Scottish defence lawyers boycott custody court to force government’s hand
Criminal defence lawyers in Scotland are taking part in a one-day boycott of custody hearings to protest them being scheduled on a court holiday.
Scotland’s most senior judge, the Lord President, Lord Carloway, announced last year that such courts would be convened on court holidays despite the defence profession not being consulted nor offered additional remuneration, in contrast to prosecutors and others.
Writing to Justice Secretary Keith Brown at the weekend, Fiona McKinnon, president of the Glasgow Bar Association, stated that the GBA had been told “that there is no reasonable prospect of our concerns being addressed by legislative change until next Autumn at the earliest”.
As a result, all GBA members who responded to a poll favoured action, our sister publication Scottish Legal News reports.
Ms McKinnon wrote: “This would ordinarily be anathema to us as our raison d’etre is to help those who are most vulnerable in our society. It is clearly symptomatic of decades of underinvestment in the defence and the widening gulf in investment between Crown and defence.”
She referred to the Scottish government’s “disastrously implemented” resilience fund for defence firms which was only salvaged with the “input of bar association presidents and Law Society representatives”.
“Our members have therefore voted in unity to enjoy public holidays and will decline to attend your holiday custody courts until further notice. No member who voted was in favour of continuing to work holiday custody courts without achieving pay parity with our justice partners.
“That there is complete unity about this demonstrates the strongly held beliefs that practitioners have about their treatment by successive Scottish governments and the apparent lack of respect towards us amongst our justice partners.”
The GBA has also been joined by the Aberdeen Bar Association, whose president, Ian Woodward-Nutt, said that “Aberdeen criminal lawyers have decided to boycott all future holiday custody courts until further notice”.
“It should be obvious to any impartial observer that it cannot be right to expect defence lawyers to work during their holidays without reasonable remuneration,” he added.
The defence solicitors of West Lothian and Peterhead faculties and those in Banff have also confirmed they will adopt the GBA position and will “decline to attend holiday custody courts until further notice”.
Ms McKinnon also warned that unless the defence profession is given clear details on funding of the duty solicitor scheme during COP26 in November, “our members cannot make an informed decision about participating”.
Solicitor Aamer Anwar told SLN that the “defence bar is haemorrhaging lawyers at such a rate to the Crown Office that any hope of diversity is now non-existent”.
“The average age of defence lawyers hovers around the 50s and they are mostly male and white.”
He said that the Crown Office need only “click their fingers to receive millions from a government that forgets there is no justice without a defence”.
Mr Anwar added: “But no need to worry because soon there will be no miscarriages of justice, as there will be no defence lawyers able to launch an appeal on legal aid.
“Keith Brown’s silence on the worst crisis ever to face our legal system, speaks volumes, as he jumps to the tune of his justice department, our legal system at times feels more on a par with a third world country’s.”
The lawyer remarked that today’s action is “likely to be the first of many, but until we completely shut the courts down, then the rapid decay will continue”.