
Can jury-less trials save our justice system?
It's hard to establish quite where the legal maxim 'justice delayed is justice denied' comes from. The Justice Secretary, Shabana Mahmood, likes saying it, as did her predecessor, Alex Chalk, and his predecessor-but-one, Brandon Lewis. It's often attributed to William Gladstone, but the notion that the timely conclusion of a legal issue is fundamental to a functioning justice system pre-dates the Victorian prime minister by hundreds of years. One such variation can even be found in the Magna Carta: 'To no one will we sell, to no one deny or delay right or justice.'
Echoing the sentiment is the retired judge Brian Leveson, who is chairing the government's review into a broken courts system. Leveson recently warned that radical reform is required to tackle a backlog of almost 80,000 cases that is causing trials for serious criminal offences to be postponed until as late as 2029. Picking up on a theme trailed in recent months by the justice minister, Sarah Sackman, one of the review's key recommendations will be to scale back a pillar of the legal system also enshrined in the Magna Carta: the right to a trial by jury.
There is precedent. Less serious 'summary offences' such as driving violations and minor assaults are already heard not by 12 of a defendant's peers but by a panel, including a district judge and two magistrates (who are unpaid and do not require legal qualifications). Serious offences, such as murder or rape, can only be heard by a Crown court with a jury. In the middle sit offences – burglary, drug possession, fraud – where the defendant can choose where they would like their case to be heard. Leveson's proposal is to restrict these defendants' right to a jury, setting up an intermediate court to hear some of these 'either way' cases. 'There's no choice. We cannot carry on with the present system,' he told the Observer. 'Justice delayed is justice denied.'
The disintegration of the justice system is one of the most underexamined crises of the past decade. In December 2019, before reports of coronavirus hit the headlines, the Crown court backlog was more than 37,400, and it already took more than a year for the most serious cases to come to trial. Then, in the early months of the pandemic, hearings were suspended completely. This came after a decade in which the Ministry of Justice became a poster department for austerity, its budget slashed and a third of court buildings sold off between 2010 and 2019 in the name of economy.
The money received into government coffers in return was pitiful: the sale of 126 courts yielded just £34m. Several of these buildings subsequently became film sets for legal dramas. In January 2021, when the court backlog was more than 54,000 and so-called Nightingale courts were being hurriedly set up to deal with it, Blackfriars Crown Court was filled not with judges, defendants and legal personnel, but with Netflix producers shooting the crime thriller Top Boy. Her Majesty's Court & Tribunal Service even inquired about hiring the building it had once owned to hear actual cases, rather than fictional ones.
The consequences of this catastrophe are lives put on hold: defendants losing jobs and relationships as they await the chance to clear their name; victims trapped in limbo, unable to process their trauma. As trials are listed far in the future, witnesses withdraw and cases collapse, enabling dangerous perpetrators to walk free and reoffend. The witness attrition rate for rape and sexual assault is particularly dire, with 325 out of 4,317 prosecutions derailed last year – a fivefold increase since 2019.
This national scandal should be a source of shame for the Tories – but no one wants to relitigate the Covid era now, any more than they want to look too hard at whose decision it was to scale back access to justice, as though fewer courthouses would lead to a decline in crime. It is the job of Mahmood to mitigate the damage inflicted by the likes of Chris Grayling.
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And so jury trials, which cost ten times that of magistrate hearings, are in the firing line. Replacing them with a judge will not be an easy case to make (not least as there is a 300,000-case backlog in magistrates courts too). Back in June 2020 when I interviewed legal professionals about the impact of the pandemic, one leading barrister warned that the 'jury trial has a Magna Carterish Brexity resonance to it that brings liberals and traditionalists together; restricting it would be picking a fight with Keir Starmer and Jacob Rees-Mogg at the same time'. Five years and a doubled courts backlog later, expect the backlash to Leveson's proposals to be furious. There will be much railing about 'two-tier justice' – a favourite phrase of the shadow justice secretary, Robert Jenrick. It will be interpreted as yet another Labour betrayal, a sign of this country's decline, the hacking away at public services to save cash.
The government will be hoping that radical reform can speed up cases and thus restore faith in a system that is failing everyone except criminals. The status quo is both unjust and unjustifiable, and the idea of trading the right to a jury for swifter trials has been backed by many legal specialists, among them five former lord chancellors (several of them Tories) and two former lord chief justices. But the public may not be so easily convinced. The risk is that, with confidence already damaged by years of deterioration, this creates the perception of justice on the cheap, removing a right etched into the British consciousness by centuries of tradition and cemented there by legal dramas filmed in the very courthouses we sold off.
[See also: Robert Jenrick and the myth of 'two-tier justice']
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Daily Record
2 hours ago
- Daily Record
Pensioner who ran seedy brothel inside Edinburgh spa spared jail
Ian Douglas Haig ran an illegal brothel from the Scorpio Leisure sauna in Edinburgh between 2016 and 2022. A Scots businessman caught running a brothel from inside a notorious Edinburgh sauna has been spared a jail sentence. Ian Douglas Haig operated the illegal sex business from the Scorpio Leisure premises in the Leith area of the capital between 2016 and 2022. Haig, 82, made a living from the brothel by charging patrons an entry fee and being paid a flat rate by the sex workers for renting out one of the sauna's five bedrooms. The pensioner was found to be running the sex den after a woman died within the premises leading to a police investigation into the circumstances of the death in April 2022. Officers interviewed staff and clients who had attended the sauna and discovered the business was also being used for prostitution purposes. Haig was arrested and charged and pleaded guilty to allowing the sauna to be used as a brothel between March 1, 2016 and April 30, 2022 when he appeared on indictment at the capital's sheriff court last month. The company director was back in the dock for sentencing on Tuesday where Sheriff Fergus Thomson said he would be stepping back from a custodial sentence and instead issued a restriction of liberty order. The OAP was ordered to wear an electronic tag on his ankle and stay within his home address between 7pm and 7am for the next 90 days. A Crown motion for a proceeds of crime order was continued to October. Previously a written narration was read out to the court describing Haig, of the capital's New Town, as the 'the long standing tenant' and 'the operator of the business known as Scorpio Leisure'. The narration stated: 'Scorpio Leisure was offering paying customers massage services, advertised itself as a sauna and operated as a brothel.' The court was told patrons entered the sauna through a locked inner door and the inside of the building included a lounge, a staff kitchen with 16 lockers, a shower area and changing room. The narration read: 'There were five rooms all containing a bed, mirrors on the walls, a corner bath and showers. The rooms contained stocks of wipes, lubricants and shower gel.' The court heard a woman passed away in non-suspicious circumstances within the sauna on April 30, 2022 sparking a police investigation. A number of women working at the sauna were interviewed and said men attending the brothel paid Haig an entrance fee of £20 per person for a 30 minutes session and £35 for 90 minutes. The narration detailed the brothel's pricing structure stating customers paid the women £50 for a 30 minute appointment and £75 for 90 minutes. Join the Daily Record WhatsApp community! Get the latest news sent straight to your messages by joining our WhatsApp community today. You'll receive daily updates on breaking news as well as the top headlines across Scotland. No one will be able to see who is signed up and no one can send messages except the Daily Record team. All you have to do is click here if you're on mobile, select 'Join Community' and you're in! If you're on a desktop, simply scan the QR code above with your phone and click 'Join Community'. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. To leave our community click on the name at the top of your screen and choose 'exit group'. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice. The court was told the sex workers would then pay Haig £10 per client for the use of one of the bedrooms. The narration added: 'Clients attending at Scorpio Leisure selected the women at the lounge area then moved to a bedroom. 'Some of those clients provided statements on their interactions with the accused either on arrival or departure and were quite clear the accused knew the premises were being operated as a brothel.' Nurses from the health charity SACRO regularly attended the premises to 'supply condoms and offer sexual health advice and support to the women working there'. Lawyer Nigel Bruce, defending, said his client was involved in 'an unusual type of case' and that he had been previously investigated for a similar offence but not prosecuted in 2013. Mr Bruce said: 'Everyone in Edinburgh knew this place was run as a brothel including the police, the Crown authorities and social workers. 'SACRO regularly attended there and police officers were regularly in attendance and it was well known the premises were being operated as a brothel. 'He seems to have taken pride in his job and he seems to have a care for the welfare of the women who essentially were self-employed.' The solicitor added there had been 'no coercion or exploitation involved' of the women working at the sauna. Haig, who used to be in the merchant navy, was the sole shareholder of Darrock Ltd before the company was dissolved earlier this year.


Scotsman
3 hours ago
- Scotsman
Scots businessman who ran brothel from notorious Edinburgh sauna spared jail sentence
The pensioner was found to be running the sex den after a woman died within the premises leading to a police investigation. Sign up to the daily Crime UK newsletter. All the latest crime news and trials from across the UK. Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... A Scots businessman caught running a brothel from inside a notorious Edinburgh sauna has been spared a jail sentence. Ian Douglas Haig operated the illegal sex business from the Scorpio Leisure premises in the Leith area of the capital between 2016 and 2022. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Haig, 82, made a living from the brothel by charging patrons an entry fee and being paid a flat rate by the sex workers for renting out one of the sauna's five bedrooms. The pensioner was found to be running the sex den after a woman died within the premises leading to a police investigation into the circumstances of the death in April 2022. Officers interviewed staff and clients who had attended the sauna and discovered the business was also being used for prostitution purposes. Ian Douglas Haig, 82, was ordered to wear an electronic tag on his ankle. | Supplied Haig was arrested and charged and pleaded guilty to allowing the sauna to be used as a brothel between March 1, 2016 and April 30, 2022 when he appeared on indictment at the capital's sheriff court last month. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The company director was back in the dock for sentencing on Tuesday where Sheriff Fergus Thomson said he would be stepping back from a custodial sentence and instead issued a restriction of liberty order. The OAP was ordered to wear an electronic tag on his ankle and stay within his home address between 7pm and 7am for the next 90 days. Make sure you keep up to date with news from across Scotland by signing up to our free newsletter here. A Crown motion for a proceeds of crime order was continued to October. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Previously a written narration was read out to the court describing Haig, of the capital's New Town, as the 'the long standing tenant' and 'the operator of the business known as Scorpio Leisure'. The narration stated: 'Scorpio Leisure was offering paying customers massage services, advertised itself as a sauna and operated as a brothel.' The court was told patrons entered the sauna through a locked inner door and the inside of the building included a lounge, a staff kitchen with 16 lockers, a shower area and changing room. The narration read: 'There were five rooms all containing a bed, mirrors on the walls, a corner bath and showers. The rooms contained stocks of wipes, lubricants and shower gel.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The court heard a woman passed away in non-suspicious circumstances within the sauna on April 30, 2022 sparking a police investigation. A number of women working at the sauna were interviewed and said men attending the brothel paid Haig an entrance fee of £20 per person for a 30 minutes session and £35 for 90 minutes. The narration detailed the brothel's pricing structure stating customers paid the women £50 for a 30 minute appointment and £75 for 90 minutes. The court was told the sex workers would then pay Haig £10 per client for the use of one of the bedrooms. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The narration added: 'Clients attending at Scorpio Leisure selected the women at the lounge area then moved to a bedroom. 'Some of those clients provided statements on their interactions with the accused either on arrival or departure and were quite clear the accused knew the premises were being operated as a brothel.' Nurses from the health charity SACRO regularly attended the premises to 'supply condoms and offer sexual health advice and support to the women working there'. Lawyer Nigel Bruce, defending, said his client was involved in 'an unusual type of case' and that he had been previously investigated for a similar offence but not prosecuted in 2013. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Mr Bruce said: 'Everyone in Edinburgh knew this place was run as a brothel including the police, the Crown authorities and social workers. 'SACRO regularly attended there and police officers were regularly in attendance and it was well known the premises were being operated as a brothel. 'He seems to have taken pride in his job and he seems to have a care for the welfare of the women who essentially were self-employed.' The solicitor added there had been 'no coercion or exploitation involved' of the women working at the sauna.


New Statesman
12 hours ago
- New Statesman
It's time for angry left populism
Illustration by Rebecca Hendin / Ikon Images 'Populism, I'm very sceptical of,' said Adrian Ramsay in the New Statesman's Green Party leadership hustings. 'I… don't want to see the kind of politics you get from populism which often brings about a divisive, polarising approach: Green politics is about bringing people together, respecting different views, having respectful discussion,' added the MP, and current party co-leader. On the contrary, countered Zack Polanski, the party's current deputy and London Assembly member, who's running for the top job promising 'bold leadership' and 'eco-populism'. 'Populism just means the 99 per cent vs the 1 per cent,' he said. He was reviving the old slogan of the Occupy movement. But he was also stating a clear position on a debate which has wracked the intellectual left for more than a decade. If Polanski's right, and if he wins, then there's more at stake than the leadership of England's fifth party. Should they adopt the attitude of their insurgent new political star, then the Greens have an opportunity to change the political climate in Britain, pointing the way to a durable populism of the political left. It's not just the Green Party; a similar phenomenon is emerging across civil society. Under newish, millennial co-directors, Greenpeace UK have adopted an angrier, anti-elite tone. 'Did you know that one of the richest billionaires in the UK is destroying our oceans with plastic?' the NGO asked in one recent online post, linking a traditionally soft-focus issue to spikier class politics. The most significant academic advocates of left-populism have been the Belgian political scientist Chantal Mouffe and her late husband and academic collaborator, the Argentine philosopher Ernesto Laclau. They saw populism as 'a political strategy based around constructing a frontier' between the privileged and the downtrodden, and 'appealing to the mobilization of the 'underdog' against 'those in power''. Mouffe argued that neoliberalism has impoverished not just the working class, but also the middle class, has depoliticised the bulk of the population, and produced what she calls 'oligarchisation' – that is, both radical wealth inequality, and also the political dominance of a growing international billionaire class. This context, she argued in 2016, produced a 'populist moment', one which led to radical political changes on right and left: as well as Trump, Brexit and (later) Johnson, there were Corbynism, Syriza, Bernie Sanders, Podemos, and Jean Luc Mélenchon. Even the more successful centrists of that era – Emmanuel Macron (during his first election) and Nicola Sturgeon – painted themselves as direct opponents of 'those in power'. Nearly a decade later, much of that post-2008 context remains, to which we could add the surge in anxiety about the environmental crisis in 2019, the anger with elites which emerged from the pandemic, and the daily nausea millions of us feel watching a Western-backed genocide livestreamed through our phones. In this context it's absolutely vital, as Mouffe argues, that the left try to mobilise the overwhelming majority of people together against that oligarch class and those in power who protect them. Doing so will require telling clear political stories about the world, which express the tension between 'us' – the majority of people – and 'them' – the oligarchs and their allies. Subscribe to The New Statesman today from only £8.99 per month Subscribe This is not a time to tell citizens to 'calm down, dear'. It's a time to focus righteous rage into change. This will require rhetorically 'constructing a boundary' between 'the 99 per cent' and 'the 1 per cent' and their outriders on the right. It's drawing this boundary to which Ramsay and, in another debate, his running mate Ellie Chowns, object when they describe populism as 'polarising'. But any good story needs conflict and villains, and the real world has plenty for Polanski to point to. Oligarchs and their allies must be curtailed, and we're not going to do that by 'having respectful discussions' with them. Anger has to be focused upwards, or the political right will channel it down. In the context of environmental crisis, economic inequality becomes even more urgent. As Oxfam calculated in 2024, billionaires emit more carbon every three hours than the average British person does in a lifetime. The richest 1 per cent of humanity are responsible for more emissions than the poorest 66 per cent, and are increasingly insulating themselves from the impact of the disaster they've created, flitting around between air-conditioned mansions in private jets while the rest of us swelter. Despite this, Reform's fossil fuel financed anti-environmental populism has managed to rhetorically spin action on climate change – framed as the technocratic sounding 'net zero' – into an 'elitist' project, one which they can blame for rising energy bills, neatly deflecting blame from the fossil fuel industry and energy companies. As Polanski himself pointed out during the New Statesman debate, Ramsay is happy to call for a wealth tax, and clearly wants to curtail the oligarch class. So what's he's afraid of? Perhaps the most articulate intellectual opponent of populism is the Dutch social scientist Cas Mudde, who defines it as an ideology which divides society into two groups, 'the pure people' and 'the corrupt elite', and which regards politics as 'an expression of the general will of the people'. While he sees it has a role in bringing issues that elites don't want discussed to the fore, he worries that it ultimately undermines systems of liberal democracy. And it's this that Ramsay and Chowns really fear: if you channel anger at elites and the system which sustains them, you risk attacking those systems of democracy that we have, and replacing them not with more democracy, but less. But to me – certainly in Britain and the United States – this fear is itself dangerous. Britain has astonishingly low levels of trust in our political system for a simple reason: Westminster stinks. Too often, in Britain (as in America), the left ends up defending that system from right-wing attacks, because the right wants to replace it with authoritarianism, or market rule. Which means voters see us propping up an obviously rotten system, and turn to the right to replace it. This is how Trump won twice, it's how Johnson crushed Corbyn in 2019, and it's why Farage is ahead now. For an alternative strategy, look across the Channel. In France's 2024 legislative elections, the left-wing New Popular Front came first after making radical constitutional change a central message, promising an assembly to write a new constitution, and launch a sixth Republic. Progressives – including Greens – shouldn't fear hatred of our politics any more than we should worry about anger at our economic system, rage at rising bills, or horror at genocide in Gaza. We should express that collective fury, and channel it into serious ideas for the radical change we need. [Further reading: Are the Greens heading left?] Related