Chair Criminal Cases Review Commission. Member Women’s Justice Bd.
Ex Victims’ Commissioner, Solicitor Gen & PCC. Fellow St Hilda’s Oxford. Writer. Labour Party

Category: BLOG

  • Progress Online Article (13th June 2014) – Policing through rights and respect – not kilos of water.

    Police forces across the country work hard, delivering community safety and working with residents to problem solve and cut crime

    Policing can only be based on partnership. ‘The police are the public and the public are the police’ is the most quoted of the Peelian principles, set out by the founder of the Metropolitan police. Few people, police, members of the public or politician would ever dispute it – except, perhaps, London mayor, Boris Johnson.

    Despite the opposition of 20 of the 25 London assembly, and without the approval of the Home Office, Johnson has decided to spend up to £400,000 of public money on heavy weaponry, which cannot be targeted but only used against people at large, namely water cannon.

    This is not just a decision for London – it is the first time that water cannon will feature in policing in all of England and Wales. There is no consensus for this step. Johnson shows little respect for his public in following the example of police commissioner, Bernard Hogan-Howe, who has said that ‘his’ officers are there to wage ‘total war on crime’. Londoners may be unhappy with the notion that cops are their leaders’ storm troopers rather than servants of the public. Made sceptical, through scandals such as the Lawrence case,‘plebgate’ and the deaths of Ian Tomlinson, Mark Duggan and John Charles de Menezes, Londoners may worry too about further arming the police and might ask exactly who will be defining the enemy.

    Labour assembly member Joanne McCartney objects that ‘there is confusion behind exactly how the process of their deployment will work’. Police and crime commissioners across both the country and the political spectrum are against their introduction. The Association of Chief Police Officers’ briefing says that ‘water cannon are capable of causing serious injury or even death’.  The home secretary is right when she states that we need to consider the health and safety aspects before going any further. There are examples from across Europe of severe injuries caused by police using water cannon. The riots in London in 2010 could not have been stopped with these devices which only work in spaces the size of Parliament Square.

    We are a country of free speech. We do not police protests through water cannon but through respect for that right and the rights of others who disagree. There were no riots where I live in Northumbria. If police there make a mistake, even a grave one, they do not retreat into defensive obfuscation but trust their public with the truth. Lost confidence which gives rise to protest and then, as respect for the rule of law evaporates, to lawlessness, is better not triggered in the first place. It will not be recovered by indiscriminate blasting of protesters, bystanders and criminals alike with thousands of kilos of water.

    Since 2010, through massive spending cuts imposed by the mayor’s Conservative party, the people of London have lost 3,111 police officers. Water cannon are not a substitute for uniformed officers on the street. Nor are they a substitute for the trust of the community in their police, so lamentably weakened under Johnson’s bravado but feeble stewardship.

  • Tackling Knife Crime (Northumberland Gazette article)

    Knife crime can have a harsh effect on communities. Across Northumbria, we have seen the devastating effect that knives have caused to families.

    I am a firm believer that there should be tougher sentences for those who carry knives and I am pleased that the Home Secretary, Theresa May, has given her backing to tougher sentences for knife crime.

    An amendment to the Criminal Justice and Courts Bill has been put forward which proposes a six-month jail term for anyone convicted of carrying a knife for the second time.

    This amendment makes sound sense.

    Tougher sentences would send a clear message to those who carry knives repeatedly that it is not acceptable.

    The family of 16-year-old Glen Corner in South Shields have campaigned for changes in the law.

    In the past, they have lobbied their MP and taken their campaign to the heart of government to demand change.

    Glen was tragically taken from them in August 2006 when he died from a stab wound.

    Their belief is quite simple – that no one should be carrying knives as they can devastate lives.

    I agree totally with this sentiment.

    Tackling knife crime has received the support of the two major parties in the House of Commons.

    Labour leader Ed Miliband is clear in his determination that legislation should be used to strengthen the law and he is sympathetic to the issue of mandatory sentences after a second offence.

    Of course, we need to make sure this is done in the right way.

    I believe that in Northumbria, people want to send a strong message to people who carry knives repeatedly.

    A similar measure was put in place to tackle gun offences and the Metropolitan Police Commissioner, Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe, said that a simple message is needed.

    It was heard about guns and it needs to be heard about knives.

    We need to ensure that we educate and rehabilitate those caught up in the knife culture, but just as importantly it is imperative that the police and courts are given support to tackle knife crime.

    While we are fortunate in Northumbria that we do not have the same problem with knife crime as in some other areas of the country, we have had tragic deaths in this force area and Northumbria Police will continue to take a proactive stance in tackling knife crime.

    Politicians across the political spectrum continue to want this issue addressed.

    There is a drive and commitment from the Home Secretary, Leader of the Opposition and Police and Crime Commissioners to see change.

    It is now our job to make it happen.

  • Huffington Post Article (9th June). Responding to the Director of Public Prosecutions Rape Action Plan.

    Today’s Rape Action Plan from Director of Public Prosecutions, Alison Saunders, is yet another valiant attempt to improve the conviction rate for sexual offences which is, in reality, still held back by out of date rape myths which prevail at court and which remain influential in the police and the Crown Prosecution Service.

    There was an upward trend in the rate of conviction for cases that got to court for about seven years as police and CPS made progress in training their staff and improving witness care. However, the increase was never huge and it fell sharply from 63%-60% during the past year.

    There must be a fear that similarly, the recent increase in the number of complainants who have the confidence to report rape will go into reverse if the conviction rate continues to go down, making the point that they are unlikely to get justice.

    The police and CPS training which brought those original improvements was substantial. However it seems only to have got them over some of the rape myths that used to block prosecutions, leaving them locked into others. A letter read this morning on the Today programme made that point. It showed CPS explaining to a complainant that the underwear she was wearing was one of the reasons why they wouldn’t prosecute her allegation of rape. Particularly shocking is that the letter must have been written by a dedicated rape prosecutor since it is a decade since CPS allowed a non-specialist to manage a rape case.

    Alison Saunders is therefore right to focus in her Action Plan on yet more guidance for prosecutors, research into why victims withdraw, ensuring legal advocates have the right skills, regional workshops for CPS/police to strengthen learning around investigations and prosecutions and improving oversight and accountability for police decisions to take no further action. It is rightly too all directed towards acquiring and using a better understanding of what consent means and on shifting the focus from the credibility of the victim to the overall allegation and the conduct of the accused.

    The continuing impact of these out of date myths even on trained police and prosecutors leaves little hope that untrained jurors will do better. And if myths and prejudices influence outcomes at court, that will cause injustice and will re-inforce their use in police and CPS decisions about which future cases to take forward. So while the DPP re-trains her staff in the significance of factors such as underwear, it is equally important that every rape jury has explained to them the prejudicial effect of similar myths.

    Happily, the Crown Court judges have long had a folio of directions in place to neutralise most of the well-known myths and prejudices in trials. It was the former Lord Chief Justice, Lord Judge, who first appreciated that the training that the judges themselves get about myths and stereotypes had to be passed on to juries if rape trials were going to be fair.

    A good example is when a rape complaint is made sometime after the event. The defence will say that the sex was consensual, that rape is so nasty that anyone would complain of it immediately and that the delay in complaint shows that she is lying about lack of consent. In the absence of any different understanding jurors might accept that argument. Yet judges know from experience, including around guilty pleas, that sexual assault victims frequently do not complain at once. So they can direct a jury that while some people may speak to the first person they see, others will, through shame and shock take far longer to tell anyone what has happened. Judges will, in that way, bust the myth that a late complaint is necessarily a false one and leave the facts in each case, fairly set out for the jury to decide.

    There are directions similarly to deal with notions such as because the complainant wore provocative clothing, he/she must have wanted sex; since the complainant got drunk in male company, he/she must have been prepared for sex; that an attractive male does not need to rape; a complainant in a relationship with the alleged attacker is likely to have consented; that rape does not take place without physical resistance from the victim and usually causes injury and that rape by a stranger is necessarily more traumatic than rape by someone the victim trusted.

    However, many victims and rape support groups would say that despite these directions there is often aggressive cross examination in rape trials, which relies on these very myths. That can undermine the quality of a complainant\’s evidence and prejudice the jury long before the summing up when the directions are given. Clearly the point of Judges knowing that rape myths can prejudice trials should be so they banish them from the process all together, not allow their use by lawyers and then try to explain them away.

    There is no DPP figure who can oversee and direct the Courts as Alison Saunders can give leadership to her prosecutors. There is no Court Inspectorate who can monitor performance as HMIC does for the police. In Northumbria, we will fill this gap by establishing a panel of volunteer Court Observers, probably with a complement of former victims, who will follow every sexual assault case at Newcastle Crown Court to see whether the courts are doing their share of ridding rape trials of pernicious myths as the CPS and the police are encouraged and exhorted once again, to do theirs.

    They will look at other aspects of the trial too, such as whether Independent Sexual Violence Advisers (ISVAs) who support complainants throughout sexual abuse cases are allowed to accompany them in court; how Crown Prosecutors relate to complainants who, since police are trained to give evidence and defendants prepare their case with their barristers, are the only ones unprepared for what is to come and whether questioning about previous sexual history still haunts these trials. We will also look to establish our very own Police Rape Scrutiny Panel to scrutinise case files which have failed to attain the requisite evidential level of prosecution or where a prosecution has failed and look for lessons to learn.

    If we are to continue to increase the proper conviction rate in rape and to prevent a consequent decline in complainant’s confidence to report, all the criminal justice agencies must play a role in ridding these trials, once and for all of the prejudice and myth which today’s announcement shows are alive and well in the police and CPS. What happens in trials can either reinforce these myths or render them redundant

  • DELETION OF DNA RECORDS

    Northumbria’s Police and Crime Commissioner has written to the Home Secretary expressing her alarm at plans to destroy thousands of DNA samples from a national database.
    Vera Baird QC believes it will be victims of rape and sexual violence who will ultimately suffer as a result of samples held on the national DNA database being destroyed as part of the Protection of Freedoms Act. From October police forces won’t be able to hold indefinitely the DNA of people arrested on suspicion of sexual and violent crimes if they are released without charge. Forces can apply to the biometrics commissioner to hold a sample for three years, with an extension of two years, if they have the grounds to do so.
    However it is claimed this appeals process is not yet in place. The Police and Crime Commissioner said today: “I’ve written to the Home Secretary expressing my deep concern that thousands of DNA samples could be lost. “I’ve highlighted my opposition to early deletion of DNA and my fears that critical DNA which could support future successful convictions could be lost.
    “I know the difficulties there are now in securing convictions in rape cases – it is very hard to give evidence in public about such intimate and traumatising events. However it is well known by police that in some cases rape is serial offending by the same attacker. Victims are more likely to give evidence if they believe that doing so will protect others. So if a victim knows there are other people saying that the same person raped them, they are more likely to give evidence – giving a better chance of conviction\”.
    “With this in mind DNA is invaluable as historic samples can currently be compared and matched with new evidence – which can ultimately provide closure for some victims many years down the line. If DNA is destroyed after three years this can’t happen and we’ll end up with even lower conviction rates. And while there is a lot of good working being done in Northumbria to support victims of sexual offences, the conviction rate across the country is still far too low. Ultimately it will be the victims of sexual violence and rape who will suffer as a result when what we are all trying to achieve is to increase their support and confidence in justice.”

  • Noisy neighbours sorted.

    Police are reminding residents not to leave calling officers as a ‘last resort’ when anti-social behaviour (ASB) problems happen.

    This follows an issue of noisy neighbours in Jesmond when a resident suffered for over two months before contacting police for help. When the caller did decide to ring the police she was very pleased with the swift and effective response she received.

    The regular night-time disturbances started in April and were affecting the caller and her family. She said she felt she just had to put up with them even though she was suffering sleepless nights and was worried it would affect her health When she finally rang police in June, local officer PC Mick Rainbow dealt with it.

    PC Rainbow reassured the resident that this was the type of incident police want to know about and do take seriously, so they can sort it out. He visited those responsible for the noise and made them aware this behaviour would not be tolerated.

    He informed them he would be monitoring the issue very closely and discussed this with their landlord, who supported the police response. The officer rang the caller back after she had got some sleep and updated her with what had happened. The neighbours were very apologetic for their behaviour and moved out.

    Just over a week later the resident suffered similar problems with other neighbours. Again PC Rainbow met with the culprits and quickly resolved the problem. He has kept in contact with the resident who has not had any further issues.

    PC Rainbow said: “The caller was delighted her problems had been sorted and was very pleased it had happened so quickly once she got in touch.

    “Our message is simple, don ‘t suffer in silence. If you have a problem of ASB give us a call on 101 so we can help you. ”

    Northumbria Police and Crime Commissioner Vera Baird welcomed the positive action taken by local officers.

    She said: “This is exactly the kind of issue which affects people ‘s quality of life and no-one should have to tolerate it.

    “Tackling anti-social behaviour such as this is one of the key objectives of my policing plan and I ‘m pleased officers were able to help this woman. I hope more people who may be suffering similar problems are encouraged to get in touch so police and partners can take appropriate action. “

    The activity supports Northumbria Police’s ‘Report it to sort it’ campaign aimed at encouraging people to report ASB so police can take action.

    Anyone who has concerns about crime or disorder where they live should contact their local neighbourhood policing team on 101, ext 69191.

  • The Reality of Rape Law

    Read Vera\’s piece in the Huffington Post here.

  • Vera visits Newcastle’s Angelou Centre

    Everyone I have spoken to, locally, about violence against women admires the Angelou Centre, which is just moving to bigger premises in Newcastle’s West End. (more…)

  • Police candidate hails S. Tyne approach on anti-social behaviour

    The Shields Gazette reported Vera’s visit to South Tyneside to learn at first hand how the council is working with its partners to tackle crime.