HC Deb 23 February 1999 vol 326 cc202-3W
Mr. Cox

To ask the Attorney-General how many cases were referred to the Crown Prosecution Service in each of the last three years; in how many cases court proceedings were recommended; and if he will make a statement. [72548]

The Attorney-General

The table shows the number of cases which the Crown Prosecution Service received from the police, and the number which the Service finalised, in each of the last three years. Both figures are inclusive of cases submitted for pre-charge advice and non-criminal proceedings, and the numbers of these completed in each year are shown separately.

The table then shows the number and the proportion of cases in which a prosecution did not proceed. These outcomes are divided into those cases discontinued by the Service, and those which were written off because the defendant could not be traced or had died, or because proceedings were adjourned indefinitely.

Finally, the table shows the number and proportion of cases in which a prosecution proceeded. These are divided into cases in which the defendant was bound over to keep the peace, those which proceeded to a committal hearing, and those which proceeded to a trial or guilty plea.

The Code for Crown Prosecutors requires that there should be sufficient reliable evidence to give a realistic prospect of conviction, and that the prosecution should be in the public interest. These criteria are applied in every case. Every case discontinued must be reviewed by a Crown Prosecutor and, wherever time allows, the police must be consulted before a decision is taken. The number of cases discontinued against the opinion of the police is very small: a survey conducted in 1994 showed that the police objected to discontinuance on only 4 per cent. of occasions when they were consulted.

However, discontinuance is not primarily the result of a Crown Prosecutor's judgment. More than half of discontinued cases are unable to proceed because witnesses fail to appear at court, refuse to give evidence or change their evidence, defendants produce driving documents proving their innocence on the day of the trial; evidence is excluded because of irregularities in its collection; or due to lack of continuity evidence in the

Crown Prosecution Service magistrates' courts cases 1996–98
1996 1997 1998
Number Percentage Number Percentage Number Percentage
Did not proceed
Discontinued 153,274 12.0 161,461 12.2 162,661 12.0
Written off 102,283 8.0 92,930 7.0 88,506 6.5
Total cases which did not proceed 255,557 20.1 254,391 19.2 251,167 18.5
Cases proceeding
Bind over 20,016 1.6 22,747 1.7 24,914 1.8
Committal hearing 98,575 7.7 107,979 8.1 95,073 7.0
Trial or Guilty plea 900,215 70.6 942,665 71.0 987,943 72.7
Total cases proceeding 1,018.806 79.9 1,073,391 80.8 1,107,930 81.5

Notes:

  1. 1.The figures given in the draft reply represent cases handled by the 13 Areas of the CPS, but do not include the specialised cases handled by Central Casework.
  2. 2.Cases discontinued are inclusive of those in which the CPS withdrew proceedings at court as well as those discontinued by way of a s23 notice.
  3. 3.Discontinuance fell from 13.3 per cent. of completed cases in 1992 to 12.8 per cent. in 1993, and has remained almost unchanged at around 12 per cent. for each year since then.