

Dr. Jen Hough ๐ฆ
961 posts

@Agent_Jen_
Senior Lecturer - DProf Course Leader @UCLan | Researching Legal Spaces, Access to Justice, ND, Policing, Crime History & Violence | SFHEA | ~Cake Enthusiast~ |




๐Today, 10 January 2025, 102 out of the 516 Crown courtrooms in England & Wales will not be sitting. That's 20% of them. #courtstats #CS10012025 courtstats.co.uk



Autumn Budget Statement from the Criminal Bar Associationย Whilst we recognise that there has been an overall increase in the budget for the criminal justice system it will not make a difference to those waiting for justice unless there are court rooms to hear the cases and criminal barristers to prosecute and defend them.ย We await with interest the information from the Government following the Budget as to how it intends to rebuild the criminal justice system, how it will invest to reduce delays for those awaiting trial in serious criminal trials and how it will invest to ensure that there are sufficient criminal barristers to prosecute and defend them.ย A failure to invest in the criminal barristers and solicitors is a failure to value victims of crime and a failure to protect us all from the harm caused by a broken criminal justice system.ย The 81,000 serious crimes which form the basis of the cases which are waiting to get on may take years to be reached. They involve witnesses, those accused of crimes and victims of crime. That means at least 160,000 people are waiting to be heard. And it will only get worse.ย ย There is no point in talk of investing in police investigations, in the protection of women and girls, in โswift justiceโ ย and building new prisons if the essential part of the justice system, the trial process, is so underfunded that by the time a trial can take place, the witnesses have walked away. If six years or so are allowed to pass before a matter comes to trial, even more will do so.ย It is not just the complainants who walk away, it is also witnesses. Criminal Solicitorsโ firms are walking away. Criminal Barristers are walking away. Mary Prior KC, Chair.ย criminalbar.com/resources/newsโฆ





โSir Robert said: "This Governmentโs actions fly in the face of their rhetoric on cutting the backlog.โ @RobertBuckland He said another option is to use secondary legislation temporarily extend the custody time limit to eight months, as he did in the pandemic. โThe idea this Government is helpless in the face of a supposedly inherited crisis is wrong,โ he said. โThey have options they have not taken.โ Sunday Express front page and page 2 @Daily_Express And last night, Shadow Justice Secretary Ed Agar said: โThis decision will be deeply disappointing to victims, and risks increasing backlogs. โOne hundred days in, and this government has shown how little it cares about the victims of crime.โ Mary Prior KC chair of the Criminal Bar Association said: โCuts in sitting days may save some limited amount of money from one budget but it will increase costs in others. The true cost is that people stop believing in justice. People may well ask, what is the point of calling the police to report a crime if it takes between 4 and 6 years for the trial to be heard.โโ #amp-readmore-target" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">express.co.uk/news/uk/196115โฆ











Researchers @UCLanCJP are currently conducting a survey on third-sector experiences of commissioning, conducting, and participating in evaluations. Please fill out, RT & share with your networks: qualtricsxmxsx8jpxkp.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_6Sโฆ #research #evaluation #fundingbids




Thanks so much for all the condolences for the loss of Isabelle.We're so grateful for offers of help but as we can't think straight at the moment,a colleague has kindly done a fundraiser page until we can function enough to know what we need.Thank you x justgiving.com/crowdfunding/eโฆ





July 2027โฆ..I was right. Not a single solitary word about the state of our courts in Starmerโs speech.