Like most British people, I was brought up to respect the law and its traditions, including trial by jury.
As many will know from consuming countless TV shows, films and novels, in the more serious court cases in Britain, a dozen men and women selected at random listen to the evidence before the court and decide who is guilty and who is innocent. If the accused is found guilty, the judge decides the penalty.
Itβs a tradition that has been a cornerstone of the UKβs democracy ever since trial by jury was first recorded in England in the 13th century. It came into existence after the Vatican authorities in 1215 moved away from the cruelty of βtrial by ordealβ, a medieval practice where guilt or innocence was determined by a judgment after an βordealβ such as holding a hot iron.
The courts in England and Wales are somewhat different from those in Scotland and Northern Ireland, but the jury system features in all parts of the UK and was exported to former British colonies, including the US in the mid-17th century.
Court traditions include somewhat antiquated trappings such as the ways in which judges and lawyers are expected to dress. They typically wear black gowns, starched white neckwear and uncomfortable-looking wigs. Some years ago, I asked a judge whether wearing wigs in court wasnβt a rather daft tradition. He strongly disagreed, saying there had been occasions when he felt that an unruly accused person in the dock only kept calm because of the authority that a wig and gown bestowed on the judge and therefore on the justice system.
UK Justice Secretary David Lammy has recommended that a judge sitting alone will hear some criminal cases currently heard by juries. Reuters
I thought then β and still think now β that the judge was absolutely right. There is something about the formalities of the British court system that commands respect. Iβve attended a number of criminal cases as a journalist and can vouch for the idea that wigs and gowns do bring a sense of authority, order and even calm to proceedings that at times involve violent or disturbed people in the dock.
And so like many British people, I was shocked by the suggestion from Justice Secretary David Lammy that jury trials may soon be abandoned in some of the less serious cases. The reason for this undoubtedly controversial proposal is clear. The England and Wales court system β indeed the wider justice system at all levels β is on the verge of chaos.
In recent weeks, there has been a series of embarrassing cases involving prisoners being released when they still had time left to serve. The prisons are hugely overcrowded, morale among prison officers is said to be low, and the system seems to be in the Victorian age of pen and paper rather than laptops and emails. Moreover, building new prisons not only takes time, but it is also a simple fact of life that while every honest citizen wants convicted criminals to be put behind bars, few honest citizens are enthusiastic about a new prison being built in their neighbourhood.
Beyond the planning problems, there is also the court log-jam problem. The backlog of serious criminal cases has increased significantly since the Covid-19 lockdown. Itβs estimated that almost 80,000 serious court cases involving juries are still waiting to be tried.
A few months ago, I was invited to a private lunch that included a number of judges and lawyers. There was total agreement that the criminal justice system is on the verge of meltdown at more or less every level. The judges β men and women I respect greatly for their common sense as well as their legal knowledge β all seemed ve
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