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The Round Up: Healthy Jury, Healthy Justice System?

The Old Bailey

Two jury trials will resume at the Old Bailey this week in the first steps toward Crown court cases restarting around the country. It has been almost two months since jury trials were suspended on 23 March amid coronavirus lockdown measures.

In his announcement, the Lord Chief Justice, Lord Burnett of Maldon, began by affirming that “the practice of trial by jury sits at the heart of our criminal justice system.” In contrast, the Lord Chancellor, Robert Buckland QC, began his statement with a more equivocal comment about a well-functioning justice system being the hallmark of a healthy democracy.

Lord Burnett went on to explain that:

He also clarified that the trials would be conducted with twelve jurors, despite having previously told the BBC that he would “support a move to reduce the number of jurors” and other radical measures to avoid an “unimaginable backlog”.

For the time being, this should quiet the early rumblings of a debate about whether the pandemic should prompt a complete reassessment of the role of jury trials in this jurisdiction. Late in April, Geoffrey Robertson QC recommended the Australian model, which allows defendants to opt for trial by judge, noting that juries are not available in most continental countries or international criminal courts, and that judge-only Diplock courts were introduced in Northern Ireland at the height of the Troubles. The Guardian’s legal affairs correspondent Owen Bowcott discussed the idea of a departure in greater detail, and was met with strongly-worded criticism in a letter from Jeremy Dein QC, who wrote: “Jury trial is the lifeblood. It must not become another victim of this crisis.”

Proposals to reduce the number of jurors, rather than doing away with them altogether, were considered on the Justice Gap and then this blog by Sapan Maini-Thompson. While acknowledging the practical merits of the plan, he stressed that it could undermine a defendant’s right to a fair trial, and proposed a number of procedural safeguards.

Most members of the legal profession cautiously welcomed the news that jury trials would resume. Bar Council chair Amanda Pinto QC said that she was “encouraged” by the decision, which had “not been made lightly.”

However, some commentators expressed misgivings. David Lammy MP, Labour’s Shadow Justice Secretary, called on the Government to do more by co-opting empty public buildings for trials, and streaming trials online. The Secret Barrister expressed concern that the Government was rushing the return to avoid an enormous backlog “caused by cuts but exacerbated by Covid-19,” and risking the “health and safety of jurors, court staff, lawyers, defendants and witnesses” in doing so.

For better or for worse, it seems the time for the “radical changes” entertained by the Lord Chief Justice in relation to jury trials may have passed. But many legal professionals want to emphasise that the justice system was in crisis before the crisis, and will be in even worse shape after it passes. The Lord Chancellor is right to say that a well-functioning justice system is the hallmark of a healthy democracy; whether we’ve got one is another matter.

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