Yorkshire Post

‘Cuts to the forensic service are a risk to justice’

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CUTS TO funding for forensic science work are eating into essential services – heightenin­g the risk of miscarriag­es of justice, an official watchdog has warned.

Gillian Tully flagged up the potential for wrongful conviction­s or evidence being missed as she raised the alarm over ongoing financial reductions.

Dr Tully, the Forensics Science Regulator, said: “A year ago I warned that funding was too tight, and now even more money has been taken out of the system. We cannot continue on this path.”

She detailed how scientists have been required to give expert advice based on interim forensic reports because some police forces have refused to pay for them to produce statements of evidence that can be admitted in court.

Downward pressure on costs, which affects both commercial and government-funded organisati­ons, has eroded the time available for profession­al developmen­t, the regulator said.

Publishing her annual report covering the year to November 2017, Dr Tully said: “My concern is there was no fat in the system as it was.

“The more pressure you put on people, the less time they have to spend on their actual work, the more you raise the risk of errors.

“The worst case is that there are miscarriag­es of justice, either through the wrong person being convicted or through justice being denied to somebody because, for example, the evidence wasn’t found when it should have been.”

She called for the Government to put her role on a statutory footing so she can ensure all bodies providing forensic science evidence in the criminal justice system meet the required high standards.

Techniques including analysis of DNA, fingerprin­ts and digital evidence play a major role in a range of criminal investigat­ions.

The publicly owned Forensic Science Service, which previously provided police with the majority of such work, was controvers­ially closed in 2012.

Dr Tully warned some forces have missed the deadlines to achieve standards in their own forensic science practices, leading to a lack of independen­t assurance on the quality of the work.

Her report noted that progress has been made in the sector.

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