Clause 3 — Applications

Part of Orders of the Day — Consolidated Fund (Appropriation) (No. 2) Bill – in the House of Commons at 7:00 pm on 8 July 2008.

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Photo of Vera Baird Vera Baird Solicitor General, Law Officers' Department 7:00, 8 July 2008

I doubt whether the situation is as the hon. Gentleman says. As I understand it, magistrates would be able to write to the Attorney-General to ask for a special counsel to be appointed, just as a judge would do, I think, using the more ordinary route. They would not just appoint under inherent jurisdiction, but would write to the Attorney-General asking for an appointment to be made in that fashion. I do not think, therefore, that there is a bar on magistrates courts having such assistance—if assistance it be—but it is very difficult to get a clear view of what special counsel is intended to be at all in this case. Is it to be a person who represents the defence, so that there are no secret things that the defence counsel cannot know, because he must pass them on to his own client? Alternatively, is it, as Mr. Hogg suggested, really an aid to the judge; or is it, as Mr. Garnier suggested, somebody who susses out whether the witness is really frightened or not? All three conflict with each other. Is that not the problem with trying to get a provision such as this into legislation now, rather than waiting until we have sorted out what we really want?