Policing and Crime Bill Commons Reasons and Amendments 3.38
pm Motion A Moved by Baroness Williams of Trafford
That this House do not insist on its Amendments 24
and 159, to which the Commons have disagreed for their Reason 24A.
24A: Because Lords Amendment 24 would involve a charge on public
funds and Lords Amendment 159 is...Request free trial
Policing and Crime Bill
Commons Reasons and Amendments
3.38 pm
Motion A
Moved by
24A: Because Lords Amendment 24 would involve a charge on public
funds and Lords Amendment 159 is consequential on that Amendment;
and the Commons do not offer any further Reason, trusting that
this Reason may be deemed sufficient.
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The Minister of State, Home Office (Baroness Williams of
Trafford) (Con)
My Lords, as the House is aware, Amendment 24 would require
the Prime Minister to proceed with what is commonly
referred to as the Leveson 2 inquiry into the relationships
between the police and the media. When the House last
debated this issue at Report stage on 30 November, I drew
the House’s attention to the likely financial implications
of the new clause, given that part 1 of the Leveson inquiry
cost in excess of £5 million. In disagreeing with
Amendments 24 and 159, the House of Commons has done so on
the basis of financial privilege. This was the second
occasion on which the Commons has rejected—both times by a
substantial majority—an amendment to the Bill on this
issue. The Companion to the Standing Orders makes it clear
that in such cases the Lords do not insist on their
amendment.
To that extent, I therefore welcome Motion A1 in the name
of the noble Baroness, Lady O’Neill, but while Amendment
24B is clearly different in terms to Amendment 24, it none
the less still seeks to bind Ministers’ hands and
effectively compels the Government to proceed with part 2
of the Leveson inquiry. This is not how the Inquiries Act
2005 is intended to operate, and it is difficult to see why
we should make special provision for one particular inquiry
established under that Act. The 2005 Act already includes
provision for changes to be made to the terms of reference
of an inquiry and for the termination of an inquiry. Under
the Act, the responsible Minister must consult the chair of
the inquiry before changing the terms of reference or
terminating the inquiry and must then notify Parliament.
In the same way as a Minister of the Crown is best placed
to decide whether to establish an inquiry under the 2005
Act, we believe that the responsible Minister is also best
placed to determine the public interest both for and
against the continuation of an inquiry. Accordingly, we
should not now be putting in place additional hurdles over
and above those already set out in the 2005 Act.
I want to stress that, in putting forward Motion A, the
Government’s case goes wider than simply one of cost. As I
argued on Report, the Government are firmly of the view
that, given the extent of the criminal investigations
related to this issue that have taken place since the
Leveson inquiry was established, and given the
implementation of the recommendations following part 1,
including reforms within the police and the press, it is
appropriate that we now consider whether proceeding with
part 2 of the inquiry is appropriate, proportionate and in
the public interest.
It is for this reason that we launched a consultation on 1
November to help inform our further consideration of this
issue. That consultation closed on 10 January, and it is
estimated that we have received more than 140,000
individual responses as well as a petition estimated to
contain more than 130,000 signatures. Noble Lords will be
aware that an application has been made to judicially
review the consultation. While I cannot comment on the
ongoing legal proceedings, the Government have committed
not to take any final decisions relating to the
consultation until these legal proceedings have concluded.
Given the process that we have set in train for considering
whether to proceed with Leveson part 2, and the fact that
further legislation is not required should we decide to
proceed with the inquiry, I put it to noble Lords that
there are further good grounds for not continuing to press
these amendments. As I have said, the elected House has
already rejected an amendment on this issue on two separate
occasions. I put it to noble Lords that we should not now
send back to the Commons a revised amendment which would
simply invite a further rejection. I beg to move.
Motion A1 (as an amendment to Motion A)
Moved by
24B: After Clause 26, insert the following new Clause—
“Public inquiries into police conduct etc: requirement for
approval for termination or changes
(1) A Minister of the Crown may not terminate, or change the
terms of reference of, a relevant inquiry unless—
(a) each House of Parliament approves a proposal laid by the
Minister for the termination or change, and
(b) the chair of the inquiry consents in writing.
(2) In subsection (1), “relevant inquiry” means an inquiry under
the Inquiries Act 2005 whose terms of reference include matters
relating to police conduct connected with the press industry.”
24C: Clause 150, page 171, line 16, at end insert—
“( ) section (Public inquiries into police conduct etc:
requirement for approval for termination or changes),”
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of Bengarve
(CB)
My Lords, we have been on this terrain a number of times. I
understand the Minister’s objection that there should not
be a charge on public funds. Therefore, these amendments do
not propose any charge on public funds that has not already
been agreed by Parliament. I therefore think that that
reason does not now hold.
We know that the status quo is unacceptable and that the
form of press regulation that we now have is unstable and
needs to be clear in supporting freedom of speech and the
future possibility of democratic debate. That is a wider
question and I will not go into the details here.
However, there is a second procedural issue which the
Minister needs to address. When Parliament has already
reached agreement, as it has on this matter, surely it is
not acceptable to have a retrospective consultation.
Consultation should take place before Parliament determines
a matter. In this case, the consultation is retrospective.
For that reason, we should not leave matters as they are. I
beg to move.
3.45 pm
-
(LD)
My Lords, I support the remarks of the noble Baroness, Lady
O’Neill of Bengarve. If anybody is in any doubt about the
need for Leveson 2, which was intended to be an inquiry
into the potential for corrupt practice between the police
and the press, let me say that, with the former Prime
Minister, , the then leader of the
Opposition, , and the former Deputy
Prime Minister, , I met with the family of
Milly Dowler. The Sunday before that series of meetings
took place, Mr Dowler received a phone call from Surrey
Police to tell him that the News of the World had told
Surrey Police at the time of Milly Dowler’s disappearance
that it had hacked into Milly Dowler’s voicemail and
retrieved information from it. Surrey Police did nothing at
all to prosecute the News of the World over that issue, and
it was only the day before that series of meetings that
Surrey Police told Mr Dowler that it had known all along
that the News of the World had hacked into Milly Dowler’s
voicemail. This is the sort of matter that we have not got
to the bottom of yet, and Leveson 2 should be held in order
to establish what happened.
On financial privilege, I agree with the noble Baroness,
Lady O’Neill of Bengarve. Parliament has already committed
to the expenditure for Leveson 2; the amendment simply says
that it is Parliament itself that should decide that that
money should not be spent. The amendment would not involve
additional money which has not previously been committed.
However, there is an issue with the wording of the
amendment. Our reading of the amendment, if correct,
suggests that as the chair of the inquiry, Lord Justice
Leveson could override the view of both Houses of
Parliament, in that if both Houses voted not to hold
Leveson 2 but Lord Justice Leveson himself disagreed with
that, the inquiry would still go ahead. We feel that that
is a defect in the amendment. Clearly, there will be an
opportunity for that to be corrected if we support the
amendment today and it goes to the other end, but I hope
that the noble Baroness will consider that carefully in
considering whether we are on firm enough ground to divide
the House on the amendment.
I cannot stress strongly enough from our side how important
we think Leveson 2 is and how it needs to take place. We
will take every opportunity we are offered to ensure that
the Government hold the Leveson 2 inquiry.
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(Lab)
Like, I imagine, many other Members of this House, I have
received an email from Margaret Aspinall in her capacity as
chairwoman of the Hillsborough Family Support Group, asking
me to support this amendment. I will not repeat the terms
of the email, which I believe has been widely circulated,
but it is an indication of the widespread and heartfelt
concern that Leveson part 2 might not proceed.
The Leveson inquiry was set up with cross-party agreement
and firm commitments from the then Conservative Prime
Minister that Leveson part 2 would take place. Let us be
clear: Leveson part 2 was in the agreed terms of reference
of the Leveson inquiry. The words in the terms of reference
for part 2 conclude with:
“In the light of these inquiries, to consider the
implications for the relationships between newspaper
organisations and the police, prosecuting authorities, and
relevant regulatory bodies—and to recommend what actions,
if any, should be taken”.
When the Lords amendment on Leveson part 2 was considered
in the Commons last week, the Government said that,
“given the extent of the criminal investigations into phone
hacking and other illegal practices by the press that have
taken place since the Leveson inquiry was established, and
given the implementation of the recommendations following
part 1, including reforms within the police and the press,
the Government must consider whether proceeding with part 2
of the inquiry is appropriate, proportionate and in the
public interest”.—[Official Report, Commons, 10/1/17; col.
247.]
Those are words with which we are uncomfortable. They sound
like the words of a Government who have already decided
they do not wish to proceed with part 2 and are looking for
their public consultation, which has now concluded, to give
them a cloak of respectability for going back on previous
firm pledges that part 2 of Leveson would take place.
The inquiries under the terms of reference of Leveson part
2 have not taken place, and thus neither have we had, nor,
I would suggest, if this Government think they can get away
with it, will we have the considered implications, in the
light of those inquiries, for the relationships between
newspaper organisations and the police, prosecuting
authorities and relevant regulatory bodies with
recommendations on what actions, if any, should be taken,
called for and provided for under the terms of reference of
Leveson part 2.
The Government appear in effect to have decided that they
already know what would emerge from the Leveson part 2
inquiries and, likewise, what the recommendations would be
without those inquiries taking place and recommendations
being made. Frankly, it begins to look as though some
powerful individuals and organisations behind the scenes
know that they have something to hide and are determined to
stop Leveson part 2 and, with it, the prospect of it all
coming out into the open.
When the Lords amendment on Leveson part 2 was considered
in the Commons, the Speaker certified it as engaging
financial privilege, and that is the reason the Commons has
given for disagreeing with it. Whether the amendment before
us today would likewise be deemed as engaging financial
privilege is not something on which I have any standing.
However the amendment, which I saw for the first time only
at a very late stage, does say that Leveson part 2 proceeds
unless both Houses of Parliament and the chairman of the
inquiry agree that it should not.
We are thus in a situation where, if both Houses decided
that Leveson part 2 should not proceed—I sincerely hope
they would not so decide—that decision would mean nothing
if the chairman of the inquiry was not of the same view. I
think that however strongly we may feel that Leveson part 2
should proceed, we are in difficult territory if basically
we say that the view of the chairman of an inquiry that
Leveson part 2 should proceed can override a decision by
both Houses of Parliament that it should not proceed,
particularly when at heart the issue is whether a clear and
unambiguous promise made by a Conservative Prime Minister,
with cross-party agreement, that Leveson part 2 would
proceed can be tossed aside. That is the kind of issue that
Parliament has to address and determine.
We feel very strongly that Leveson part 2 should proceed
and that cross-party agreements and associated prime
ministerial promises should be honoured and not ditched by
this Government. We are unhappy with the wording of the
amendment. However, whatever the outcome, we will continue
to pursue all credible opportunities to ensure that the
pressure is maintained and that Leveson part 2 takes place.
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(CB)
My Lords, many victims of phone hacking, harassment and
press intrusion are relying on part 2 of Leveson to proceed
and to provide answers to suspicions of corruption between
the press and public officials, including the police. Many
noble Lords will have received correspondence from the
Hillsborough Family Support Group and from Jacqui Hames.
Those letters are quite concerning and show the need for
further understanding of what happened and what went wrong
so that we can appreciate whether adequate measures are in
place to ensure that that kind of activity does not happen
again.
My family has an interest in part 2 being carried through,
as promised by our previous Prime Minister. Dozens of other
families and individuals have been affected and also want
answers. It does seem fair that we have the inquiry. The
misinformation by some newspapers leading up to the close
of the consultation may indeed have led to a very large
number of formulaic responses. I hope that Her Majesty’s
Government will have the wisdom and moral courage to stand
up for what is right in this situation and to go through
with part 2. I find it very difficult to believe that
financial privilege is really the reason for the current
caution in this matter. I support the amendment.
-
(LD)
My Lords, I will speak briefly to the amendment in the name
of the noble Baroness, Lady O’Neill. On two occasions, this
House has previously considered the subject of whether
Leveson 2 should proceed and, on both, came down firmly in
favour of it going ahead. Whether or not the noble Baroness
decides to test the opinion of the House today, it is
important that the Government be reminded that your
Lordships’ House is not going to let the matter drop.
Some very pertinent questions remain unanswered. I draw the
House’s attention to just one of the terms of reference for
Leveson 2 and the important issues that remain unresolved.
The sixth term of reference is:
“To inquire into the extent of corporate governance and
management failures at News International and other
newspaper organisations, and the role, if any, of
politicians, public servants and others in relation to any
failure to investigate wrongdoing at News International”.
It is essential that, in such a vital industry as the
press, the extent and nature of corporate governance and
management failures be established. This is underscored by
the fact that many of the leading executives are still in
post, have returned to their post or retain key roles in
the industry. These include the chief executive of News UK,
the editor-in-chief of Associated Newspapers and the
director of legal affairs at the Telegraph, who had the
equivalent post at Trinity Mirror during the phone hacking
scandal and its cover-up.
The questions that need addressing are as follows. First,
how did it come to be that phone hacking and the unlawful
blagging of personal data persisted on such an industrial
scale at certain titles for so long; in the case of News UK
and Trinity Mirror for at least 10 years, and for several
years after journalists at both companies were first
questioned by the police under Operation Glade in early
2004? Secondly, how and why was phone hacking and the
unlawful blagging of personal data covered up at some of
the largest newspapers, in the face of emerging evidence
that executives knew about the practice and some findings
and admissions in the civil courts to that effect? Thirdly,
is it appropriate that no executive has lost their job over
the corporate governance and management failures that took
place? Has there been a cover-up of the cover-up of
wrongdoing?
I will not delay the House further as I suspect noble Lords
would like to move on to other matters. Suffice it so say
that there are several other topics that Leveson 2 is
scheduled to examine and they are of equal importance to
the one I have highlighted. Leveson 2 is needed to inquire
into suspicious matters affecting our police, our
newspapers and our politicians. Since the completion of
part 1 of Lord Leveson’s inquiry, the case for part 2 has
become even stronger.
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(CB)
My Lords, I declare an interest as a regular adviser to the
press on regulatory matters. It has not yet been mentioned
today, but your Lordships may wish to take into account
that, since Leveson was instituted, there have been large
numbers of criminal trials and civil proceedings in which
the conduct of the press and the police has been on trial.
I am far from convinced that the time, expense and use of
judicial resources that will be required by Leveson part 2
are therefore justified. However, your Lordships do not
need to decide that issue today—it is the very matter under
consultation by the Secretary of State. If the Secretary of
State’s answer is unsatisfactory to noble Lords, this House
and the other place are perfectly entitled to, and no doubt
will, reconsider the matter.
The noble Lord, , mentioned the
unsatisfactory element of the amendment of the noble
Baroness, Lady O’Neill: that it appears to give Lord
Justice Leveson a veto over the views of Parliament. I hope
that when considering the consultation issues, the
Secretary of State will privately talk to Sir Brian Leveson
and take his view as to whether he thinks, with all of his
enormous experience, that Leveson 2 would be justified. I
cannot support the Motion of the noble Baroness, Lady
O’Neill.
4.00 pm
-
(LD)
When I was young at the Bar there used to be a judge whose
concurring judgments were commendably brief—he would simply
say, “I agree”. I can say that about the speech of the
noble Lord, —I agree with
him—and would add a few words. I declare an interest
because I have given evidence in the consultation on why
Section 40 is, in my view, arbitrary, discriminatory and
contrary to freedom of speech and should not be brought
into force. I have not given evidence on the other question
in the consultation to which the noble Lord, referred, upon
which many views have been expressed. I agree with what the
noble Lord said about that.
As I have said again and again in debates in this House,
Parliament has not shown itself to be fair minded in the
way it amended two Bills in order to create a scheme to
bully the newspapers into entering a regulatory framework
other than the one now being admirably well conducted by
Lord Justice Moses—IPSO. Contrary to what the noble
Baroness, Lady O’Neill, has said, we now have an effective
system of voluntary press regulation and the state and
politicians ought to give it breathing space. I wish to
make that clear.
When I was young I began believing in the philosophy of
John Stuart Mill. That is why I am a Liberal. I remain a
Liberal today, and that is why I am sympathetic to the
Government’s position.
-
My Lords, I shall respond first to the point made by the
noble Lord, . He is right to
assert that Sir Brian Leveson will be consulted formally in
due course in his role as the inquiry chair before any
decision is taken. The noble Lord also made a point about
the cost and other issues that have already been addressed.
Lord Justice Leveson said:
“Before leaving the Ruling, I add one further comment … If
the transparent way in which the Inquiry has been
conducted, the Report and the response by government and
the press (along with a new acceptable regulatory regime)
addresses the public concern, at the conclusion of any
trial or trials, consideration can be given by everyone to
the value to be gained from a further inquiry into Part 2.
That inquiry will involve yet more enormous cost (both to
the public purse and the participants); it will trawl over
material then more years out of date and is likely to take
longer than the present Inquiry which has not over focussed
on individual conduct”.
On the point made by the noble Baroness, Lady O’Neill,
about Parliament voting on part 2 of the inquiry, in fact
Parliament did not vote on part 2; the inquiry was
established by Ministers under the powers of the 2005 Act.
Parliament voted on Section 40, but in this Motion we are
talking not about Section 40, but about Leveson 2.
On the point made by the noble Lord, , about the
Government already deciding to abandon part 2, as I hope I
have explained, we have not made a decision on this; we
want to take a view on it as part of the ongoing
consultation. It is five years since the inquiry was
established and since the scope of part 2 was set. We think
a consultation is needed before a decision is made on
whether proceeding with part 2 of the inquiry, on either
its original or its amended terms of reference, is still in
the public interest. In response to the point from the
noble Lord, , as I said, we will
consult with Sir Brian Leveson formally in his role as the
inquiry chair before any decision is taken.
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of
Bengarve
My Lords, I thank the Minister for her reply and other
noble Lords who have helped illuminate the issue we recur
to. The noble Lord, Lord Lester, is perhaps a little
optimistic in imagining that IPSO is a model of
self-regulation. Perhaps he meant to say a model of
self-interested regulation. The point is that Leveson
provides not regulation, but an audit of the standard of
self-regulation. As we all know, IPSO has refused to have
its process audited. Its so-called independent review of
what it did was to terms of reference that it provided and
funded by itself. Just as we think a free market requires
companies that are—
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I am sorry for interrupting the noble Baroness, but is she
aware that the independent review was conducted by a very
senior former Permanent Secretary?
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of
Bengarve
I am aware of that and know him. I admire him and what he
did in Northern Ireland. He is an admirable person. I
comment just on the terms of reference.
Self-regulation is something anybody would concede can
reasonably be subject to audit. We allow companies in a
free market to proceed as they wish, but they have to have
their accounts audited. It is no different when we say that
a free press should also be willing to subject itself to
proper standards of audit. That, in a sense, is the area of
debate. We should be very careful to keep self-regulation
distinct from audit.
Quality matters, as does Leveson 2. We will return to this
terrain and I do not think this is the end of the story,
but I will withdraw the Motion because it has one or two
deficiencies we need to deal with. It is not at all
adequate to imagine that we can deal with these matters by
having a consultation after a parliamentary decision. That
is essentially the reason why I feel strongly that this is
not the way to go; however, I beg leave to withdraw the
Motion.
Motion A1 withdrawn.
Motion A agreed.
Motion B
Moved by
96A: Because Lords Amendment 96 would involve a charge on public
funds and Lords Amendment 302 is consequential on that Amendment;
and the Commons do not offer any further Reason, trusting that
this Reason may be deemed sufficient.
-
My Lords, when we last debated what is now Amendment 96 on
Report in December, I pointed to its potentially
significant financial implications. The House of Commons
has disagreed with the amendment on the basis of financial
privilege. Given the normal conventions of your Lordships’
House, I trust that noble Lords will not insist on it.
However, let me assure noble Lords that this is by no means
the end of the matter. While, in the usual way, the House
of Commons has cited financial privilege as the only reason
for disagreeing with the amendment, it has never been our
contention that this is the sole ground for our believing
that the new clause should not be added to the Bill. The
Government’s view remains that the amendment is premature
in that it pre-empts the outcome of the review by Bishop
James Jones into the experience of the Hillsborough
families and the Government’s subsequent consideration of
Bishop Jones’s findings.
The noble Lord, , and others have
argued that the issue goes wider than Hillsborough. We do
not dispute that, but the experience of the Hillsborough
families, which will include the issue of legal
representation at the original and subsequent inquests, is
highly relevant to the broader question and it is right
therefore that we take Bishop Jones’s current review into
account in deciding this question.
As noble Lords may have seen, the review’s terms of
reference were published earlier today. They state:
“The Review and Report will cover the history of the
Hillsborough families’ experiences throughout the whole
period, ranging from the conduct of past police
investigations, through their engagement with public
authorities, to the current investigations”.
The report will therefore cover a wide range of issues,
including, as I have said, the families’ experiences of the
various legal proceedings. Bishop James Jones will present
his final report to the Home Secretary, including any
points of learning that he may choose to highlight for the
Home Secretary’s consideration.
It is envisaged that Bishop Jones will complete his review
and produce his report in the spring of this year. I can
assure the House that the Government will then give very
careful consideration to his conclusions and any points of
learning contained in his report.
In the knowledge that this issue remains firmly on the
Government’s agenda and that there will, I am sure, be
opportunities to debate it further in the light of the
report, I invite the House to agree to Motion B. I beg to
move.
-
I accept that the Commons Speaker has also certified the
Lords amendment on this issue of parity of funding as
engaging financial privilege and that the Commons reason
for disagreeing with the amendment is that it would involve
a charge on public funds. I want nevertheless to raise one
or two points with the Government in light of what the
Minister has said.
During consideration of the amendment in the Commons last
week, the Minister there referred to the report by Bishop
James Jones and said:
“Our view remains that we should await the report, expected
this spring, from Bishop James Jones on the experiences of
the Hillsborough families. The Opposition have argued that
this issue goes beyond Hillsborough. I do not dispute that,
but the experiences of the Hillsborough families will have
significant relevance for other families facing different
tragic circumstances, and the issue of legal representation
at inquests will undoubtedly be one aspect of those
experiences. Bishop James’s report will provide learning
that could be of general application, so it is entirely
right that we do not now seek to pre-empt his review, but
instead consider this issue in the light of his
conclusions”.—[Official Report, Commons, 10/1/17; col.
249.]
Those words make it pretty clear that Bishop James Jones
has not been asked to look at the general issue of
representation and funding at inquests where the police are
represented, which was the subject of the Lords amendment.
He has been asked to look at the experiences of the
Hillsborough families. The Minister in the Commons stated
that the report would provide learning that could be of
general application.
Will the Minister say quite clearly one way or the other
whether the Government consider that the terms of reference
which Bishop James Jones has been given require him also to
look at the issue of representation and funding at inquests
generally where the police are represented? Alternatively,
if the Government consider the terms of reference to be
ambiguous on this point, has Bishop James Jones now been
asked by the Government to address in his review the issue
of representation and funding for families generally and
not confine himself to the experiences of the Hillsborough
families? Bearing in mind the way the Government have used
the existence of the Bishop James Jones review and the
forthcoming report as an argument for not going down the
road of the amendment that was passed in this House, which
deals with the position at inquests generally, I think
there will be some concern if, when the report comes out,
it is clear that it relates only to the experiences of the
Hillsborough families and that the issue of whether it
should or could have wider implications for representation
and funding for families at inquests generally has not been
considered. I would be grateful for some very clear and
specific answers from the Government to all the questions I
have just asked.
4.15 pm
-
Viscount Hailsham (Con)
My Lords, I will make some brief observations. When the
Government come to consider the recommendations concerning
funding at inquests, I hope they will agree to the concept
of parity of funding, for all the reasons that have been
ventilated on previous occasions. But I repeat what I have
said to your Lordships’ House before about the triggering
mechanism: I do not believe that the police and crime
commissioner should be the trigger for that. The coroner
should be the trigger for it. There are three very brief
reasons for saying that.
First, the coroner is much better placed to form a view as
to the relevance and importance of the representation in
question. I do not see that the police and crime
commissioner would necessarily have access to the relevant
information. Secondly and differently, in some inquests,
where the conduct of the police or, indeed, the police and
crime commissioner could itself be in question, there is a
danger of a conflict of interests. Thirdly, sometimes the
integrity of the decision of the commissioner will be in
question. What happens when the commissioner is facing an
election in short order? He or she may well make a decision
influenced by the electoral consequences of that decision.
All these things seem to suggest very powerfully that the
trigger should be the decision of the coroner, not of the
police and crime commissioner.
-
(Con)
My Lords, the noble Lord, , seemed to suggest
that the Government are using the Bishop Jones report as
some sort of excuse to not respond to what is suggested by
the amendment. Of course, I will hear what my noble friend
has to say, but as I understand the position, the question
is being considered very seriously by the Government but it
would be rather strange not to consider a report of this
magnitude dealing with the best-known example of a series
of inquests with improved legal representation before
coming to the conclusion, to which they may or may not
come, that a response to the amendment is appropriate.
-
I thank noble Lords who have made points on this Motion. My
noble friend is absolutely right
that the whole point of establishing an inquiry or a
review—one of such magnitude on an event that will be ever
seared on people’s minds; that is, the horrors of
Hillsborough—is to learn the lessons of that event so that
they can be applied to similar cases in the future. The
noble Lord, , is not in the
Chamber but I was reflecting on the lessons that local
authorities learned from the terrible death of Victoria
Climbié at the hands of her relatives. These reviews always
have that wider learning that can be applied in the future.
The terms of reference do not require Bishop Jones to look
wider but the learning from the review will have wider
application.
I understand the point made by my noble friend about the coroner.
We talked at length both in Committee and on Report about
an independent assessment of these matters. Of course, for
me to respond about whether or not that is the right way
would pre-empt the review so I will not go there. But I
hope that noble Lords find those comments helpful.
Motion agreed.
Motion C
134A: After Clause 143, page 164, line 9, at end
insert—“Sentences for offences of putting people in fear of
violence etc
(1) In the Protection from Harassment Act 1997 —
(a) in section 4 (putting people in fear of violence), in
subsection (4)(a), for “five years” substitute “ten years”;
(b) in section 4A (stalking involving fear of violence or serious
alarm or distress), in subsection (5)(a), for “five years”
substitute “ten years”.
(2) In the Crime and Disorder Act 1998, in section 32 (racially
or religiously aggravated harassment etc), in subsection (4)(b)
(which specifies the penalty on conviction on indictment for an
offence under that section which consists of a racially or
religiously aggravated offence under section 4 or 4A of the
Protection from Harassment Act 1997), for “seven years”
substitute “14 years”.
(3) The amendments made by this section apply only in relation to
an offence committed on or after the day on which this section
comes into force.
(4) Where the course of conduct constituting an offence is found
to have occurred over a period of 2 or more days, or at some time
during a period of 2 or more days, the offence must be taken for
the purposes of subsection (3) to have been committed on the last
of those days.”
305A: In the Title, line 29, after “marriage;” insert “to
increase the maximum sentences of imprisonment for certain
offences of putting people in fear of violence etc;”
-
My Lords, the House will recall that Amendment 134 sought
to increase the maximum penalty for the more serious
stalking offence, where the behaviour of the offender puts
a person in fear of violence, from the current five years
to 10 years. The amendment would also increase the maximum
penalty for the racially or religiously aggravated version
of the offence from the current 10 years to 14 years. I
would like to thank the noble Baroness, Lady Royall, but
she is not in her place so I thank her in her absence, for
introducing that amendment and explaining her concerns
about the current maximum penalties during the debate on
this amendment on Report.
The Government have reflected carefully on that debate and
wish to ensure that the criminal justice system deals with
these offences properly. The Government continue to keep
maximum penalties under review and are ready to increase
them where there is evidence that they are not sufficient
to protect victims. Current sentencing practice suggests
that, in the majority of cases, the maximum penalty of five
years is sufficient to deal with serious stalking. In a
small number of the most serious cases, however, courts
have sentenced near to the current maximum. For those most
serious cases, we are persuaded that judges should be able
to pass a higher sentence than the current five-year
maximum. This would afford greater protection to victims
and be commensurate with the serious harm caused by these
cases. The Government therefore tabled Amendment 134A, to
which the Commons agreed, which replicates with some fine
tuning the provisions of the noble Baroness’s amendment.
However, we are going further. As I said during debate on
Report, we are keen to retain consistency between penalties
for related offences. The Commons amendment in lieu will
also therefore increase the maximum penalty for the related
Section 4 harassment offence of putting a person in fear of
violence. In line with standard practice, Amendment 134A
also provides that the increase in maximum penalties for
these offences will apply only to crimes committed on or
after the date of commencement. As the Commons amendment in
lieu builds on Lords Amendment 134, I trust that in the
absence of the noble Baroness, Lady Royall, the whole House
will be content with the substitution. I therefore beg to
move.
-
Viscount Hailsham
My Lords, I am sorry to say that I really disagree with my
noble friend on this matter. There is absolutely no
justification for increasing the maximum sentence, and I
have two reasons for saying that. First, I do not believe
that the increase will provide an additional deterrent.
Either the person in question is rational, in which case a
maximum sentence of five years is a sufficient deterrent,
or they are not rational, in which case it will make
precious little difference. I note my noble friend’s point
that the judges have rarely sentenced at the higher end of
the existing maximum. My other point is a general one. I am
very concerned about overcrowding in prisons. There has
been a tendency to increase the sentences imposed by the
courts. The newspapers and Parliament are responsible for
that in part, and I do not wish to see Parliament
increasing the pressure on our prisons. This is a small
contribution to that, and I am bound to say I am against
it.
-
(UKIP)
My Lords, I notice that in Amendment 134A the proposal is
to increase the penalty from seven to 14 years for what is
described as an offence,
“which consists of a racially or religiously aggravated
offence under section 4 … of the Protection from Harassment
Act 1997”.
Before we agree to this increase in the penalty, will the
Minister enlighten us about what, particularly, a
religiously motivated offence might be? Specifically—and I
have asked this before in Written Questions and had
unsatisfactory Answers from the Government—could such an
offence be caused by a Christian preaching the supreme
divinity of Christ and therefore denying the supremacy of
Muhammad? Would various assembled Muslims be free to regard
that as a religiously aggravated offence under this
section?
-
I shall be very brief and say that, unlike, apparently,
some noble Lords, we welcome the Commons Amendment.
-
(CB)
My Lords, I shall make a clarification. Muslims accept all
religions that preceded Islam and accept all the texts that
preceded it. Therefore, there would be no likelihood of
such an event occurring.
-
My Lords, to address the point made by my noble friend
about the maximum
penalties and overcrowding in prisons, the prison
population has remained relatively stable since 2010. The
Justice Secretary is clear that she wants to see more early
intervention and a reduction in reoffending. To that end,
we have launched a White Paper outlining our plans to make
prisons places of safety and reform, and we have announced
a comprehensive review of our probation system.
On the point that the noble Lord, , made, I
fear I will disappoint him again. It is a matter for the
court and the CPS to determine the points that he makes.
Motion agreed.
Motion D
Moved by
136A: Because legislation already makes provision for victims of
crime and it would not be appropriate to alter that provision
without further analysis of the benefits and costs involved.
-
My Lords, the elected House has disagreed with these Lords
amendments by a substantial majority of 100. In inviting
this House not to insist on these amendments, the
Government recognise that there are legitimate concerns
about the operation of the victims’ code—I stress that—and
that there is scope for improvement, but I put it to noble
Lords that seeking to shoehorn these new clauses into the
Bill when they have not had the benefit of detailed
scrutiny either in this House or in the other place is not
an appropriate way forward. This House rightly prides
itself on its effective scrutiny of legislation. In the
case of these amendments, however, we have had what amounts
to, at best, a short Second Reading-style debate on the
case for strengthening victims’ rights.
While the underlying objective of these amendments—namely,
improving the experience of victims and witnesses in the
criminal justice system—is one we can all wholeheartedly
support, the Government continue to have serious concerns
regarding their substance. I welcome the fact that the
noble Baroness, Lady Brinton, now wishes to focus on just
two amendments rather than on all seven new clauses added
to the Bill on Report but, as with the others, we foresee a
number of problems with Amendments 137 and 138. I thank her
for meeting me yesterday, together with the noble Lords,
, and Lord , but, as we
discussed in relation to Amendment 137, the victims’ code—a
statutory code of practice—includes a wide range of
entitlements for victims of crime, including being entitled
to receive information on their case. For example, under
the code, victims should be informed about: the police
investigation, such as if a suspect is arrested and charged
and any bail conditions imposed; if a suspect is to be
prosecuted or given an out-of-court disposal; the time,
date, location and outcome of any court hearings; and any
appeal by an offender against his or her conviction or
sentence.
4.30 pm
In addition, if an offender has committed a violent or sexual
crime and has been sentenced to 12 months or more in prison,
victims can access the victim contact scheme to be provided with
updates on important changes in offenders’ sentences—for example,
if they have moved to an open prison, and how and when they will
be released. Victims are entitled make a complaint if they do not
receive the information and services they are entitled to, and to
receive a full response from the relevant service provider. If
dissatisfied with the response, they can refer their complaints
to the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman.
Amendment 137 also includes provision for children and vulnerable
adults to give evidence in court via a live video link or from
behind a screen. However, this is unnecessary as the Youth
Justice and Criminal Evidence Act 1999 already provides a
statutory framework for such measures and more.
The amendment would also require the police to inform victims of
a suspect’s previous convictions which resulted in a custodial
sentence and certain previous offences committed outside the
United Kingdom. Currently, under the domestic violence disclosure
scheme, police officers already have the power in the course of
their duties to disclose previous convictions where it is
necessary to prevent crime. Any disclosure must be proportionate
to that end. However, the routine blanket disclosure provided for
by Amendment 137 would be disproportionate and would not take
account of the protections in the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act
1974 and the Data Protection Act 1998. It is not clear what the
amendment would add to the police’s current powers to disclose
information where it is necessary to prevent crime.
Nor is it clear what the effect of the amendments would be. For
example, Amendment 137 would enable a victim to refuse a
compensation order made by the court but nothing is said about
what the outcome of the refusal would be. If a compensation order
has been made by the court, it should be enforced unless revoked.
It is appropriate that offenders should compensate victims for
the harm that they have done, and compensation orders provide a
means for the criminal courts to include this in sentencing.
However, sentencing is a matter for the judiciary, which makes
decisions within the sentencing framework and based on relevant
information about the offence and offender, including, in the
case of compensation orders, the offender’s means. It would not
be appropriate for resentencing to occur based on a victim’s
ability to refuse a compensation order.
Similarly, victims would have a right to attend and make
representations to a “pre-court hearing” to determine the nature
of court proceedings. What hearings and the representations would
concern is not explained. No definition is provided for the
“adequate notice” that victims should be given of any court
proceedings. Furthermore, Amendment 137 would impose obligations
on the criminal justice agencies in respect of matters that are
beyond their control—for example, delays caused by the defence.
Amendment 138, which concerns training, is also unnecessary. The
training of all staff in the criminal justice system is already
taken very seriously. General and specialist training is provided
to the police, prosecutors, the judiciary and others depending on
the type of work the individual undertakes. This includes
training on the treatment of victims, as my noble friend Lady
Chisholm outlined on Report.
Although the House of Commons has not sought to disagree with
these amendments on the basis that they would involve a charge on
public funds, they would undoubtedly impose additional demands on
the taxpayer. Amendment 137 would significantly expand the
existing criminal injuries compensation scheme so that it would
apply to all victims of crime and not just eligible victims of a
crime of violence as defined under that scheme. Indeed, it would
go further by requiring compensation to be paid not just for a
criminal injury, but also for “any detriment” caused by a
criminal case.
Amendment 137 would also require the provision of full
transcripts on request and free of charge to victims, which would
be prohibitively costly. Additionally, the amendment would allow
victims to receive legal advice where a judge considered it
necessary, presumably with legal aid. The aforementioned
pre-court hearings would be a likely candidate. We have been
given no indication by the proponents of these amendments of the
additional financial burdens that they would impose on criminal
justice agencies or the implications for legal aid funding.
As I have said, we recognise there are concerns regarding the
victims’ code. We know, for instance, that there are concerns
about a lack of awareness among victims of their rights under the
code, and we are considering how we might address that. Also, as
part of the work looking at what is required to strengthen
further the rights of victims of crime, we are considering how
compliance with the code might be improved and monitored, and
exploring how those responsible for the delivery of rights and
entitlements might be held accountable for failings. We want to
ensure that any future reform proposals are evidence-based, fully
costed, effective and proportionate. While the amendments are
well intended, those are qualities that they do not possess.
There is already an established legislative framework providing
for the rights of victims of crime. As I have indicated, there is
scope for improvement in strengthening the rights of victims,
ensuring that agencies are fulfilling their duty and are
appropriately trained to deliver those rights, and considering
how delivery is monitored. Given the difficulties with the
amendments, I put it to the House that it would be inappropriate
to legislate further in advance of the Government setting out our
strategy for victims, which we intend to do within 12 months. I
further assure the House that we will take the appropriate action
to give effect to the strategy, including bringing forward any
appropriate primary legislation. I ask that the House await the
outcome of this work rather than rushing ahead with this untested
and uncosted package of measures. I beg to move.
Motion D1 (as an amendment to Motion D)
Moved by
-
(LD)
My Lords, I thank the Minister and her predecessor, the
noble Baroness, Lady Chisholm of Owlpen, for being
available for meetings and discussions during the passage
of the Bill. I am very grateful for their assistance.
I can think of no better way to start the debate on the
victims’ code and support for victims than to pay tribute
to Jill Saward, who died two weeks ago. I extend my
sympathy to her husband Gavin and her family on her
untimely death at the age of 51. Jill was the first person
to waive her anonymity having been the victim of a brutal
rape and sexual assault in 1986, and her photograph was all
over the Sun newspaper just days after the incident,
something that is perhaps pertinent to our debate earlier
about Leveson 2. The judge in the case sought to justify
giving the defendant who did not take part in the rape a
longer sentence than those who did by saying that Jill’s
trauma,
“had not been so great”.
Two years later she led the campaign for anonymity for
victims from the moment of assault, but chose to waive her
own right to anonymity and published her account, Rape: My
Story, an incredible, hard-hitting and moving book.
She was a brilliant and dedicated campaigner as well as a
wise counsellor. Until she died, most people never knew how
many victims of assault, rape, stalking or domestic
violence were contacted by her privately, and she supported
them through their experience. I know that Jill provided
considerable support for Claire Waxman, a survivor of
repeated stalking and the founder of Voice4Victims, in her
campaign to inform Ministers and parliamentarians of
failings in the current system, which has resulted in the
amendments that have been put before your Lordships’ House
and another place.
In the Commons consideration of Lords amendments last week,
the Minister said:
“These amendments ignore the extensive reforms and
modernisation we are undertaking to transform our justice
system … The amendments would result in an unstructured
framework of rights and entitlements that is not founded on
evidence of gaps or deficiencies … Some amendments are
unnecessary because they duplicate existing provisions and
practices, or are being acted on by the Government already
… We are looking at the available information about
compliance with the victims code and considering how it
might be improved and monitored.”.—[Official Report,
Commons, 10/1/17; cols. 249-50.]
The reason I raise this is that we feel very strongly
because the Conservative manifesto 2015 said:
“We have already introduced a new Victims’ Code and taken
steps to protect vulnerable witnesses and victims. Now we
will strengthen victims’ rights further, with a new
Victims’ Law that will enshrine key rights for victims”.
That is what the amendments we have set before your
Lordships’ House today are intended to do. Apart from the
fact that the Minister seemed to contradict himself
somewhat during that debate, we are clear that, although
the victims’ code gives victims entitlement to support, it
does not ensure that that support is provided by the
agencies. It is the lack of statutory duty for the agencies
and the criminal justice system that is the problem.
The Code of Practice for Victims of Crime uses the words
“should” and “may” repeatedly when talking about the
services while, when it is talking about victims, it talks
about entitlement. It is that gap that the amendments are
intended to resolve. The results of that gap are all too
evident. Do not take my word for it. The criminal justice
joint inspection report, Meeting the Needs of Victims in
the Criminal Justice System, states that:
“there were some excellent individual examples of good
practice across criminal justice sectors”,
but that,
“there were unacceptable inconsistencies in the service
provided to victims—depending on the type of offence, where
they lived or the degree to which local policy support and
reinforce service provision. Given that the Code of
Practice for Victims of Crime … provides a standard which
should transcend all these variables, there is clearly more
work to do”.
Last year, the Public Accounts Committee published a report
on the needs of victims and a victims’ law, stating:
“The … system is bedevilled by long standing poor
performance including delays and inefficiencies, and costs
are being shunted from one part of the system to another …
The … system is not good enough at supporting victims and
witnesses … Timely access to justice is too dependent on
where victims and witnesses live … There is insufficient
focus on victims, who face a postcode lottery in their
access to justice due to the significant variations in
performance”.
The Victims’ Commissioner, the noble Baroness, Lady
Newlove, in her report of January 2015, said that almost
75% of respondents to her survey of victims consulted
during the review were unhappy with the response they
received, and over 50% found the relevant agency’s
complaints process difficult to use.
I am very grateful for the Minister’s statement that there
is work to do on the victims’ code. Since the amendment
started their passage through Parliament, Voice4Victims has
been flooded with new issues raised by victims on the
process failing them, not just the reason why those
families and individuals were victims. Ivy, who was 45, was
encouraged to report to the police ongoing sexual violence
by her partner. She did so, but the officer said that he
did not believe her. A second officer dismissed her claims
and said that she was overreacting. Later, she was further
violently assaulted by her partner, including suffering
broken ribs and severe bruising. At the following
multiagency meeting, she was told by the police that she
was now assessed as being at high risk of being murdered.
To cut a long story short, she had to move 170 miles away
from her home. The victim had to move because the police
could not guarantee her safety. Victims are being let down
by the system.
I thank the Minister for the statement she made earlier.
The key points to satisfy me not to call for a vote on my
amendment are that we need to undertake a review within a
timescale. I am grateful for the review that is to report
back within 12 months. As important, I am grateful to the
Minister for saying that she will ensure that any review
will make sure that there is a statutory responsibility for
the fulfilling of duties by the agencies and that
appropriate training and services delivered are monitored.
Victims—from Jill Saward, 30 years ago, who started the
movement for victim support, right through to Ivy and the
many others around her today—deserve better, and they
deserve action soon. I beg to move.
4.45 pm
-
My Lords, I rise to support my noble friend Lady Brinton
and associate those on our Benches with her remarks on Jill
Saward. The Minister acknowledged in her remarks that there
are legitimate concerns about the victims’ code, and that
is why there was a Conservative Party manifesto commitment
for a new victims’ law to ensure that the victims’ code is
given effect. That is what my noble friend is trying to
achieve through the amendment. We trust that the
Government’s review will result in more effective
protection for victims and more compliance by the police
and the other agencies with the victims’ code. If the
Minister can give that commitment, we will be prepared to
accept the Government’s intention to ensure that the
victims’ code is not simply a matter of words but will have
some effect and that victims will be better cared for by
those agencies in the criminal justice system.
-
My Lords, we, too, support the objectives behind the
amendment that was moved so eloquently by the noble
Baroness, Lady Brinton, for the reasons that she herself
set out. We also associate ourselves with the comments made
by the noble Baroness about Jill Saward.
The issue is that the current victims’ code is not legally
enforceable and there is clear evidence that it is not
being applied and acted on by the relevant agencies to the
extent that was clearly intended—to the detriment of the
victims it was intended to help. The amendment provides for
victims’ rights to be placed on a statutory footing and for
the Secretary of State to address the issue of training for
all relevant professionals and agencies on the impact of
crime on victims.
I share the view that the Government, in the statement made
by the Minister today, have been considerably more helpful
and constructive in their response than they were during
consideration of the Lords amendment in the Commons last
week.
Finally, I, too, express my thanks to the Minister for her
willingness to meet us. I hope that we have reached a stage
at which there will be some accord on this issue.
-
My Lords, I do not think that there was a lack of accord.
In fact the whole way through these discussions I felt that
we were seeking the same ends; it was just a matter of how
we got there. I add my tribute to that of the noble
Baroness to Jill Saward. I read about her the other day,
and what she went through was absolutely heart-breaking as
well as devastating while her father and then fiancé were
downstairs. How she gathered the strength to not only waive
her right to anonymity but help so many other people is
quite inspiring and not something that everybody would feel
able to do.
Following discussions today, yesterday and previously, we
have reached a consensus on this and I hope that the words
that I read out have given noble Lords confidence as we
move forward to publishing this strategy within the next 12
months. I thank all noble Lords for their part in this
debate.
-
I thank all noble Lords who have spoken in this debate, and
thank again the Minister for the words that she said from
the Dispatch Box, which meet my concerns at the moment. I
shall be interested to see the result of the review and
consultation. If we feel that there is not strong enough
legislation coming through afterwards, I suspect that more
amendments will appear in further course. In the meantime,
I beg leave to withdraw the Motion.
Motion D1, as an amendment to Motion D, withdrawn.
Motion D agreed.
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