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The COVID blame game

15 October 2020 / Mike McConville , Luke Marsh
Issue: 7906 / Categories: Opinion , Covid-19 , Criminal , Profession
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Criminal justice in a time of COVID-19: paralysis & prognosis explored by Mike McConville & Luke Marsh

In a recent judgment (R v P and Others, Woolwich Crown Court, (14/09/2020)) which involved the question whether the duration of custody for an unconvicted defendant could be extended beyond the legal time limit on account of the COVID-19 crisis, a senior judge was required to rule upon the efficacy of the government’s handling of the administration of criminal justice since the onset of the pandemic. In setting aside defence counsel’s wider submission to the court that the response from HMCTS to the crisis has been deficient, Mrs Justice Whipplewas not persuaded… that there is at present a systemic failure’.

In light of the presiding judge’s further remark that the ‘judiciary works closely with HMCTS’ it is perhaps unsurprising that an excusatory tone towards government was handed down in this way. Questions of objectivity aside, anyone familiar with the dysfunctional state of the justice apparatus in England

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NEWS
The extension of fixed recoverable costs (FRC) from low-value personal injury to most civil cases worth up to £100,000 ‘is failing to deliver what it promised’, the Law Society has warned
Bar campaigns will focus on protecting juries, legal aid and children’s rights in the year ahead with a working group already looking into the age of criminal responsibility, chair Kirsty Brimelow KC has said
Richard Orpin has been appointed chief executive officer (CEO) of the Legal Services Board (LSB), which oversees all nine legal regulators
Workers will be given day-one rights to parental leave in April, the government has confirmed
Lord Sales has become deputy president, and Lord Doherty a justice, at the Supreme Court. Both were sworn in this week at a ceremony conducted by the court’s president Lord Reed in Courtroom One
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