Heading: |
Non-crime Hate Incidents |
Question ID: |
1817147 |
UIN: |
63146 |
House: |
Commons |
Date tabled: |
2025-06-26 |
Asking Member ID: |
5072 |
Asking Member display name: |
Mr Andrew Snowden
|
Asking Member handle: |
A_J_Snowden
|
Asking Member Twitter reference: |
@A_J_Snowden
|
Member interest: |
false |
Question text: |
To ask the Solicitor General, what assessment her Department has made of the potential impact of the recording of non-crime hate incidents on the sentencing of individuals in future criminal proceedings. |
Is named day: |
false |
Date of holding answer: |
|
Date answered: |
2025-07-04 |
Date answer corrected: |
|
Is holding answer: |
false |
Is correcting answer: |
false |
Answering Member ID: |
5333 |
Answering Member display name: |
Lucy Rigby
|
Answering Member handle: |
|
Answering Member Twitter reference: |
Lucy Rigby
|
Correcting Member ID: |
|
Correcting Member display name: |
|
Correcting Member handle: |
|
Correcting Member Twitter reference: |
|
Answer text: |
All factual matters material to a criminal sentence must be admitted by the offender or proven in a court to the criminal standard using admissible evidence. By definition, the recording of a previous incident as “non-crime” is unlikely to meet that stand... |
Original answer text: |
|
Comparable answer text: |
|
Answering body ID: |
88 |
Answering body name: |
Attorney General |
Tweeted: |
true |