Sunday 24 September 2023

Guest Blog 93

Process or Fairness?

After having sat for a year or so as a magistrate in the Adult court, I had my first courtroom experience sitting as a single justice in the Applications court. This unnerving introduction was in the courtroom set aside for such hearings and involved reading and signing myriad warrants including police search warrants, mental health detention and batches of Utility Company right of entry applications which recently have been subject to revised guidance. It was unclear to me if this court was open to the public or the press. But with the introduction of the Single Justice Procedure (SJP) in 2015 designed with admirable ambition to provide efficient and speedy summary for low order, non-imprisonable offences (mainly traffic) that the format and pace of justice moved up a gear!

My first introduction to SJP was quite an instructive one. Located in one of the back rooms at the court with two computer screens on adjoining tables feeding in the days listings of offences was the Legal Advisor. I was more than a little startled to discover that the applicable fines on a finding of proven, beyond reasonable doubt had already been filled in advance! The offences were mainly speeding and driving with No Insurance, with equivocal on line pleas set back for a trial date. As the listings numbered in the dozens, I felt under pressure to complete each case submitted in mitigation, often heart rending and at times near unreadable. It felt unsettling and unethical to my understanding of open and accountable justice. It was clear that the public/press were excluded from this procedure.

One of the more concerning aspects of the SJP process that I struggled with was defendants submitting incomplete information, (literacy and language barriers appeared prominent reasons for this) particularly on financial means. This set in motion an automatic default calculation of 'presumed income' of £440 which often meant with fines, costs and surcharge that sums of money of hundreds of pounds would be deducted on notification. I raised this concern during this period, but the pressures of time meant that further discussion was considered inappropriate.

Often pleas of mitigation seemed to be solidly grounded, that is to say domestic circumstances that might elicit a more favourable penalty in open court would not be fully explored in what was a often experienced as a hothouse sentencing environment.

The submissions to the SJP are premised on early guilty pleas, but where equivocal pleas were entered in my experience the matter was either put back or listed for the traffic court.

But the decision on guilt was that of the single magistrate, with the formulaic 'proven ' entered on the sentencing outcome notice. My expressed concern again was that the sheer weight of SJP cases often meant decision making was hurried and presumptive.

I seldom heard any murmurings of doubt on the SJP process from colleagues, other than the volume of cases dealt with and my reservations when shared on open justice appeared to be side-lined when SJP was considered low end offending that merited process over fairness to defendants.

The Magistrates Association did pick up, albeit late in the day, the disquiet over utility entry warrants and this acted as a catalyst for opening up the SJP to wider scrutiny and openness.

All magistrates on the Adult court rota (6 months timeline) were assigned SJP sittings. It was assumed at first that half day sittings would be sufficient to accommodate this. But once the stark reality of increased volume prosecutions kicked in, expanded to include matters such as TV licencing and with tentative plans to invoke motoring disqualifications (with rights of appeal) as integral to this, whole day sittings were included. SJP was favoured by some colleagues who appeared to revel in the intensity of such busy sittings. But many others (myself included) felt distinctly uncomfortable with this form of closed and opaque justice.

By 2020 the number of case heard via SJP had reached a staggering 535,000 according to the court service and any judicial murmurings of residual concern seemed to go unnoticed. I was often bemused by listening to some of my colleagues in the retiring room extol with almost fetishistic glee the number of such cases they had completed (processed!) in one sitting. I did flag up my misgivings on how this might square with open justice, in the sense that the financial and penal consequences of a criminal conviction were impacting unfairly on those with the least means. But such concerns seemed not to matter. I do not want to impugn the motives of colleagues, given the busy court that I sat in. But SJP seemed very much like a Cinderella feature, with an eager willingness by some to change their rota so that the enthusiasts had the choice to sit.

The House of Commons Justice Select Committee in its 2022 report supported moves to widen access to justice and the Magistrates Association have more recently sought to offer much needed solutions to the current impasse on open and accountable justice, especially around SJP. But it is significant that this move was as a result of some sterling investigative journalism, which meant this unjust gadfly in the magistrates courts now looks like it might be taken more seriously and who knows rectified?

A Former Magistrate

25 comments:

  1. Glad to see former. This sorry expose of the magistracy reads like a Millgram experiment. Don't listen to the screaming just apply the voltage.

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    1. We live in a Neoliberal society that's based on individualism. We're all broken down into individual units that are constantly being processed. It doesn't really matter if it's by the courts or in the supermarket, theres little sense of social collectiveness that may advance the common good to be found anywhere.

      Process or Fairness?

      Fairness in todays world lays in the perception of the individual. It doesn't really matter if you feel you're being treated fairly or not (that's soley your issue), but as long as you've been processed society has carried out its obligation to the individual.
      It's a social structure that suits the more successful very well, whilst the rest of us individuals obligation is to just keep plowing on regardless and keep the system going.

      'Getafix

      Delete
  2. Ricky @ Council Estate Media (on substack)

    "The Labour Party has no plans for sensible drug reform. Their reasoning is frankly bollocks

    Sir Keir Starmer is saying he won’t introduce drug reform when he becomes prime minister in yet another example of how he is hopelessly out of touch. 6 out of 10 Britons believe that criminalising drugs is futile and less than a quarter of the public think our current approach is effective at preventing consumption.

    “I’m going to be laser-focused on the five missions for government I’ve set out. And we don’t have the bandwidth for very much else, I’m afraid.”

    Drug reform is such a no brainer. It would save money and be supported by the public, and no, it wouldn’t turn younger generations into drug addicts!

    A leaked document revealed the Tory government’s own drug advisers recommended decriminalisation back in 2016 because it’s the logical thing to do. The Scottish government recently called for drug decriminalisation, but the idea was rejected by the Tories of both the blue and red variety.

    Labour is offering the same fiscal policies that proved so unpopular they drove the working class to vote for Brexit in a desperate yet futile attempt to change the system. Reeves is now boasting there is no escape from the system.

    The war on drugs helps no one, but it gives the authorities an excuse to penalise the working-class while ignoring middle-class drug use, and in the coming years, the establishment is going to use every tool at its disposal to control us."

    The former magistrate will no doubt have witnessed innumerable cases brought before them which, if a decriminalised agenda was adopted, would have freed up many, many hours of court time.

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  3. Don't get me started in the failure of all major UK parties to address drug reform. We are failing in the most gross manner and it sickens me that I am part of this travesty. Criminalisation doesn't work, full stop but the parties are too scared of the tabloid press to do anything different. This is not progressive and just causes more human misery for those with addiction issues (generally the result of trauma) and the general public, wider society. This battle against drugs is futile and it will take a brave politician to actually listen to people including those addicted as well as those involved in CJS. At present it's the traffickers and drug dealers who are in charge. Lock up a few, rarely those at the top if the pyramid and more materialise. They feed on social deprivation and draw in young men ( and women) who have often been in care systems and experiencedenormoustrauma in their early lives. It's a sad testament to the countries failure to face the issue head on. We desperately need a more progressive approach. Meanwhile Probation Officers are forced to dole out a punative approach which is largely futile and causes much angst as we know it isn't working and we are just puppets forced to breach or recall when people fail to do what the civil service expects and suddenly recover from years of emotional trauma and social deprivation. Meanwhile so many young people's lives are wasted in a cycle of imprisonment as there is nothing in place to assist people drawn into dealing/ County lines to actually extricate themselves.

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    1. @11:55 - I totally agree with everything you say . We are supposed to be working using a trauma informed approach but the way we are directed to work is at odds with the TRM

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  4. More and more I question why the probation service continues to work with the police and it’s toxic culture.

    “A source suggested that more than 100 officers have handed in what is known as a ticket permitting them to carry firearms.”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-66906193

    What the Home Secretary should be investigating is what distorted values are involved when more than 100 police have refused to do their job in support of their police colleague who’s rightly being criminally prosecuted for killing an unarmed black man.

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  5. Role details
    HM Chief Inspector of Probation
    Application deadline 20 June 2023

    Summary

    Organisation: His Majesty's Chief Inspector of Probation
    Sponsor department: Ministry of Justice
    Location: Various
    Sector: Judicial, Prisons & Policing
    Skills: Regulation
    Number of vacancies: 1
    Time commitment: 37 hour(s) per week
    Remuneration: £135000 per annum
    Length of term: 3 years
    Application deadline: 11pm on 20 June 2023

    Timeline for this appointment

    Opening date: 24 May 2023
    Application deadline: 11pm on 20 June 2023
    Sifting date: 26 July 2023
    Interviews expected to end on: 28 September 2023

    https://apply-for-public-appointment.service.gov.uk/roles/7450

    So which of justin's 'strong, excellent leaders' are in the frame?

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    1. I hear the chain smoking galloping gourmet narcissist of the sw region is putting up a me me me bid as usual.

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  6. Probation , trauma informed ? You joking

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    1. JB: some comments on an earlier blog (the case is made) might usefully be repeated here?

      Delete
    2. ok, here's one:

      Anonymous25 September 2023 at 10:26

      Here are some links. I very much doubt that in the current climate anyone is able to deliver "A trauma-informed approach... which seeks not to re-traumatise with blame and sanction..." when the hmpps norm is recall, recall, recall :

      "four in 10 were returned within 28 days of being released and in some probation regions almost half were recalled to custody, according to a report by the HM Inspectorate of Probation."


      https://www.justiceinspectorates.gov.uk/hmiprobation/wp-content/uploads/sites/5/2022/03/Working-with-trauma-in-adult-probation.pdf

      "Context - Trauma-informed practice (TIP) originated in healthcare organisations but is now increasingly being adopted by a range of frontline services, including in the criminal justice system. Generally, trauma-informed services do not offer treatment for trauma but provide services that recognise people are likely to have experienced trauma and adversity. Principles of TIP were developed to improve staff knowledge about the impact of trauma, how it manifests in behaviour, and to develop organisational culture and practices that ensures a person’s trauma does not impede their access to services. This bulletin explores the experiences of staff working with trauma in adult probation."

      https://www.russellwebster.com/trauma-informed-probation/

      "A trauma-informed approach is promoted which seeks not to re-traumatise with blame and sanction, but to recognise individual strengths and skills, build confidence and re-educate. It is a person first, service user centred approach that is rooted in desistance and strengths-based models, recognising that the causes and impact of trauma are individualised."

      https://gala.gre.ac.uk/id/eprint/43321/2/43321_PETRILLO_Embedding_trauma_informed_Approaches_in_Adult_Probation.pdf

      https://www.pbni.org.uk/news/trauma-informed-approach-key-probation-services-says-mental-health-champion

      https://www.pbni.org.uk/files/pbni/2022-06/IPJ%20Vol%2018%20-%20Trauma-Informed%20Practice%20and%20the%20Criminal%20Justice%20System%20A%20Systematic.pdf

      See also:

      https://www.poauk.org.uk/media/2046/poa-the-experience-of-ptsd-in-uk-ex-prison-officers.pdf

      https://www.crimeandjustice.org.uk/sites/crimeandjustice.org.uk/files/PSJ%20267%2C%20Post-Traumatic%20Stress%20Disorder.pdf

      Delete
  7. https://www.gov.uk/government/news/royal-reappointment-of-charlie-taylor-as-hm-chief-inspector-of-prisons

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    1. Interesting interim appointment of probation inspectorate?
      Sue McAllister.

      https://www.gov.uk/government/news/interim-appointment-of-sue-mcallister-as-hm-chief-inspector-of-probation

      'Getafix

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    2. https://amp-theguardian-com.cdn.ampproject.org/v/s/amp.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/sep/25/insiders-on-the-state-of-english-and-welsh-prisons?amp_gsa=1&amp_js_v=a9&usqp=mq331AQIUAKwASCAAgM%3D#amp_ct=1695678458012&amp_tf=From%20%251%24s&aoh=16956784493963&referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com&ampshare=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.theguardian.com%2Fuk-news%2F2023%2Fsep%2F25%2Finsiders-on-the-state-of-english-and-welsh-prisons

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    3. The Secretary of State and Lord Chancellor, Rt Hon. Alex Chalk KC MP, has announced the appointment of Sue McAllister as the interim Chief Inspector of Probation (HMCI Probation). This interim appointment will commence on 1 October 2023 and end on 1 March 2024 or when a substantive post holder is appointed, whichever is earlier.

      The recruitment of HMCI Probation is regulated by the Commissioner for Public Appointments and this interim appointment has been made in line with the Governance Code on Public Appointments.

      His Majesty’s Inspectorate of Probation
      His Majesty’s Inspectorate of Probation (HMIP) is the independent inspector of probation and youth offending services in England and Wales. The Inspectorate offers independent scrutiny of the quality of work undertaken with individual offenders to seek to improve outcomes for individuals and communities.

      Biography
      From 2018 to 2022, Sue McAllister was Prisons and Probation Ombudsman (PPO). During that time, Mrs McAllister led two independent investigations into deaths of babies in custody. The PPO’s report on the death of Baby A at HMP Bronzefield was published in September 2021, and the report on the death of Baby B at HMP Styal was published in January 2022..

      Prior to becoming PPO, Mrs McAllister was the Director of Reducing Offending and Prison Service Director General, Department of Justice (DOJ), Northern Ireland. She has held senior policy roles including Head of Public Sector Bids Unit at the National Offender Management Service (NOMS), and operational management roles in HM Prison Service as Prison Governor, Head of Security Group and Area Manager for the West Midlands.

      Mrs McAllister also led an independent investigation into a serious disturbance at an Immigration Removal Centre for the Home Office and was a member of an independent review into a sensitive death in custody.

      Delete
    4. mcallister's dna = prisons

      onehmpps dna = prisons

      Delete
  8. When doctors & nurses strike, they are the most evil, selfish scumsuckers on the planet, they are responsible for millions of deaths & deserve nothing.

    When Met armed police hand in their firearms tickets in support of a colleague who shoots dead an unarmed citizen, the Met chief writes a letter of support to the Home Sec & demands they are given immunity from prosecution (ok, not quite, but its pretty fucking close), and the Home Sec agrees to review their terms & conditions in order to protect them.

    Surely those who handed in their tickets should be made to resit the exam? No, they're just re-instated immediately because everyone's shitting their pants about those rare occurrences when firearms officers are given the chance to shoot someone.

    I'm sure most do an extremely good job, most are decent people & they have to rely 100% on solidarity & trust in their work. Carrick & Couzens et al do not help their case: "The troubled police squad - Parliamentary and Diplomatic Protection Command - in which murderer Wayne Couzens and serial rapist David Carrick served has had a third of its staff cleared out in a major overhaul."

    Adam Provan:

    https://news.met.police.uk/news/statement-following-sentencing-of-adam-provan-471150

    Why should we be worried about Met officers with guns?

    A FoI request asked "1. Over the past five years from 03/03/16 - 03/03/21 How many serving Met police officers have been charged or convicted for any of the following offences: Murder, Sexual assault/Rape, Assault ABH, GBH

    2. Also, how many officers convicted of any offences are still employed by the Met Police.

    There was a reply:

    32 were charged with sexual (12) & violent (20) offences
    14 were convicted (7 of each type)

    There was no comment anywhere relating to who remains employed

    "More than 1,000 Metropolitan Police officers are currently suspended or on restricted duties" - https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-66842521

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    1. https://www.met.police.uk/SysSiteAssets/media/downloads/met/about-us/baroness-casey-review/update-march-2023/baroness-casey-review-march-2023a.pdf

      "This chapter sets out the picture we saw and the evidence we heard regarding two of the Met’s specialist units: the Specialist Firearms Command (MO19) and the Parliamentary and Diplomatic Protection Command (PaDP), including the Firearms
      training centre which trains all firearms officers in the Met.

      The chapter highlights serious concerns with the cultures in these units.

      6.2. Specialist Firearms Command (MO19)

      We have looked at two of the Met’s specialist units and found serious issues of culture and behaviours that need to be addressed urgently. During the Review, the mention of MO19 usually elicited an eye roll from current and former Met officers and staff we spoke to. It appeared to be well known what it was like there, but there was a sense that it either could not be challenged or that any attempt to would fail because of the overriding culture of the unit."

      "Training for MO19 and PaDP

      Firearms trainers and assessors further embed this culture. They carry the power to decide, on a frequent, ongoing basis, who carries a ‘blue card’ and therefore a gun.

      They are the gatekeepers of MO19. Too often, they use this power and influence to select officers in their own image rather on merit, and to keep out women, ethnic minorities, and other people whose faces don’t fit their ideal of a firearms officer. This area of MO19, which is based in a different geographic location to the rest of the Command, is seen as “impenetrable” and operating as its own “little island” with a lack of senior oversight or proper scrutiny. We were told that senior leaders are either unaware of what is happening in this part of the Command, or are actively part of an inner circle which allows poor behaviour to go unchallenged."

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  9. Make good modern probation officers

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  10. Just seen Braverman on BBC talking about ‘ …. politicians and thought leaders.’
    Sometimes the mask slips.

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  11. BBC News - UK's first drug consumption room to get go-ahead
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-66929385

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    1. Next they’ll bring back Opium dens in China!

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  12. Direction of travel? Probation managers attending recruitment events for armed forces personnel about to exit into civilian life or who are veterans. Strategy to close the gender gap? Strategy to finally kill off Advise, Assist and Befriend ? Excellent leaders behaving errr excellently ……

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    1. Army personnel fastracked into probation service. Couldn’t be a worse initiative.

      Delete
  13. https://amp-theguardian-com.cdn.ampproject.org/v/s/amp.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/sep/27/organised-crime-gangs-uk-sending-recruits-to-train-as-prison-officers-union-warns?amp_gsa=1&amp_js_v=a9&usqp=mq331AQIUAKwASCAAgM%3D#amp_tf=From%20%251%24s&aoh=16958398943994&referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com&ampshare=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.theguardian.com%2Fuk-news%2F2023%2Fsep%2F27%2Forganised-crime-gangs-uk-sending-recruits-to-train-as-prison-officers-union-warns

    ReplyDelete