The Scottish criminal justice process leaves those who have reported a rape or serious sexual assault feeling marginalised and with little control regardless of their case’s outcome, a new study has found.
Researchers from the Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research
at the University of Glasgow interviewed victim-survivors who have
navigated their way through the system to try and understand their
‘justice journey’.
While some positive experiences were identified, such as support
provided through advocacy services and sensitivity shown by some
specialist criminal justice professionals, victim-survivors also
highlighted the lengthy duration of the process, administrative errors
and poor communication from the police and courts. Other issues such the
physical environments in which statements are given, the removal and
non-return of personal possessions for evidential purposes, and in
particular, being subjected to distressing questioning at trial, were
also raised as significant points of concern.
Most notably none of the 17 victim-survivors, including those whose
cases had resulted in a guilty verdict, believed that justice has been
achieved.
The cumulative impacts of their experience of sexual violence and
going through the criminal justice process led to victim survivors
feeling their relationships with family had become strained, their
health had deteriorated, including suffering night terrors, suicidal
thoughts, depression, anxiety and post-traumatic stress.
Beth said: “…it was three years of re-traumatisation.” Helen felt it
had “totally destroyed everything”, while Lottie said she “didn’t know
how to live for 18 months.”
Overall, the findings suggest there is a considerable gap between how
victim-survivors anticipate their case will be treated and the reality
of the criminal justice process. Victim-survivors felt that the criminal
justice system is weighted in favour of the accused and that it does
not adequately represent their interests.
Dr Oona Brooks-Hay who co-authored the report with Prof Michele Burman and Dr Lisa Bradley said she hoped the research findings would push for real change across the criminal justice system to address the significant concerns raised around how victim-survivors are informed, supported and represented.
Dr Brooks-Hay said: “There is a pressing need to look at how the
criminal justice process can be reformed to meet the needs of
victim-survivors who have had the courage to engage with the system.
“While our research reveals that some relatively minor practical changes could go a long way to improving experiences, more radical change such as the introduction of independent legal representation in serious sexual offence cases, must be given serious consideration. Sexual offences have profound and distinctive impacts, and therefore merit distinctive responses.”
The recommendations are far ranging across the whole of the criminal
justice process, and include specialised sexual assault training for all
police officers, early access to support from specialist agencies,
better protection at court to avoid meeting the accused and his family.
The recommendations also call for a review of the nature and manner of
questioning in the court that infringes on the victim-survivors’ right
to dignity and privacy, and which was found to be a significant source
of distress.
In their own words;
On giving evidence
Pippa: “…when I say you’ve been raped before, it feels the exact same
way when you’re sitting in that courtroom, you have nothing, like you
literally are stripped bare of everything and don’t have any control
over it. You have not had any say in this, all you have told them is
like your story and they just go and do what they want with it.”
Receiving court support from an Advocacy Worker
Beth: “I don’t know if I could have had the courage to say what I did
without, because she [Advocacy Worker] gave me courage. Because I knew
someone had my back.”
On communication and administration
Debbie: “The administration from the criminal justice or whoever deals
with it, the Crown Office, was shocking. A lot of letters were to the
wrong names, to the wrong address, just the mail correspondence thing
was shocking.”
On the police investigation
Nat: “…[the police officer is] a hero […] To have someone listen to you,
after all of that time, and take the little bits that you’re giving
them, and not to dismiss them, but to actually then go off and do
something about it.”
Uncertainty and delays Lottie:” I didn’t know how to live for 18 months. I didn’t know, you know, do I just forget about it, but then it has to be all dragged back up again, or do I just live my life on pause?”
Blackstone’s Formulation is often cited in criminal cases, and it’s one of the cornerstones of the American legal system. It was created by Sir William Blackstone, who lived from 1723 to 1780, in England. English settlers in the young United States took his legal principle and used it as the basis for the legal system in their new country.
Protecting the Innocent
The exact quote from Blackstone, per Harvard Law School, is as follows: “It is better that ten guilty persons escape, than that one innocent suffer.”
The goal here is not to allow the guilty to go free, but to ensure that the innocent are not unfairly jailed or otherwise punished — capital punishment was more widely used at the time than it is today — for crimes they did not commit.
A Legal Right
This quote has been so influential that it is a
legal right. When accused of a crime, you have the right to be presumed
innocent, which stems from this principle. Courts must err on the side
of innocence. It’s the reason you have to be proven guilty beyond a
reasonable doubt. Any doubt shows that you may be the innocent party
that Blackstone is referring to, and you should therefore be allowed to
go free. Blackstone recognized that this meant some who were guilty
would also be allowed to go free when doubt was cast on their cases for
various reasons, but he — and the U.S. legal system — would take that
tradeoff to protect the innocent.
Sociologists use different methods, theories and approaches to research and understand the social world. Functionalists and Marxist study how society influences the human behaviour. (Haralambos and Holborn, 2000, p. 9-13) In contrast, Social Interactionists interested in how individuals can shape society. (Haralambos and Holborn, 2000, p. 1056-1060) In his work C. Wright Mills (2000) argued that, there is an inter-relationship between ‘the history of society’ and the ‘life of an individual’. He made a connection between personal aspects and social, historical conditions. (Mills, 1959:3) Therefore, sociologist should study history, individuals and society structures at the same time, through the glasses of Sociological Imagination.
In his notion Mills (2000) describes social reality as a three dimensional entity. It is based on the biography of individuals, their personal, unique and private desires/troubles. It is influenced by the social structures, institutions and vice versa. From a historical aspect, events, processes and issues may influence the future of the individual and/ or the social structures. It is also heavily impacted by social and political power. (John D Brewer, 2004, p. 7) In reality for example, unemployment is a personal trouble, affecting one’s personal milieu, such as financially, psychologically, socially. This private problem could turn into a wilder social issue, if unemployment reach a larger scale, such as hundreds of people losing their job, because for example a factory shuts down. This could lead deindustrialisation in the area, recession and migration of the workers. Further, it links the country’s economy decline, affecting the industry (prices) and impacts the political landscape as well. (Buchan, 2018) With the Social Imagination sociologist can examine every aspect (individual, history and social-political structure) in context to each other to explain a public issue or a personal problem. It gives them the ability to shift their perspective, see the bigger picture and predict a future outcome based on their observations. It also providing a viewpoint from the social problem, showing where the structure needs change or alteration, such as make housing more affordable or have more welfare programs.
The importance of the Social
Imagination is not just that it gives an observed understanding of the world,
but encourage sociologists to connect personal experiences to society in a
context of history to explore public issues rigorously. (Gane and Back, 2012,
p. 405) Also, Mills’ ideas are universal to everyone who wants to see the world
in a different perspective and understand it better.
By Dr Katrina Morrison, Lecturer in Criminology at Edinburgh Napier University and Board Member at Howard League Scotland
The 20th anniversary of the opening of the Scottish
Parliament allows us to pause and reflect on the progress of penal
reform in this time. While criminal justice was under the jurisdiction
of Scottish administrative structures prior to devolution, the
establishment of the Scottish Parliament created policy instruments
which could enable more radical change, and the political and civic
arena in which to affect them.
Assessing anything, including penal reform, is ultimately a
comparative endeavour, everything is relative. In Scotland, our
inevitable comparison is with England and Wales, where we like to
compare ourselves (often favourably). We do much less comparison with Northern Ireland or the Republic of Ireland, our Celtic neighbours, or with mainland Europe – we know many of the same assessments we make of ourselves would be less favourable if we did, whether in rates of imprisonment (that most dominant penal metric), or in numbers under penal supervision,
a less visible, yet still powerful indictor of Scotland’s approach to
punishment. Whilst not ignoring the perhaps justifiable comparison with
England and Wales given geographical proximity and shared histories, we
could be more ambitious and seek a different measuring rod in our
efforts of comparative analysis.
What assessment can we make around Scottish penal reform over the past 20 years?
Over the past twenty years, Scotland can rightfully be proud of:
Commitments for a new prison estate for women in custody, Community Custody Units
(CCUs), which are small, community facing, and designed to look and
feel like domestic accommodation, rather than a prison. The decision to
build CCUs follows a 2015 Scottish Government decision not to proceed with a large single prison for women following a sustained campaign by women’s and penal reform organisations.
The proposed Community Custodial Unit for women in Maryhill, Glasgow
The development of problem-solving justice in particular for young people, women, repeat offending, domestic abuse, and alcohol abuse, with a recent evaluation showing just how successful such approaches can be.
Whilst we in Scotland can rightly celebrate these developments, we
must also recognise the limits to more radical and progressive reforms
over this time, including:
These examples are by no means exhaustive, but reflect some key
issues captured from my viewpoint (as someone who has worked in
universities, criminal justice and in penal reform), which represent
both developments of which we can be rightly proud in Scotland, and also
the distance we still have to travel. What then does this mean for the
prospects for penal reform in Scotland over the next 20 years and
beyond? I think we need to be looking at reform which is both top-down,
and bottom-up, and also somewhere in between.
Current political party composition of Scottish Parliament
However, we cannot rely on change as a result of political action alone, there is a socio-cultural context which sustains Scotland’s penal approach which must also be addressed. Despite concern over the way we punish in Scotland for many years,
‘policy fixes’ have so far not had the traction we would hope. Perhaps
this could be because the story Scottish people tell themselves about
who they are, and the values they hold, is not always reflected in the
data we have about the way Scottish people feel about a range of social
issues. In 2015, difference in views between Scotland and England and
Wales towards free tuition fees and the EU were much less marked than one might think, and in 2018, social attitude data also revealed that views towards immigration
were very similar in both Scotland and England and Wales (though views
were translated into different voting preferences). In relation to views
on crime and justice, the latest Scottish Crime and Justice Survey
showed that nearly 75% of the representative sample of the Scottish
population did not know ‘very much’ or ‘anything at all’ about the
criminal justice system. Despite this, 75% of those surveyed also felt
either confident or very confident in the delivery of criminal justice
across a range of indicators, an opinion which did not change much
between victims and non-victims. Data showed
that the public believed that support should be provided to people in
prison to assist with later reintegration, but only 53% agreed that only
those who commit the most serious crimes should be in prison. These are
indicators that with careful conversations, and the right information,
public opinion can be led to think about punishment in a different way
than one might first think when reading some of the more sensationalist
headlines.
How then can the cultural context in which the penal system operates
be shaped, in order that positive changes in practice and outcomes be
realised? Possibilities might lie in attempts to engage citizens more
deeply in conversations about crime, punishment, and more broadly, in
social justice. Such work was undertaken as part of the ‘Creating Spaces
for Change’ project, described as ‘part knowledge exchange, part social experiment’,
which sought to capitalise on increased civic engagement in Scotland in
the wake of the 2014 independence referendum, a project which resulted
in a range of collaborative initiatives, dialogues around justice and
influence on practice. However, the very ‘success’ or progress realised
through such projects is difficult to measure
according to conventual methods of evaluation. Nonetheless, such an
approach may have traction in Scotland at this moment: there is an
appetite for deliberative dialogue to facilitate better Scottish public policy reform,
and the commitment to more participatory means of civic engagement has
been further strengthened in the recent announcement for Scotland’s first ever Citizens Assembly
which will focus on the future of Scotland. There is no reason that
conversations around crime, punishment and citizenship, cannot be
included into those processes. This could compliment other smaller scale
means of engaging with the public around these questions which have
recently been launched, including efforts by the Scottish Sentencing Council, Community Justice Scotland, and Release Scotland. Other recent initiatives seeking to engage civic society around justice reform employ more creative methods, such as Distant Voices,
a song-writing project involving groups of people with convictions,
criminal justice staff, victims, academics, artists and musicians, and
families affected by imprisonment, or A Life in Pieces , a graphic novel which conveys routes into custody and the experiences of punishment to different audiences.
Sustained progressive penal change lies in a range of different
factors, both within, and out with the criminal justice system. For
example, Finland succeeded in radically changing the way it uses imprisonment in the 20th Century
by legal and sentencing reform which was also enabled by becoming part
of the Nordic welfare model and building a political consensus for
change involving criminal justice elites, sentencers and experts.
However, there was also a cultural context, including a moderate media,
which facilitated this too. In Scotland, we need both changes to law and
policy around punishment, but also attention to wider questions around
welfare and support, and finally also more deliberate and deliberative
efforts at changing the cultural context in which these all occur.
Devolution is still in its infancy, and the political sphere is maturing after initial haste and impatience in reform across a range of areas including criminal justice.
There is much that be achieved by politicians and policy-makers in this
moment of Scottish history, but solutions to the problems of Scotland’s
enduring approaches to punishment lie outside the political sphere as
well. The growing confidence of Scotland as a nation, both civically and
politically, provide the space and incentives to enable a different
approach (in: rhetoric, policy, values, and ultimately, in practices and
experiences) to the way we respond to harm in Scotland.
The murdermap project began in 2010 with the aim of covering every single case of homicide (murder and manslaughter) from crime to conviction to reveal the stories behind the crime figures. A BBC article also highlighted the website, where Victim Support have said their concerns regarding the “insensitive” nature of the website as it sharing “gruesome and unnecessary amount of detail.”
Criminal Justice Joint Inspection (CJJI) is a product of
long-standing cooperation between the four criminal justice
inspectorates (of Constabulary; the Crown Prosecution Service; Prisons; and Probation) which was formalised by the Police and Justice Act 2006.
The purpose of Criminal Justice Joint Inspection
They work together to address issues that involve more than one criminal justice agency and have a direct impact on the public who use the justice system. Working together produces a more rounded examination of issues that cut across the system and enables us to achieve more than if just one inspectorate acted alone.
They support democratic accountability, local transparency and the drive to reduce bureaucracy.
Joint inspection particularly provides a unique focus on:
Systemic issues within the criminal justice system (CJS) as a whole
Identifying and driving cost from the system
Addressing risks and public safety
Looking at the system end-to-end and the role individual agencies play
Universal issues, standards and constraints within the CJS
Public reassurance and confidence
Inspection focus and scope
Their four inspectorates increasingly collaborate to focus on end-to-end and cross-cutting justice processes. To reflect this, they have focussed activity around four high level business processes:
Community safety;
Bringing offenders to justice;
Offender management;
and Custodial conditions
and three cross-cutting issues:
Victim and Witness experience;
Equality and diversity;
and Achieving Value for money and Efficiency.
Latterly, their increased focus on outcomes and the user experience have been key drivers. The overall balance of their joint programme also relies heavily on stakeholder consultation and resultant prioritisation.
The Scottish Sentencing Council would like to hear your views on a proposed new sentencing guideline for the public, which sets out steps taken by courts when making sentencing decisions.