So the Justice department is to prohibit the use of police
cautions for the most serious offences, because Chris Grayling says that they
are unacceptable and unfair to victims. Existing
guidance, issued only six months ago, permits the use of simple cautions as a
response to serious offending only in exceptional circumstances, “where the
decision maker is able to conclude that the public interest does not require
the immediate prosecution of the offender and that if it took place there would
be reasons why the court would not impose a period of imprisonment or high
level community order.”
As things stand, in the case of crimes
which, if prosecuted, must be tried in the Crown Court, any decision to caution
has to be taken by the Crown Prosecution Service. It may seem surprising, shocking even, that offenders
who admit guilt for offences of manslaughter, rape or robbery could even be
considered for what Grayling calls a slap on the wrist. But there may be rare occasions in which such
an apparently unthinkable decision could be the right one. Only five months ago, Grayling’s junior
minister told parliament that “ there will always be
exceptional cases in which a prosecution for what appears to be a relatively
serious offence is not in the public or the victim's interest and that we
should not remove police officer
discretion.” That is now exactly what the government is proposing to do.
Their proposal appears to be the result of a review of
cautions launched in April which reported to ministers in the Summer and whose
results are to be shared not with parliament but the Conservative party
conference.
Of course Grayling is right that the public have a right to
expect that people who commit serious crimes should be brought before a court,
but we also have a right to see the detailed results of his review. There seems some confusion about the numbers
of cases which are involved each year. The Press Association reported that “last
year, 5,084 simple cautions were issued for the most serious crimes – those
that would automatically be heard in a crown court if they went to trial. These
included 962 for possession of knives, 1,543 for other weapons and 54 for
supplying or offering to supply class-A drugs.”. But possession of knives and
offensive weapons is not a crime that always goes to the Crown Court.
We also need to know what analysis has been made of the likely consequences of this policy change. In some at least of these unusual cases where cautions are given for a very serious crime, prosecution may prove impossible and conviction unlikely. The result may in some cases be to exchange the slap on the wrist with its accompanying criminal record, for no action at all.
We also need to know what analysis has been made of the likely consequences of this policy change. In some at least of these unusual cases where cautions are given for a very serious crime, prosecution may prove impossible and conviction unlikely. The result may in some cases be to exchange the slap on the wrist with its accompanying criminal record, for no action at all.
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