11. Aug. 2010. – 12:54:37
ADDENDUM 13th August 2010
11. Aug. 2010. – 12:54:37
11 Aug. 2010. – 11:37:02
04. Aug. 2010. – 23:06:41
04. Aug. 2010. – 12:58:24
03. Aug. 2010. – 08:52:18
02. Aug. 2010. – 11:56:35
@ 31. Jul. 2010. – 12:08:23
28. Jul. 2010. – 11:19:43
23. Jul. 2010. – 15:34:43
22. Jul. 2010. – 11:43:31
21. Jul. 2010. – 08:48:20
19. Jul. 2010. – 14:33:33
18. Jul. 2010. – 12:45:28
The Ministry of Justice recently published its Draft Structural Reform Plan. It would seem that lots of little elves in Whitehall have been working their little arses off since the election in May to produce this document. Depending on one`s point of view political or otherwise there is much to consider. The usual "camel is a horse designed by a committee" signs are still apparent:- e.g. sect. 5.2 says "Develop a mechanism to prevent unnecessary criminal offences".
However it will be in relation to this document that future changes will be judged.
17. Jul. 2010. – 13:34:17
16. Jul. 2010. – 17:01:11
16. Jul. 2010. – 16:45:58
15. Jul. 2010. – 11:59:17
The history, practice and efficiency of the jury system has been examined in ever closer detail by myriad academics and legal eagles and can easily be accessed by those interested. My comment today is a result of a statement yesterday 14/07/2010 by the Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales Lord Judge that juries should be directed by a trial judge not to research a case or anything pertaining to it on the internet. I wonder in all humility if His Lordship knows what a curate`s egg he has opened.
Jury composition from its earliest medieval beginnings until the 21st century has moved from exclusivity to inclusivity; virtually any sane person who is neither lord nor convict is eligible to sit. There is no requirement to have a basic knowledge of English language, mathematics, carpentry or indeed any intellectual or practical ability. The juryman reflects society warts and all. And this is what I find disturbing in Lord Judge`s approach. If we accept that the internet is merely a vast library where those with or without knowledge of a subject can research it to the n th degree it follows that on any case before a jury some jurors might have relevant knowledge that another does not and wishes to find for him/herself. This is what Lord Judge appears to want forbidden. Therefore the ignorant jury member must remain in ignorance and be subject to the inevitable explanations that the knowledgeable fellow member will expound.
This is nonsense. To have juries of the lowest common knowledge can only be a forerunner to one of two futures; to return to a stricter method of jury selection where individuals` capacity to comprehend proceedings can be tested or to create a new form of “either way” trial where one or both parties can elect for judge or tribunal [three judges] trial or jury trial. However in the tradition of muddled English legal development it is unlikely to be spelt out so blatantly.
This coalition government born not of goodwill but of necessity has shown some promising trends in its stated wish to eliminate some of the authoritarian actions of its predecessor. If there is, as I now believe, an underlying intention to change radically our trials system there should be more than merely “consultation”, the weasel word of political cowards; there should be encouraged open debate where effective discussion can take place with no pre-determined objective already pencilled in on what was supposedly a blank piece of paper.
14. Jul. 2010. – 12:27:13
13. Jul. 2010. – 08:52:44
12. Jul. 2010. – 11:39:12
11. Jul. 2010. – 13:41:13
10. Jul. 2010. – 13:27:12
08. Jul. 2010. – 21:11:21
@ 08. Jul. 2010. – 16:12:11
07. Jul. 2010. – 16:13:09
The Magistrates' Association
reads with astonishment the National Audit Office report that there is a
staggering £1.3billion in unpaid confiscation orders, fines, compensation and
legal costs. At a time of financial constraint with 103 courts threatened with
closure to save money the failure to secure such a large amount of potential
income will be considered by magistrates to border on negligence. The large
sums uncollected send an unacceptable message to offenders, undermine the
sentences of the courts and are a significant blow to public confidence.
Criminals will rejoice that
they can retain the proceeds of their offending behaviour despite court orders.
Magistrates were criticised recently for not imposing more fines to provide
funding to service the justice system. They will now be rightly angry that the
sentences they impose appear not to be adequately managed. Victims awarded
compensation for the hurt and distress they have been caused continue to
suffer. Magistrates are reporting a reduction in the number of courts with
resultant delay in hearings and trials. The significant amount of unpaid costs
would be more than sufficient to employ enough prosecutors to service all our
current courts without further court closures. The MA appreciates these figures
are a legacy of a previous administration and is therefore willing to engage
with the review it believes is necessary to restore the confidence of both the
magistracy and the public.
Notes for Editors:
The £1.3 billion is made up as follows:£706 million in unpaid confiscation
orders;£350 million in unpaid fines; £150 million in unpaid compensation
orders; £110 million in unpaid legal costs.
Clear and unambiguous
information such as this which is lacking in many areas of public
accountability is certain to fuel backbenchers` demands that "their"
local court is exempt from closure. I predict the Rt Hon K.Clarke will be
eating hubris over his precipitate announcement and that reasoned argument
might at long last inform the debate.