The Scotsman

Solicitors fear increased workload amid new rules on suspects’ advice

- By CATRIONA WEBSTER paris.gourtsoyan­nis@jpress.co.uk

New rules on the arrest and questionin­g of suspects have come into force amid concerns from solicitors about their impact.

The changes under the Criminal Justice Act will give everyone being held in police custody the right to speak to a solicitor, regardless of whether they are going to be interviewe­d.

Lawyers have raised concerns about the potential impact on workload, with bar associatio­ns across Scotland indicating they will boycott the new police station duty solicitor scheme.

The Scottish Legal Aid Board (SLAB), which is responsibl­e for ensuring suspects have access to legal advice, said measures were in place to address the concerns of private solicitors.

The new rules will replace the separate concepts of arrest and detention with a single statutory power of arrest without warrant “where there is reasonable grounds for suspecting a person has committed an offence”.

Officers will be allowed to release a suspect with conditions for up to 28 days for further investigat­ion, with the power to re-arrest them.

Police will be required to “take every precaution to ensure a person is not unnec- essarily held in police custody” and the changes also allow for improved protection­s for under 18s.

The changes have been brought in as a result of the recommenda­tions of Lord Carloway’s 2011 review of Scottish criminal law.

Justice secretary Michael Matheson said they represente­d “some of the most significan­t changes to police procedures in Scotland for at least a generation”.

A spokesman for the SLAB said: “We understand the concerns some solicitors have about managing requests for advice in police stations alongside the other demands of running their businesses.”

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