot of lawyers went on the radio at the time saying that the bar had been lowered, not raised. But somehow the CPS interpreted it the other way round: as though the bar had been raised. They seemed to think that what had been fine at the time of charging was no longer sufficient. That is odd.”

Legal experts who spoke to Dan expressed surprise that CPS thought it needed further assurance from the government that China was an enemy insofar as it posed “a current threat to national security”, with some saying either prosecutors probably “messed up” when charging Cash and Berry in April 2024 or when they abandoned the case last month.

For the government, Dan also questioned why so many of the statements early on were vague or spoke of their disappointment with the outcome. “Because if you believe the CPS version of events, it was Downing Street itself that failed to provide the evidence required. So what is that disappointment about?”

If this trial had gone ahead, we might have learned more about China’s methods. “We would have seen more clearly what the evidence was. We would have seen more clearly what the mode of operation was alleged to be. People would have spoken about how real the threat was.”

For now, we remain in the dark.

What else we’ve been reading

Bolsonaro supporters invade headquarters of power and the Presidency of the Republic in Brazil.
  • Tiago Rogero’s latest report from Brazil paints a frightening portrait of a country still on the precipice of authoritarianism, even as former president Jair Bolsonaro is imprisoned for his attempted coup (pictured above). Toby Moses, head of newsletters

  • Leading British comedians Jimmy Carr, Jack Whitehall and Omid Djalili have agreed to take part in Riyadh’s comedy festival. While each has tried to frame their participation as bold or boundary-pushing, Jonathan Liew points out the real absurdity at play. Aamna

  • Apparently Maga has gone tee-total, with only 46% partaking in booze in 2025. As one restaurateur says: “As soon as some new [British] journalist or diplomat type moves to DC, they come here. And they all say: ‘Nobody drinks here. Nobody even has martinis at lunch. What is happening in this country?’” Toby

  • Katy Perry was (rightfully) eviscerated for joining the ludicrous celebrity space trip while the rest of the world burns. But as her Lifetimes tour hits the UK, this ranking of her top hits is a reminder that it’s not all bad with the mega pop star. Aamna

  • There are a lot of BIG problems in the world at the moment, so take a break from all that and consider the most important question of our age in this week’s You be the judge: laundry basket or no laundry basket? Toby

 

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Sport

Bukayo Saka scores for England during the International Friendly between England and Wales at Wembley Stadium on 9 October 2025 in London, England.

Football | Bukayo Saka scored England’s third goal inside 20 minutes with a trademark strike in the 3-0 friendly win against Wales at Wembley. Elsewhere, Scotland beat Greece 3-1 in their World Cup qualifier.

Tennis | Novak Djokovic battled past a spirited Zizou Bergs 6-3, 7-5 on Thursday to reach the Shanghai Masters semi-finals for a 10th time, setting up a clash with surprise package and the world No 204, Valentin Vacherot.

Football | Gianni Infantino has opened the door to further winter World Cups and Club World Cups, saying football needs to “keep an open mind” about moving major tournaments away from the summer.

The front pages

Guardian front page 10 October 2025

“Celebrations after Hamas and Israel agree first phase of deal,” is the splash on the Guardian on Friday. “Trump celebrates art of the ‘everlasting peace’ deal,” says the Times.

“A moment of shared hope,” writes the Mirror, while the Telegraph runs with “‘We have peace in Middle East, and the FT: “Israel and Hamas agree to first phase of US-led ceasefire plan for Gaza war.”

“Peace within reach at last,” is the lead story at the Metro. “Ceasefire deal for Gaza: Israel to withdraw troops and hostages set for release,” says the i paper, while the Mail has “Blessed is the peacemaker’ and the Express “Trump’s peace.”

Finally the Sun with: “He’s smart, good-looking & funny …but even David Beckham snores.”

Something for the weekend

Our critics’ roundup of the best things to watch, read, play and listen to right now

Celebrity contestants wearing blindfolds sit around a round table in the new series of The Celebrity Traitors. Claudia Winkleman stands behind them.

TV
The Celebrity Traitors | ★★★★★
All the essential elements are present and correct. The Winkleman. The castle. The eight kabillion first-round contestants. The only difference is that these contestants are a bit easier to keep track of because they are all familiar faces. There are national treasures (Stephen Fry), people for the kidz (singer-songwriter and frankly mesmeric screen presence Cat Burns), TV presenters (Jonathan Ross), actors and comedians (Nick Mohammed), singers (Charlotte Church) and sportspeople (Tom Daley). The traitors are well-chosen. The first task sees them digging through their own mock graves for shields. Roll on the next few weeks when this will be all I have the capacity to care about. Lucy Mangan

Music
Blawan: SickElixir | ★★★★☆
From the moment he started releasing music as Blawan, Jamie Roberts has cut an impressively unbiddable figure. SickElixir – which was recorded in the wake of a struggle with addiction and the overdose deaths of several friends – is served up in bite-size three-minute chunks, crammed with sound, wilfully oppressive, spattered with sudden, jolting disruptions. The vocals are frequently guttural growls or hoarse, panicked whispers. A headlong dive into a troubled mind working overtime, it isn’t a journey you might want to undertake on a nightly basis. That said, it’s a journey worth taking. Alexis Petridis

Film
I Swear | ★★★★☆
Kirk Jones’s terrifically warm, generous film is about real-life activist John Davidson, who is from Galashiels in the Scottish Borders and has Tourette syndrome, with its tics, compulsive behaviour patterns and random obscene shouts. It contains a great performance from Robert Aramayo, full of intelligence and charm, and it raises relevant questions about the overdiagnosis debate surrounding conditions such as ADHD and autism, as well as the larger tonal point of how, when and whether to laugh at John or with him. Absorbing and compassionate. Peter Bradshaw

Art
Peter Doig: House of Music | ★★★★★
In this new exhibition, or club, or festival, Doig’s eerie paintings are set to a soundtrack of music selected from his personal collection of vinyl and played through immense speakers, salvaged from old cinemas by his collaborator Laurence Passera. Your body and head will be filled with Aretha Franklin and Kraftwerk as his art takes you to an ethereal dream space, off the map and out of the history books. A sonic enterprise that teaches us that the language of painting is not remote or difficult, but as enjoyable as music. Play it again. Jonathan Jones

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