Subject Predicate Object
lztNqLoC
a
Resource
Answer
Written answer
answer has question
B6wUK6de
answer has answering person
Chris Ian Brian Mynott Philp
answer text
<p>The Ministry of Justice publishes annual and quarterly data on cracked trials in England and Wales, available at <a href="https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/criminal-court-statistics-quarterly-july-to-september-2019" target="_blank">https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/criminal-court-statistics-quarterly-july-to-september-2019.</a></p><p> </p><p>In these statistics a cracked trial is defined as: “a trial which does not commence on the scheduled date and the trial is not rescheduled, as it is no longer required. Cracked trials are usually the result of an acceptable guilty plea being entered by the defendant on the day or the case ending as the prosecution decides not to proceed (offers no evidence) against the defendant.”</p><p> </p><p>It is not possible to separately identify if the trial was cracked on the day of trial or at any prior point from the data centrally collated by the Ministry of Justice. As a result, identifying the proportion of trials that were ‘cracked on the first day of the trial’ would require a search of court records, which would be of disproportionate cost.</p><p> </p><p> </p><p> </p><p> </p><p> </p>
answer given date
answer has answering body
Ministry of Justice
written answer has answering body
Ministry of Justice
Ministry of Justice
answering body has written answer
lztNqLoC
answering body has answer
lztNqLoC
B6wUK6de
question has answer
lztNqLoC
Chris Ian Brian Mynott Philp
answering person has answer
lztNqLoC