The sites will hear mostly non-custodial Crown Court
cases, with the total number of Nightingale courtrooms
set up across the country to enable more socially
distanced trials increasing to 60 by the end of March
2021.
Ministers have also confirmed today that a ‘super
courtroom’ will be created at Manchester Crown Court,
Crown Square to deal with so-called ‘multi-hander’
cases, which typically require more space as they
involve multiple defendants being tried together – such
as gang murder trials.
The Lord Chancellor, ,
said:
We have achieved an immense amount in our battle to
keep justice moving during the pandemic – restarting
jury trials before anyone else, turbo-charging the
rollout of video technology, bringing magistrates’
backlogs down, and opening more courtrooms for jury
trials.
These new courts are the latest step in that effort,
and I am determined to minimise delays and ensure
justice is served for victims, defendants and the
public.
That is why we are investing hundreds of millions to
drive this recovery further, deliver swifter justice
and support victims.
The move forms part of a £113m investment to alleviate
pressures on courts and tribunals, including recruiting
1,600 extra staff, further technology, and on-site
safety precautions such as plexiglass screens. This is
on top of the £142m being spent to speed up
technological improvements and modernise courtrooms.
The impact of these measures is already being seen:
- England and Wales is believed to be the first
comparable major jurisdiction in the world to resume
jury trials, with hundreds now being listed each week
- Outstanding cases in the magistrates’ courts have
fallen by over 50,000 since the peak last summer
- The number of cases resolved in the Crown Courts
reached pre-pandemic levels in December 2020, with more
courtrooms for jury trials now open than before the
pandemic
- More than 20,000 hearings using remote technology
are taking place each week – compared to around 550 in
March 2020 – a 4000% rise.
The decision to keep courts and tribunals open during
the pandemic has had a tangible impact on people’s
lives. Over 9,000 court orders were issued to protect
children from female genital mutilation, forced
marriage, and domestic abuse between April and
September 2020.
Meanwhile, a major £40m investment announced last month
will go towards specialist help for vulnerable victims
– funding helplines and the recruitment of more
counsellors. This comes as an extra £337m was confirmed
in the recent Spending Review to deliver swifter
justice and support victims in 2021/22, while £76m will
further increase capacity in family courts and
tribunals.
Caroline Bull, CEO of CCT Venues, London, said:
We are delighted to be supporting the work of HM
Courts and Tribunal Service (HMCTS) through the
provision of space for two temporary Nightingale
courtrooms at our CCT Venues-Barbican location.
Although the majority of our traditional business is
corporate meetings and events, this has been severely
curtailed during the pandemic, so supporting this
important project has created a win-win situation.
This contract is great for the morale of our team and
frankly also for saving jobs. Contributing to such
worthwhile projects helps us to feel connected and
valuable at a time when many are not so fortunate.
Dominic James, Venues Director, etc venues who operate
Maple House, said:
Our relationship with HM Courts and Tribunal Service
(HMCTS) goes back to the middle of 2020; working in
partnership with HMCTS at our Prospero House venue in
London, which was the first Nightingale Court to
mobilise in early August 2020.
It is testimony to our Maple House venue in
Birmingham that it also been selected, to further
assist the Ministry of Justice to reduce the backlog
of trials, whilst our core business of providing
inspiring space for events, meetings and conferences
is suppressed.
Notes to editors:
- The confirmed Nightingale Court locations are:
- Aldersgate House (Barbican), London - 2
additional hearing spaces
- Maple House, Birmingham - 3 additional hearing
spaces
- Manchester Hilton Deansgate - 2 additional
hearing spaces
- Croydon - 2 additional hearing spaces
- Wolverhampton - 2 additional hearing spaces for
Crown
- Liverpool 1 additional hearing space
- Chichester - 2 additional hearing spaces for
Crown
-
Courts continue to prioritise cases of the utmost
seriousness, where the safety of the public and
individuals is a concern. This includes the
judiciary prioritising hearings involving
vulnerable victims and witnesses and urgent
applications for matters such as domestic violence.
-
The ‘super courtroom’ to be created at Manchester
Crown Court to deal with ‘multi-hander’ cases, will
be a modification to the existing building at Crown
Square.
- We have invested £113m into a range of measures to
boost recovery and ensure justice continues to be
served:
-
23
Nightingale Courts are now up and running –
the Nightingale programme has provided 44
courtrooms across the estate which enables more
crime work to be dealt with.
- We’ve installed plexiglass screens into more
than 450 courtrooms and jury deliberation rooms.
- Over 290 courtrooms have been assessed as being
routinely available to hold jury trials – more than
before the pandemic.
- 20,000 hearings using remote technology are
taking place each week – compared to around 550 in
March 2020 – a 4000% rise.
- We are in a much stronger position to manage
the impact of the pandemic compared to last spring,
and public health experts have confirmed our
measures remain sufficient to deal with the current
variants of the virus.
-
These efforts will be bolstered by
a £337m Spending Review settlement to deliver
speedier justice to convict offenders, support
victims, and protect the wider public.
-
Every HM Courts & Tribunals building –
including Nightingale Courts - meets the
government’s COVID-secure guidelines, and public
health experts have confirmed the arrangements
remain sufficient to deal with the current strains
of the virus.
-
Meanwhile, a rapid testing pilot is being launched
in Southwark Crown Court, to determine how the
government can test people on their way to a
hearing. A rapid
testing pilot launched at Manchester Civic Justice
Centre in January 2021.
-
On 1 February 2021 the Ministry of
Justice announced an extra £40m to help victims
during pandemic and beyond, building on the
unprecedented £76m the government has pledged to
help the most vulnerable in society during this
challenging time.
- The latest HMCTS
Management Information was published last week.