Catherine questioned the Attorney General in the Commons yesterday (27th November) in her role as Shadow Attorney General. She raised the issue of hate crime, whilst her colleague and Shadow Solicitor General, Karl Turner MP, questioned the Attorney General on the Crown Prosecution Service’s budget. Their questions can be read below, with the full question session available here.

Catherine McKinnell: The sad reality is that hate crime is a growing problem. A young Muslim woman, Ruhi Rehman, was racially abused when travelling on the metro in my home town of Newcastle on Saturday. Thankfully, her attacker was chased off by outraged passengers, but not everyone is fortunate enough to have “Geordie angels”. More than 27% of prosecutions for hate crimes are currently failing because of victim issues, a significant rise since 2010. Do the Government share my concern that victims are being let down, and that serious crimes are going unpunished as a result.

Solicitor General: I am grateful to the hon. Lady for raising that case. When I attended a hate crime training conference at the College of Policing a few weeks ago, not only disability hate crime but the type of hate crime to which she has referred was very much on the agenda. She will be glad to know that the CPS is enhancing training for all the leaders in their regions, which I think will result in a renewed emphasis on the need to make victims confident that the system will work for them rather than against them.

 

Karl Turner: At the beginning of the year, the DPP (Director of Public Prosecutions) asked the Attorney General for an extra £50 million to plug the funding gap so that the CPS (Crown Prosecution Service) could properly prosecute complex matters, such as historical sex cases. He confirmed to this House that he was talking to the Treasury about this extra funding and that he thought it would understand the case he was making, but there was no mention in yesterday’s Autumn Statement of this extra, special funding for historical sex cases. What went wrong?

Attorney General: The hon. Gentleman should pay close attention to what the CPS is saying now, as much as to what it said then. Let me tell him what it said yesterday in response to the settlement. It said:

“This settlement will allow the CPS to respond to a changing caseload and the significant increase in complex and sensitive cases, such as terrorism, rape and serious sexual assaults and child sex abuse.”

The CPS is making the same point that I am making today about this settlement: it is a settlement that recognises the need to deal with precisely the type of increase in case load that he is talking about.

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