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£37,500 cap for automatic legal aid revealed under Justice Secretary's proposals

 

Jamie Grierson
Tuesday 09 April 2013 13:07 BST
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Cap on legal aid is one of a number of reforms put out to consultation by Justice Secretary Chris Grayling
Cap on legal aid is one of a number of reforms put out to consultation by Justice Secretary Chris Grayling (Getty Images)

Criminal defendants living in households with a disposable income of £37,500 or more are to be stopped from automatically accessing legal aid under new proposals revealed today.

The cap is one of a number of reforms put out to consultation by Justice Secretary Chris Grayling that are aimed at slashing the criminal legal aid bill by £220 million.

Prisoners' rights to legal aid would be curbed, while the reforms could also pave the way for lawyers to compete for contracts.

Mr Grayling said: "We have an excellent tradition of legal aid and one of the best legal professions in the world. But we cannot close our eyes to the fact legal aid is still costing too much. It is not free money, it is paid for by hard-working taxpayers, so we must ensure we get the very best value for every penny spent."

The consultation is launched as Mr Grayling also called for measures that would see criminals pay for the cost of running courts out of their future earnings.

Offenders can already be required to make payments to victims, the courts or other Government agencies through a range of orders and fines, but there is currently no power to make them pay directly towards the running cost of the court.

Criminal legal aid costs taxpayers more than £1 billion every year, the Ministry of Justice said.

Among the reforms put out for consultation, the Government also wants to clamp down on the small number of high cost cases that swallow millions of pounds in public money.

A residency test has also been proposed to ensure legal aid does not go to immigrants who have only recently arrived in the country.

But solicitors hit out at proposals to introduce competition for legally-aided advice and representation.

Lucy Scott-Moncrieff, president of the Law Society, which represents solicitors in England and Wales, said: "In several previous attempts, the Government has been unable to come up with a workable model for price tendering, and we do not see how they will be able to address the fundamental difficulties this time round.

"We also think it is implausible that tendering will save the sort of sums of money the Treasury is looking for, and there is some doubt whether it will save anything at all."

However, the proposals would not cover crown court advocacy - a move welcomed by barristers.

Maura McGowan QC, chairman of the Bar Council, which represents barristers in England and Wales, said: "Whilst tendering for crown court advocacy is not an option which is being consulted upon, that news comes alongside swingeing fee cuts, which will hit the criminal Bar exceptionally hard.

"The publicly-funded Bar is a vital front-line service, which is already at breaking point. For those who have invested a decade or more in developing their skills and expertise, these proposals, alongside prosecution cuts, will be a particularly bitter pill to swallow."

Last week, reforms to the Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act (Laspo) came into effect, removing large areas of law from the scope of civil legal aid.

Some law firms estimated the reforms will reduce the number of people who qualify for legal aid by 75%, meaning around 200,000 fewer cases, while barristers warned the cuts are the biggest to civil legal aid since the system was introduced in 1949.

PA

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