Originally published at thestealingofemily.co.uk

We reported on The Stealing of Emily amid a raft of new sentencing guidelines being rapidly introducedโ€”rules which, if enforced, could have led to different outcomes in the criminal justice system based on a personโ€™s age, sex, or ethnicity.

In response to this, Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood attempted to pass emergency primary legislation to block the changes. Her goal was to have the bill through Parliament within 24 hours. However, she was advised that this would be impossible before the Easter recess. The revised sentencing guidelines were scheduled to take effect the following Tuesday in England and Walesโ€”raising the risk of a โ€œconfusing periodโ€ where theyโ€™d be in force before possibly being rendered illegal.

At the heart of the controversy was a list of ten groups for whom pre-sentence reports would โ€œnormally be necessary.โ€ This included individuals from ethnic, cultural, and religious minorities, as well as young adults, mothers, and survivors of abuse. Under the new guidance, magistrates and judges would be required to consider these reports before sentencing, which the Sentencing Council claimed would โ€œtake into account structural disparities in sentencing outcomes.โ€

Legal figures such as the Society of Black Lawyers defended the guidelines as a historic step toward equality, aiming to redress racial disparities that have persisted for centuries in British law. โ€œEqual treatment,โ€ they argued, cannot be achieved without first acknowledging past and present inequality. But critics, including Mahmood, argued this amounted to singling out specific cohorts for differential treatment under the law.

Following a high-level meeting on Monday, the Sentencing Council announced it would suspend the implementation of the guidelines, citing the imminent introduction of legislation that would make them unlawful. This followed their earlier refusal to amend the list of specified groups as Mahmood requested.

The dispute has laid bare a rift between the executive and the judiciary, which dominates the Sentencing Councilโ€™s membership. Mahmood has since told MPs that the Councilโ€™s role will come under formal review.

Meanwhile, Shadow Justice Secretary Robert Jenrick called for the removal of Lord Justice Davis, who chairs the Sentencing Council. In sharp contrast, Attorney General Lord Hermer KC warned Parliamentโ€™s Joint Committee on Human Rights that political attacks on the judiciary represent โ€œa huge threat to the rule of law and the independence of the judiciary.โ€


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Class action needed 500 plus cases to bring Truth justice and accountability for our children in the corrupt care system. Anyone who remembers the England Post Office Horizon scandal will know we need 500+ names to get A class, collective or group action is a claim in which the court awards permission to an individual or individuals to bring similarly placed claims in a single case. Collective actions are an efficient way of dealing where there are a huge number of claimants suing a large corporation or social services under a similar set of facts.

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