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Speech in Commons Chamber - Mon 22 Jun 2020
Extradition (Provisional Arrest) Bill [Lords]

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Speech in Commons Chamber - Mon 22 Jun 2020
Extradition (Provisional Arrest) Bill [Lords]

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Written Question
Slavery: Car Washes
Friday 6th March 2020

Asked by: Steve Baker (Conservative - Wycombe)

Question to the Attorney General:

To ask the Attorney General, how many cases have been brought by the Director of Public Prosecutions in respect of modern slavery at hand car washes; and how many convictions there have been as a result of those cases.

Answered by Michael Ellis

The data published by the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) shows the number of defendants prosecuted for offences of human trafficking for all forms of exploitation. To obtain details on the number of defendants prosecuted for offences relating to exploitation at hand-car washes would require a manual examination of individual case files to be undertaken at a disproportionate cost.

The table below shows the number of defendants prosecuted in cases flagged as human trafficking offences in England and Wales from 2015/16 to September 2019.

Convictions

Non-Convictions

Total

Volume

%

Volume

%

2015 - 16

192

65.1%

103

34.9%

295

2016 - 17

181

61.4%

114

38.6%

295

2017 - 18

185

65.1%

99

34.9%

284

2018 - 19

219

68.0%

103

32.0%

322

April - Sept 19

114

72.2%

44

27.8%

158

Data Source: CPS Case Management Information System


Speech in Commons Chamber - Wed 25 Sep 2019
Legal Advice: Prorogation

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Speech in Commons Chamber - Tue 12 Mar 2019
Withdrawal Agreement: Legal Opinion

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Speech in Commons Chamber - Mon 03 Dec 2018
Withdrawal Agreement: Legal Position

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Speech in Commons Chamber - Tue 26 Apr 2016
European Convention on Human Rights: UK Membership

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Speech in Westminster Hall - Wed 03 Feb 2016
Serious Fraud Office: Bryan Evans

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Speech in Westminster Hall - Wed 03 Feb 2016
Serious Fraud Office: Bryan Evans

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Written Question
Prisons: Crimes of Violence
Tuesday 18th November 2014

Asked by: Steve Baker (Conservative - Wycombe)

Question to the Attorney General:

To ask the Attorney General, if the Crown Prosecution Service will take steps to ensure that all assaults against prison officers are prosecuted.

Answered by Jeremy Wright

The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) is committed to ensuring that assaults against prison officers are dealt with robustly. The CPS considers each case on its own facts and in accordance with the two stage test set out in the Code for Crown Prosecutors.The Code outlines that a prosecution is more likely to be in the public interest if the offence was committed against a person serving the public. Furthermore, the specific CPS Legal Guidance on Prison Offences outlines that, if the victim is a prison officer performing his/her duty, the public interest is heavily in favour of prosecution.

In addition to this, the new joint protocol produced by the Prison Service, CPS and Association of Chief Police Officers will set out that when there are serious assaults on prison staff, the perpetrators will be prosecuted unless there is a good reason why not.