CHRONOLOGY | |
1995 | Research into the
information needs of victims and issue of
Judicial Studies Board paper on Body Language
and Cross-cultural Communication to all legal
staff and precognition officers. |
1995 | Working Group on Child
Witness Support set up by the then Lord
Advocate. |
Autumn 1995 | Racial and Cultural
Awareness Training centrally with the
assistance of the Commission for Racial
Equality. |
Early 1996 | Training on the use of
interpreters centrally. Members of Crown Office
Policy Group and other members of the Service
have since been involved in providing training
for interpreters. |
January 1998 | Publication of the Joint
Statement on Crown Witnesses which had been the
work of a joint Crown Office/Scottish Court
Service working group. It committed both the
Department and the SCS to "treat all witnesses
fairly and give consideration to their
interests whatever their race, sex, religion,
age or any special need". |
April 1998 | Crown Office Victim and
Witness Steering Group formed to:- - Keep under review COPFS policies and
practices in relation to victims and
witnesses and to identify areas where
service delivery could be improved.
- Monitor and co-ordinate the
Department's involvement with other
agencies in the development and
implementation of co-ordinated strategy for
initiatives on victim and witnesses.
- Report by June 1998 on options for the
provision of case progress information to
victims and to outline a victim information
strategy.
- Oversee the development of a programme
of victim awareness training that commenced
with a 2-day event in October 2000.
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May 1998 | Issue of revised Chapters 12
and 13 of the COPFS Book of Regulations dealing
with Deaths and Public Inquiries. |
Summer 1998 | Awareness raising seminars
on Chapters 12 and 13 of the COPFS Book of
Regulations. |
1 Aug 1998 | Re-issue of Judicial Studies
Board paper on Body Language and Cross-cultural
Communication to all legal and precognition
staff as part of a review and consolidation of
existing policy guidance, which took place
within Crown Office Policy Group in 1997/8. |
29 Sep 1998 | Crown Office Circular (COC)
on new policy on racially aggravated crime
contained in the Crime and Disorder Act
1998:- - To use statute instead of common law in
summary cases.
- In solemn cases to have regard to the
statutory penalties in making
recommendations on appropriate charge and
forum.
- Fiscal Fines inappropriate.
- District Court inappropriate.
- When using the Section 96 aggravation
the Procurator Fiscal in selecting the
forum must have regard to the maximum
sentencing power of the court to allow the
court to take the aggravation into account
in determining the appropriate
sentence.
- The Department took the unprecedented
step of consulting with the Commission for
Racial Equality on this guidance. The
nature of the guidance has repeatedly been
made public by Lord Advocates at the
Scottish Grand Committee, for example in
early 1999 and in speeches to conferences
organised by Race Equality Councils in June
1999 and March 2000.
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30 Sep 1998 | Crime and Disorder Act 1998
creating the new statutory racially aggravated
offences came into force. |
4 Nov 1998 | The murder of Surjit Singh
Chhokar. |
6/9/10 Nov 1998 | The 3 accused appear at
court. |
13 Nov 1998 | Crown Counsel instructions
issued that only Ronnie Coulter should be fully
committed and that David Montgomery and Andrew
Coulter be liberated meantime. |
17 Nov 1998 | Ronnie Coulter was fully
committed and remanded in custody. The 110-day
time limit in the case was 6 March 1999. |
19 Jan 1999 | The precognition was
reported to Crown Office and Crown Counsel
instruct that Ronnie Coulter be indicted in the
High Court on a charge of murder. The position
with David Montgomery and Andrew Coulter was to
be reviewed after the trial of Ronnie
Coulter. |
13 Feb 1999 | Sir William MacPherson
reported on the Stephen Lawrence Inquiry. |
1 Mar 1999 | Ronnie Coulter was indicted
to the sitting to commence on 1 March and the
trial took place on 2, 3, 4, 5, 7 and 9 March
1999. He was convicted of simple assault and
the Advocate Depute did not move for sentence.
The trial judge openly criticised the Crown's
decision to prosecute Ronnie Coulter alone. |
11 Mar 1999 | The then Lord Advocate's
reply to the trial judge was widely reported in
the media. |
15 Mar 1999 | The Chhokar Family Justice
campaign was established. |
6 Apr 1999 | Following the Stephen
Lawrence Inquiry report the Lord Advocate
issued further directions to COPFS in relation
to the prosecution of racially motivated
crimes, which are in line with Sir William
MacPherson's recommendations in respect of the
Crown Prosecution Service:- - Rebuttable presumption in favour of
prosecution where evidence of racial
motivation existed.
- Particular care should be taken at all
stages of the prosecution to recognise and
include reference to racial motivation
which is an aggravating factor which has
bearing on the offence and bring it to the
attention of the court.
- Pleas of guilty should not be accepted
which exclude available and admissible
evidence of racial motivation.
Although the report did not
specifically relate to Scotland the
recommendations in the report were considered
by the Department and immediately accepted
where relevant. The above guidance was issued
within 6 weeks of the publication of the
Stephen Lawrence inquiry report. |
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April 1999 | The impact of the MacPherson
recommendations on the Department was discussed
at the Senior Civil Service seminar. |
30 Apr 1999 | Victim Steering Group
sub-group on Information to Victims formed to
develop a pilot scheme for the provision of
case progress information to victims. |
Jun 1999 | The then Lord Advocate
addressed a conference arranged by Grampian
Racial Equality Council and stated in response
to questions from the media that criminal
justice agencies must assume that institutional
racism exists or risk complacency which could
itself constitute evidence of the existence of
institutional racism. |
Jun 1999 | The Lord Advocate had
previously commissioned Crown Office Policy
Group to draft an action plan dealing with race
matters, this was completed in June 1999. |
21 Jun 1999 | The case against David
Montgomery and Andrew Coulter was reported to
the Law Officers. |
28 Jun 1999 | Indictment of David
Montgomery and Andrew Coulter instructed. |
Jul 1999 | A pilot workshop on customer
awareness was held at Glasgow Sheriff Court.
Crown Office and the Scottish Court Service in
collaboration with Victim Support Scotland had
developed it. After a favourable
evaluation a team of trainers from each
Department was trained in the delivery of the
programme in September 1999 and thereafter the
training was rolled out to frontline staff. |
16 Aug 1999 | The first sitting into which
the case against David Montgomery and Andrew
Coulter was indicted. |
Sep 1999 | Feasibility study
commissioned on the Lord Advocate's proposal
for a new service for victims attached to
COPFS. |
13 Sep 1999 | The date of the adjourned
indictment - 2
nd sitting. |
Sep 99-Jun 00 | Racial awareness training
delivered regionally to all staff. |
22 Nov 1999 | The date of the adjourned
indictment - 3
rd sitting. |
1999 | Lord Advocate's Working
Group on the support of child witnesses
reported with 16 sets of recommendations. |
2000/2001 | Two members of staff were
seconded from Grampian Racial Equality Council
to the Aberdeen Office where they worked as
Precognition Officers. |
10 Jan 2000 | The date of the adjourned
indictment - 4
th sitting. |
13 Jan 2000 | "Being a Witness" leaflet
translated into Punjabi, Urdu, Bengali,
Chinese, Arabic and Hindi. |
Feb 00 onwards | The Department contributed
to the drafting of the Executive's Action Plan
for Scotland which contained a number of
commitments made by COPFS. The Deputy Crown
Agent represented the Department on the Stephen
Lawrence Inquiry Steering Group. |
14 Feb 2000 | The date of the adjourned
indictment - 5
th sitting. |
10 Apr 2000 | The date of the adjourned
indictment - 6
th sitting. |
Apr 2000 | The Department intimated in
the 2000-2003 Strategic Plan:- - An intention to establish a pilot at
the Aberdeen Office to provide information,
support and assistance to the victims of
serious crime and next of kin.
- A commitment to pursuing a policy of
positive action to improve recruitment of
minority ethnic and disabled staff.
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5 Jun 2000 | The date of the adjourned
indictment - 7
th sitting. |
31 Jul 2000 | The date of the adjourned
indictment - 8
th sitting. The adjournments were as
a result of the devolution issues raised and
appeals ultimately to the Judicial Committee of
the Privy Council. |
Jul 2000 | Lord Advocate established
the Race Strategy Group (later to become the
Diversity Strategy Group) and asked the
Solicitor General to chair this and take
special responsibility for race matters within
the Department. |
Jul 2000 | Issue of a new Chapter of
the COPFS Book of Regulations - Chapter 22
Victims, Next of Kin and Witnesses - including
a section of minority ethnic victims, next of
kin and witnesses. |
10 Aug 2000 | Introduction of practice of
requesting interpreters to attend at the
Procurator Fiscal's Office to facilitate the
witness in claiming expenses. |
28 Sep 2000 | Training for trainers on
Chapter 22 with particular reference to
domestic abuse, later cascaded at Regional
level. |
July-31 Oct 00 | Review of all reports
received by Procurator Fiscals during this
period of racially motivated crime. (Results
reported in Crown Office Circular (COC) dated
14 June 2001:- - Vast majority of Fiscals adhering to
the policy.
- Policy clarified in light of detailed
findings of review and further guidance
issued).
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Sep 2000 | Results of feasibility study
commissioned in September 1999 endorse the Lord
Advocate's proposal for a new service for
victims attached to COPFS - Victim Liaison
Office (now Victim Information and Advice -
VIA). |
9 Oct 2000 | The date of the adjourned
indictment - 9
th sitting. |
23 Oct 2000 | The date of the adjourned
indictment - 10
th sitting. The case was then
adjourned on Crown motion. |
Oct 00 & Mar 01 | Anti-racist training input
to training days for Advocate Deputes (ADs).
Judicial Studies Board Bench book also
circulated to all ADs. |
Oct 2000 | Training for trainers on
Victim Awareness for legal and precognition
staff held with input from Victim Support
Scotland and Rape Crisis, later cascaded at
Regional level. |
6 Nov 2000 | The final trial sitting - 11
th sitting. The trial took place
during November 2000 after the second
anniversary of the death of Surjit Singh
Chhokar. At the conclusion of the trial David
Montgomery was acquitted and Andrew Coulter
found guilty of housebreaking and uttering a
stolen giro cheque but in respect of the murder
he was convicted of assault only. On 29 November 2000 the Lord
Advocate took the unprecedented step of
announcing 2 inquiries into the prosecution
handling of the case. Sir Anthony Campbell
looked at the way prosecution decisions were
made and Dr Raj Jandoo reviewed and reported on
the liaison arrangements in the case and
whether liaison arrangements were affected in
any way by institutional racism. |
Jan 2001 | After a pilot in Glasgow
Language Line telephone interpreting service
has been available in all offices since January
2001. |
Early 2001 | Review of Departmental
arrangements and policy in relation to the
instructions of criminal court interpreters and
followed by guidance on policy and best
practice on 6 July 2001. |
Mar 2001 | Department assisted the
Central Research Unit in relation to research
into racist crime in Scotland. |
2 Apr 2001 | Race Relations (Amendment)
Act 2000 came into force. |
11 May 2001 | COC on RRAA 2000:- - Detailed the specific duties proposed
by the Department in response to the
Act.
- Advertised the establishment of the
Race Strategy Group to develop Departmental
strategy on race issues and the Regional
Resource Teams (now Area Teams) to
co-ordinate race strategy regionally.
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11 May 2001 | Review of arrangements for
instruction of criminal court interpreters
announced in COC - further guidance to come
(issued 6 July 2001). |
May 2001 | The issue of the Lord
Advocate's Guidelines to Chief Constables on
the investigation and reporting of racist crime
in light of the recommendations of the Lawrence
Inquiry Report and the Crown Office review on
racist crime. The perception of the victim as
to motive should be ascertained and reported to
the Fiscal. |
May 2001 | Training for
interpreters. |
Jun 2001 | Secondment of a second year
trainee solicitor to the Commission for Racial
Equality and secondments from the West of
Scotland Community Relations Council to the
Procurator Fiscal's Office at Glasgow started
and continue to the present time. |
14 Jun 2001 | COC on results of review of
racially motivated crime (July - 31 Oct 2000).
The vast majority of Procurator Fiscals were
found to be adhering to Crown Policy. Policy
was refined:- - No change to the rebuttable
presumption.
- Warning letters were never to be
issued.
- Diversion/mediation and reparation was
considered appropriate in a very few cases
and this course could only be followed
after the matter was reported to Crown
Office Policy Group.
- Where police officers were called
"black bastards" and there was sufficient
evidence to institute proceedings under the
statutory provisions Procurator Fiscals
should proceed with the statutory provision
where police officers were of an obvious
minority ethnic background.
- Anti-English racism was caught by the
statutory provisions and if there was
sufficient evidence the statutory
provisions should be libelled.
- Care was required in the consideration
of offences against travelling people as
Romany gypsies are a distinct ethnic group
but there had been no judicial
consideration of Scottish travellers from a
non-Roma background.
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6 Jul 2001 | COC on review by the Race
Strategy Group of arrangements for instruction
of interpreters by Procurator Fiscals.
Introduced:- - Guidance on instruction of
interpreters, on the briefing of
interpreters and using interpreters in
court.
- Minimum requirements on the
qualifications and experience of
interpreters.
- Interpreters' code of conduct.
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20 Jul 2001 | COC on docquet to be
attached to correspondence and other
documentation where despite attempts made to
clarify the position with the police it remains
unclear as to whether the intended recipient
requires translation services. This was
intended as part of an incremental approach
which the Department was taking to the issue of
translation of correspondence and
documentation. The original docquet was in 7
languages; as of 10 May 2004 this is now
30. |
19 Sep 2001 | The Lord Advocate announced
the setting up of an internal management review
to start in October 2001 and Jonathan Pryce, a
senior Civil Servant from the Scottish
Executive and Catherine Dyer, Procurator
Fiscal, Linlithgow appointed (this reported in
February 2002 and led to the reorganisation of
the service from 6 Regions into 11 Areas). |
24 Oct 2001 | The Lord Advocate announced
to Parliament the findings of the inquiries by
Sir Anthony Campbell and Dr Raj Jandoo into the
handling of the tragic case of Surjit Singh
Chhokar. |
2001 | Report by the Centre for
Education for Racial Equality in Scotland
(CERES) at Edinburgh University re an
audit/review of COPFS training (results of
further review submitted 9 August 2002). |
28 Feb 2002 | Report on the planning,
allocation and management of resources in COPFS
- the Pryce Dyer Report that led to the
reorganisation of the COPFS. |
28 Mar 2002 | COC detailing:- - The second set of Lord Advocate's
Guidelines to Chief Constables, which took
effect on 1 April 2002 with the aim of
improving the quality of the investigation
and reporting of racist crime. Although the
guidelines were in preparation prior to the
publication of Dr Jandoo's report into the
tragic case of Surjit Singh Chhokar they
also attempted to take into account many of
the recommendations in the report. They
supersede and consolidate the first set of
guidelines.
- The transfer of responsibility for
interpreters for the accused from COPFS to
the Scottish Court Service from 1 April
2002. This arrangement does not cover the
District Courts and the Procurator Fiscal
continues to instruct interpreters for
accused in some District Courts.
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9 Aug 2002 | Follow up report from CERES
at Edinburgh University on the mainstreaming of
race training. The Diversity Awareness
Programme being rolled out throughout COPFS for
all staff being the result. |
Oct 02-Mar 03 & Oct 03 | Review of quality of police
reporting in light of the terms of the second
set of guidelines from the Lord Advocate to
Chief Constables (follow up exercise in October
2003). |
8 Oct 2002 | COC on the provision of
interpreters for bereaved relatives and
relatives of victims who wish to view
proceedings. |
6 Jun 2003 | Establishment of the
Equality Advisory Group to provide independent
and expert advice to COPFS on the impact or
likely impact of its existing and future
policies on equality issues and any racial,
religious and cultural issues which arise in
criminal cases and in particular the likely
liaison needs of bereaved relatives from a
minority ethnic or religious community. |
27 Jun 2003 | The Criminal Justice
(Scotland) Act 2003 came into force and Section
74 of the Act provided an aggravation of
religious prejudice in relation to any offence.
Evidence from a single source is sufficient to
prove the aggravation. Directions to Procurator
Fiscals were also given on such cases:- - There should be a rebuttable
presumption in favour of prosecution where
evidence of religious prejudice
exists.
- The attention of the court should be
brought to evidence of the religious
prejudice aggravation at all relevant
stages of prosecution.
- Any reduced or partial plea will
require to be fully justified and the
reasons for taking such a plea should be
recorded. There is a strong presumption
against acceptance of a plea that excludes
available and admissible evidence of the
religious prejudice aggravation. Reduced or
partial pleas are not acceptable where the
complainer is a member of a particularly
vulnerable group or where such religious
aggravation may be associated with other
forms of prejudice and, in particular,
racist behaviour.
- Proceedings will normally be
appropriate in the Sheriff Court or above
but there may be some cases where District
Court proceedings will be sufficient and
where a fiscal fine may be considered. The
reasons for taking proceedings or issuing a
fiscal fine should be recorded.
- Where religious prejudice in terms of
Section 74 is libelled in a charge
Procurator Fiscals, in selecting the
appropriate forum, must have regard to the
maximum sentencing power of the court to
allow the court to take the aggravation
into account in determining the appropriate
sentence.
- Warning letters may be considered in
exceptional cases but only on the personal
instruction of the District Fiscal.
- Diversion/Mediation and Reparation.
Some offenders may benefit from such
schemes and the Procurator Fiscal should
check that a suitable course is available
for such cases before following this
course. Such cases should be passed to
District Fiscals to asses and take the
final decision on whether or not to
instruct either of these disposals.
- Guidelines were also issued by the Lord
Advocate to Chief Constables on the
investigation and reporting of offences
aggravated by religious prejudice.
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Sep-Oct 2003 | Training of in-house
trainers for Diversity Awareness Programme
prior to rollout commencing. This training
followed on from attendance at a police run
course. This programme is being rolled out to
every member of the COPFS. |
Oct 2003 | Review of quality of police
reporting in light of the terms of the second
set of guidelines from the Lord Advocate to
Chief Constables (following on from exercise
October 2002 - March 2003). |
Oct 2003 | Establishment of WGIT -
Working Group for Interpreting and Translation
Provision in the Criminal Justice System in
Scotland in partnership with the Scottish Court
Service, Scottish Legal Aid Board, the Police
and the Law Society of Scotland. The aim of the
group is to drive up standards in
interpretation and translation. |
2003 | Publication by the Scottish
Executive of guidance on the investigative
interviewing of children and questioning of
children in court in response to the Lord
Advocate's Working Group on Child Witness
Support. |
17 Feb 2004 | Diversity Proofing Tool
guidance published on Departmental intranet -
race proofing has now been widened to include
the entire diversity agenda. |
31 Mar 2004 | COC providing guidance to
staff in respect of "failed asylum seekers" and
the extent to which the apparent withdrawal of
all financial support could lead to some degree
of criminality. |
Apr 2004 | A survey of members of the
public leaving Procurator Fiscal Offices in
April 2004 by an independent survey company
found satisfaction ratings high with 87% of
users "very" or "fairly" satisfied with the
service received. |
23 Jun 2004 | COC permitting the issue of
warning letters in race cases as an alternative
to prosecution in exceptional
circumstances. |
24 Jun 2004 | Crown Office results of 2003
review of compliance with the Lord Advocate's
Guidelines on the investigation and reporting
of racist crime by the police. |
Sep 2004 | Review of COPFS structure on
diversity with the topics becoming regular
agenda items at the Management Board and the
Legal and Policy Forum meetings replacing the
National Area Diversity Team meetings. Reports
will then be made to the Diversity Strategy
Group which will continue to be chaired by the
Solicitor General. |