Further Expansion of the Single Justice Procedure

  The Single Justice Procedure (“SJP”) is designed to enable magistrates’ courts to deal with minor offences more efficiently, while still ensuring rigorous, open and fair justice. Whether those aims are in fact met is the subject of some intense debate, with a number of high-profile journalists consistently exposing weaknesses in the system. 535,000 cases … Continued

Will Password Sharing Land You in The Dock?

  It is standard for people to share a Netflix account (the same is true of other sharing services). In many instances, it is perfectly proper to do so when those persons are all part of the same household. But sharing password access with relatives and friends further afield has always been something widely acknowledged … Continued

Excess….As Night Follows Day

It’s funny how things change as the years pass by. Perhaps only ten years ago, if we were thinking about particular spikes in alleged criminal offending over the Christmas period, the one that would jump out would always be drunk driving. These days it is common to come across drug driving due to advances in … Continued

Police Cells For Prisoners

The Ministry of Justice has announced emergency measures that will see some people who ought to be in prison instead placed in police cells. The capacity pressure is specific to the adult male estate, and there is ample capacity in the women’s and youth estates. There are currently about 83,000 people in prisons At the … Continued

Delay & Alleged Historic Offending

    It is now commonplace for us to be asked to deal with cases where a person is accused of a crime, most commonly of a sexual nature, which is said to have occurred many decades earlier. Not surprisingly, those accused will wonder how they can be expected to properly defend themselves after such … Continued

Police Respond to Increased Reports of Hate Crime

    Police recorded crime figures in 2021/22 show that there were 155,841 offences where one or more of the centrally monitored hate crime strands were deemed to be a motivating factor. This represented a 26% increase on figures for 2020/21. Since April 2015, there have been spikes for racial or religiously aggravated hate crimes … Continued

Bribery – an expensive business….

  On 3 November 2022, Glencore Energy (UK) Limited was sentenced to financial penalties totalling some £280 million. Glencore was charged on indictment with seven counts under the Bribery Act 2010. Glencore pleaded guilty to all seven counts on 21 June 2022 before the Honorary Recorder of Westminster. Counts 1 to 5 are bribery offences, … Continued

Pre-charge Bail – Changes Coming Soon

Changes to pre-charge bail arrangements and the current system of “release under investigation” are expected to come into force in November 2022 when schedule 4 of the Police, Crime, Sentencing And Courts Act 2022 is commenced. The current system An individual who has been arrested by the police but who has not yet been charged … Continued

Public Accounts Committee Report Condemns Government Electronic Tagging Strategy

HM Prison & Probation Service launched an electronic tagging programme to improve efficiency and increase the usefulness of tagging for police and probation services, but after significant setbacks and delays the failure has cost taxpayers dear. Tagging allows the police, courts, probation and immigration services to monitor offenders’ locations and compliance with court orders, and … Continued

Discharge of the Jury

  Given the complexity of many criminal trials, it is inevitable that, from time to time, something will go wrong. A witness may give inadmissible evidence; the jury was shown something they ought not to have seen, or a judge or advocate making an inappropriate comment. When mistakes happen, all parties will wish to consider … Continued

Sentencing & Deterrence

  General deterrence raises some of the oldest questions in criminology. A general deterrent effect would occur where a disposal makes other potential offenders less likely to offend. General deterrence is said to depend on three main factors which have been explored in recent research published by the Sentencing Council: the certainty that an offender … Continued

Police Constables

Given we are criminal defence lawyers we interact with police on a regular basis, but perhaps without thinking too much about the office of police constable and what it entails. Every police officer, irrespective of rank hold the office of police constable. The office dates back to ancient times and the practice of each local … Continued