Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
The government wants to reduce the number of jury trials
to address backlogs in the court system. So to do this,
to get a jury trial at the moment, you must
be charged with an offense which carries a maximum penalty
of two years or more in prison. They want to
up that too, three or four years. The idea being
that fewer people will have the option of a jury
trial and will speed the whole thing up. Philip Morgan
is Casey is a barrister. He's with us this morning. Philip,
(00:23):
good morning, good morning, Thank you, thank you for being here.
Do you think this is going to work?
Speaker 2 (00:29):
I have my doubt. I mean, cly, I applaud anything
to try and produce the backlog and the courts, but
I question the number of jury trials that will drop
merely because the threshold of two years in prison un
(00:49):
or more has changed to three years in prison or more,
or even four years imprisonment or more. That's because I
think that the number of very trials which proceed to
trial for which the most serious offense in the Crown
charge notice is an offense of liable to a term
(01:14):
of imprisonment for two or three years or more. I
think that the number of such cases is very small.
Speaker 1 (01:21):
Okay, what is the hit rate? Guilty v. Not guilty
jury verse judge? What do you advise your clients?
Speaker 2 (01:32):
There isn't an answer to the rate. And what I
tend to advise my clients is that there are advantages
and disadvantages in addcting either judge alone or judge and jury,
and they need to make a decision based on a
series of criteria. These days, it's fair to say that
(01:57):
there's no real advantage to a defendant in deciding to
go judge alone compared to a ging jury. So in
it certainly in terms of your initial election, whether you
ultimately stay and have it with the election for trial
(02:21):
by jury or change it back to judge alone, you
know that will vary from case to case as well.
Speaker 1 (02:30):
And you can get some benefits by doing that, can't
you If you pick judge alone, Do you have to
do judge alone?
Speaker 2 (02:39):
Ordinarily, yes, it's difficult to persuade a court once you've
elected judge alone or you've not made an election of
til by jury, to be able to change that to
judge alone.
Speaker 1 (02:53):
And that's part of the problem, isn't it, Because that's
why everyone goes, well, I'll do jury and then I
can always flip to judge alone later.
Speaker 2 (03:00):
Yeah, I agree, which.
Speaker 1 (03:01):
Draws the pro whole process out, which defeats the purpose.
And yeah, yeah, all right, hey, thanks very much for
your time. That's Philip Morgan k C with us. We say,
barrister talking there about the government's plans to try and
I am on applaud it for doing something I guess,
try and reduce the backlog in our court system, because,
as they say, justice delayed is justice denied.
Speaker 2 (03:23):
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