Philip Davies – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the Ministry of Justice
The below Parliamentary question was asked by Philip Davies on 2014-03-10.
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, what the average cost was of a (a) jury trial at the Crown Court for (i) either way offences sent by magistrates where their sentencing powers were not deemed sufficient, (ii) either way offences where the defendant has chosen to elect jury trial and (iii) indictable only offences and (b) trial in a magistrates’ court for (i) summary only offences and (ii) either way offences in the latest period for which figures are available.
Shailesh Vara
The information requested is not currently available in full. An analysis of criminal court costs is based on average timings from Activity Based Costing allocations models. Some of the timings in the models are based on a timing survey, conducted in a representative sample of courts. Undertaking a new survey to support an analysis of costs in a different way to that currently available could only be achieved at disproportionate cost.
Some of the information is available. There are a number of different ways costs of cases can be estimated, depending on how indirect costs are apportioned. Estimates below are based on 2012/13 costs (up-rated to 2013/14 prices).
Costs at the Crown Court are analysed by offence type (criminal damage, burglary, drug offences etc) rather than by how the offence has come to be heard in the Crown Court. Estimates are based on average trial lengths – individual trials for any given case may be longer or shorter. The lower and upper trial cost estimates shown below are the weighted average of upper and lower estimates for all either way or indictable offence types.
Summary offences in the magistrates’ court have been split into motoring and non-motoring offence types.
Estimated Average Costs |
Lower |
Higher |
In the Crown Court (Either way or indictable trial in the Crown Court) |
||
Committed for trial |
£5,500 |
£6,400 |
Sent for trail |
£9,500 |
£10,500 |
In the Magistrates Court |
Lower |
Higher |
Summary motoring trial |
£500 |
£600 |
Summary non-motoring trial |
£1,000 |
£1,300 |
Either way trial in the magistrates’ court |
£1,300 |
£1,700 |
These figures do not include legal aid costs.
Costs shown to the nearest £100.