The Daily Telegraph

Judges pledge to end two-year court waits for rape victims

- By Charles Hymas Home Affairs editor

JUDGES have pledged to end two-year court waits for rape victims to gain justice.

Lord Justice Edis, one of Britain’s most senior judges, said he aims to clear the backlog of rape cases delayed more than two years by the end of this sum- mer – and then ensure no rape victim has to wait more than two years after that point.

He described the court delays of over two years – and in one case five years – as a “serious stain” on the criminal justice system and “unacceptab­le” for victims, witnesses and defendants. “It’s a step in trying to make sure that rape cases don’t get this old in the future,” said Lord Justice Edis, who is the senior presiding judge for England and Wales.

There are 181 cases, as of the end of last year, who have waited more than two years for a trial date, on top of the time their complaint had been investigat­ed by police before prosecutor­s decided to charge a suspect.

Lord Justice Edis said this represente­d about 6 per cent of the total 3,355 rape cases awaiting trial. The average wait for a rape victim between their case being sent for trial and a verdict being delivered is 358 days.

However, the 181 victims who were entering their third year waiting for the trial had been caught by a double “shock” caused to the criminal justice system in 2020 by the pandemic closing down courts, and then in the summer of 2022, as their cases were relisted, by the industrial action by criminal barristers. Their trials will be prioritise­d over other cases, which could mean some are delayed “a short period of time”. Judges, barristers and court staff will “red flag” the cases so that pre-hearings can be fast-tracked, dates set for the trials and all parties agree to a fixed date for the hearing.

Lord Justice Edis set a target date of July 31 to clear the backlog but admitted a “few” may not be completed. In one case, a defendant on bail has gone abroad and is believed to be dead though this is yet to be confirmed. Another who also went abroad is claiming to be ill, which prevents him from being tried in his absence. One victim has been waiting since May 2019 to see her two assailants brought to justice in a retrial. It is now listed for May 2024.

Court delays, combined with low police conviction rates and fears over the trauma of reliving the crime in court, have contribute­d to more than two thirds of rape victims withdrawin­g from investigat­ions.

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