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The Weekly Round-up: Criminal justice scandals and ‘prison-like’ hotels for victims of modern slavery

In the news:

Failures of the criminal justice system were once again under the spotlight this week.

On Wednesday, business minister Paul Scully announced a statutory inquiry into the sub-postmaster scandal, following widespread outrage at one of the greatest miscarriages of justice un UK legal history. After the Court of Appeal quashed the convictions of 39 former sub-postmasters last month, hundreds more have been invited to appeal their own convictions for theft and fraudulent accounting, which may have been based on faulty evidence from the Post Office’s ‘Horizon’ digital accounting system. 

The full public inquiry may include an investigation of the role played by Post Office lawyers in possible failures to disclose important evidence discrediting the accuracy of the Horizon system. The Solicitors Regulation Authority had already confirmed last month that it was monitoring the case, after the judgment levelled criticism at a culture among the prosecution counsel of ‘seeking to avoid legal obligations when fulfilment of those obligations would be inconvenient and/or costly.’

The inquiry will be led by Sir Wyn Williams, President of Welsh Tribunals, and is expected to submit its findings in autumn 2022. 

Meanwhile, a stand-off emerged between the Home Secretary and an independent panel set up to investigate the murder of private investigator Daniel Morgan in 1987, for which no one has been convicted.

The special panel was established eight years ago in response to allegations that the killers were shielded by police corruption, in order to investigate ‘the incidence of connections between private investigators, police officers and journalists at the former News of the World and other parts of the media, and alleged corruption involved in the linkages between them.’ It was set to publish its findings today, only to be informed last week that the Home Secretary was intervening to review the paper’s contents before its release. The Home Secretary explained that this was necessary to ensure that the report complies with human rights and national security considerations. The panel complained that the intervention compromised its independence, which was central to the original agreement it had with the Home Office when first established in 2013.

Commons Leader Jacob Rees-Mogg confirmed in Parliament on Friday that the Home Secretary was yet to have received the report.

In other news:

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