Ciminal Courts and Lay People

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Magistrates Court

The magistrate courts hear:

  • all summary cases
  • some triable-either-way cases
  • sending indictable cases to the crown court
  • dealing with bail
  • issuing search and arrest warrents

Magistrates have special training for:

  • youth courts
  • family courts
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Crown Court

The crown court deals with:

  • triable-either-way cases from the magistrates
  • indictable cases
  • cases that the magistrates feel their sentencing powers are not higher enough
  • appeals from the magistrates

Appeals from the crown court go the the CofA which may:

  • dismiss the appeal
  • allow the appeal
  • order a new trial
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Qualifications and Requirements to be a Magistrate

MC GUSS

M - maturity

C - commitment

G - good character

U - understanding

S - socially aware

S - sound judgment

Lay Mags must be between 18 and 65 

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Disqualifications to being a Magistrate

  • People with a Criminal Record
  • A member of the Armed Forces
  • Bankrupt
  • Deaf or imfirm people
  • Inappropriate people
  • Related to a Person in the criminal legal system
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Selection of new Magistrates

Local Advisory Committee (LAC)

  • made up of current, ex lay mags and non-mags
  • people can apply to be part of LAC or can be nominated
  • they try to achieve a local bench which covers all views

Interview Process

The first interview:

  • character and personality
  • tested on their views

The second interview:

  • tested on their judgment skills
  • given 2 cases and must discuss appropriate sentencing 
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Training of Magistrates - YEAR 1

  • learn basics of the role
  • will sit in court with 2 other mags
  • a trained mag will mentor a new mag for a few months

The new mag:

  • visits prisons
  • observes other mags
  • given a core workbook for further study
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Training of Magistrates - YEAR 2

  • consolidation training builds on the sittings and core training
  • first appraisal happens when they are ready 
  • the mentor sits as part of the bench to monitor the new mag and decide if the new Mag meets the role
  • when the new Mag is successful he/she is graded fully comptent
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Training of Magistrates - ONGOING

  • continuation training once every 3 years
  • appraisals take place every 3 years
  • update training with new laws and procedures

Mags go through detailed training to:

  • be a chairperson
  • sit in the youth court
  • sit in the family court
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Role and Power of Mags

  • Mags sit for at least 26 half days a year
  • usually sit in threes 
  • they start 100% of criminal cases
  • they hear 95% - summary offences and less serious offences
  • they pass 5% to crown courts - more serious offences and indictable offences

Areas of work:

  • bail and bail conditions
  • issue search and arrest warrents
  • family court
  • youth court
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Removal of Mags

  • Retirement - Mags must retire at 70
  • Removal - lack of standards, compentence or misbehaviour
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Advantages of Mags

  • cross section of society
  • local knowledge
  • cost are kept low
  • training has improved so Mags have good understanding
  • fewer appeals to Crown court
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Disadvantages of Mags

  • middle aged, middle classed, middle minded - only 5% are under 40 and 66% are retired
  • inconsitency with sentencing
  • reliance on the Clerk to know the law and guide
  • prosecution bias - Mags may become more likely to believe police etc rather than the D
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Qualification of Jurors

The jury is a randomly selected group of people from the electoral register that is called to court to decide questions of fact and gives a verdict of guilty or not guilty - the crown court judge gives the sentence.

Requirements:

  • must be between 18 and 75
  • must be registered on the electoral register
  • must have lived in the UK for at least 5 years since the age of 13
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Disqualification of Jurors

  • if on bail when summoned
  • anyone registered with a mental health disorder
  • conviction - permanent disqualification if a life sentence of 5 years plus was given
  • conviction - 10 year disqualification due to any other sentence under 5 years or suspended sentence or community order
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Selection of Jurors

  • Deferral - can be put back to 12 months but must have a good reason
  • Excusal:
  • - aged over 65
  • - have served on a jury in the last 2 years
  • - armed forces
  • - MPs
  • Vetting - look inot polictical views etc
  • At court - 15 people attend and 12 are picked from them

Before the 12 people are picked they are challenged by the Jurors

  • to the array - whole jury can be excused
  • for 'cause' - can object for a good reason
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The Jury's Role in Criminal Cases

Jury's Function

  • listen to all evidence
  • decide on the verdict of guilty or not
  • judge can advse the jury on the law

Majority Verdict

  • 2 hours given to reach a decision
  • a majority verdict is allowed so not everyone has to agree with the final decision
  • can become a hung jury if there is no final verdict - can lead to a retrial

The Jury room and Secrecy

  • only allowed notes made while in court
  • any exhibit is allowed in the room
  • mobiles are not allowed
  • all discussed in the jury room must not be discussed outside the jury room
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Advantages of Jury Trial

  • public confidence
  • jury independence from the judge
  • open system of justice
  • secrecy of the jury room
  • impartiality
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Disadvantages of Jury Trial

  • lack of understanding - does not know law so need for guidence
  • racial bias
  • media influence
  • illogical decisions
  • secrecy - no one knows how or why the jury made the decision
  • some evidence is horrific
  • jury service is compulsory so some people do not like it
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