Criminal Proceedings in Magistrates Court

Criminal Proceedings in the Magistrates’ Court: Exceptional Funding On The Grounds Of Hardship

The Criminal Defence Service Act 2006 received Royal Assent on 30 March 2006. It provides enabling powers to transfer responsibility for the grant of legal aid from the courts to the LSC, and to introduce a new means test for legal aid applicants.

The means test will be introduced for criminal proceedings in the magistrates’ court on 2 October 2006. The purpose of the Hardship Review is to allow legal aid applicants who fail the means test but believe that they are genuinely unable to pay for their defence costs to have their circumstances reviewed on the basis of whether they have sufficient means to afford the costs of their case.

We believe that the Hardship Review proposals will ensure that the resources made available to the legal aid fund are directed towards those in genuine financial need, and allocated in an efficient, consistent, transparent and fair way.

These proposals expand on the policy outlined in the ‘Criminal Defence Service Bill: Supplement to the Framework Document’ and the Criminal Defence Service Act Regulations published by the Department for Constitutional Affairs (DCA).

This consultation closes on 17 August 2006. The consultation paper is under Related Documents.

Queries and consultation responses should be sent to:

Alex Nash
Contract Design
Legal Services Commission
85 Gray’s Inn Road
London
WC1X 8TX
DX 328 London/Chancery Lane
0207 759 0344
alex.nash@legalservices.gov.uk

 

Last updated: 28 December 2006

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