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Minister threatens to override new sentencing rules | |
(about 3 hours later) | |
The government has threatened to override the body advising judges in England and Wales in a row over how ethnic minority offenders should be sentenced. | |
It comes after the Sentencing Council refused a request from the justice secretary for it to rethink new instructions for judges due to take effect next week. | |
Under the rules, judges will be expected to consider the lives of offenders from ethnic minority and other backgrounds before deciding on punishment. | |
The guidelines have prompted a "two-tier" justice row, with critics arguing certain groups of people will be less likely to go to prison for a crime. | |
'Differential treatment' | 'Differential treatment' |
Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood said she was "extremely disappointed" the council had refused her request for the guidance to be changed. | |
"All options are on the table and I will legislate if necessary," the Labour minister said. | |
"I have been clear in my view that these guidelines represent differential treatment, under which someone's outcomes may be influenced by their race, culture or religion," she added. | |
Conservative Shadow justice secretary Robert Jenrick, who also opposes the guidelines, said the threat of passing a new law had come "too little too late". | |
The updated guidance, due to come into effect on Tuesday, says judges should normally request a pre-sentence report on offenders from an ethnic, cultural or faith minority before deciding on their sentence. | |
The guidance also said the reports should be commissioned before sentencing other groups, such as young adults aged 18 to 25, women and pregnant women. | |
These reports contain information about an offender's background and are intended to help judges decide what sort of punishment is appropriate. | |
But Jenrick hit the headlines earlier this month when he argued the new guidelines would make prison sentences "less likely" for ethnic minorities - something the council denies. | |
Mahmood had a meeting with Lord Justice Davis last week and set out in a letter that government policy opposes "differential treatment" based on race or ethnicity in the courts. | Mahmood had a meeting with Lord Justice Davis last week and set out in a letter that government policy opposes "differential treatment" based on race or ethnicity in the courts. |
In correspondence published on Friday, council chair Lord Justice Davis said the council has decided the guidelines "did not require revision". | |
"The council respectfully disagreed with the proposition that the list of cohorts in the guideline represented an expression of policy. | "The council respectfully disagreed with the proposition that the list of cohorts in the guideline represented an expression of policy. |
"In providing a list of cohorts, the council was and is only concerned with judges and magistrates being provided with as much information as possible." | "In providing a list of cohorts, the council was and is only concerned with judges and magistrates being provided with as much information as possible." |
He said the council agreed any systemic issue relating to ethnic groups is a matter for policy, adding: "Any judge or magistrate required to sentence an offender must do all that they can to avoid a difference in outcome based on ethnicity. | He said the council agreed any systemic issue relating to ethnic groups is a matter for policy, adding: "Any judge or magistrate required to sentence an offender must do all that they can to avoid a difference in outcome based on ethnicity. |
"The judge will be better equipped to do that if they have as much information as possible about the offender. | |
"The cohort of ethnic, cultural and faith minority groups may be a cohort about which judges and magistrates are less well informed." |