Royal Commission on Criminal Justice

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Royal_Commission_on_Criminal_Justice an entity of type: WikicatBritishRoyalCommissions

The Royal Commission on Criminal Justice, also known as the Runciman Commission, was established in London on 14 March 1991 by the Home Secretary for the purpose of examining the English system of criminal justice and make recommendations as to changes that should be made increase the efficiency of the system and the effective justice inherent in the process. It took effect in 1993. The Commission was the continuation of Sir John May's inquiry into the false convictions of the Maguire Seven and extension to other miscarriages of justice. Viscount Runciman was the original chairman. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Royal Commission on Criminal Justice
xsd:integer 12690879
xsd:integer 1102656776
rdf:langString The Royal Commission on Criminal Justice, also known as the Runciman Commission, was established in London on 14 March 1991 by the Home Secretary for the purpose of examining the English system of criminal justice and make recommendations as to changes that should be made increase the efficiency of the system and the effective justice inherent in the process. It took effect in 1993. The Commission was the continuation of Sir John May's inquiry into the false convictions of the Maguire Seven and extension to other miscarriages of justice. Viscount Runciman was the original chairman. In particular, it was to examine:1) The behaviour of the police and supervising officers.2) Proper process of prosecutors3) Forensic science and the role of professional witnesses.4) The rights of the accused to a proper defence.5) The range of powers of the courts in the process, and if the balance is proper.6) The global efficacy of the process, including process in the right to appeal. The Royal Commission reported to Parliament in July 1993 and recommended the establishment of an independent body to: * consider suspected miscarriages of justice * refer appropriate cases to the Court of Appeal As a result the Criminal Appeal Act 1995 established the Criminal Cases Review Commission as an executive non-departmental public body.The total expenditure of the Royal Commission was £2 600 000.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 2380

data from the linked data cloud