Courts and Tribunals Bill — Further written evidence submitted by Tim Crosland, PlanB.Earth (CTB32)
Parliament bill publication: Written evidence. Commons.
Courts and Tribunals Bill Supplemental evidence further to submissions of 25 March 2026 (see ) Jury trial, Public Bill Committee Tim Crosland, PlanB.Earth Proposal: to introduce a clause to the Bill to safeguard the vital constitutional
principle
of
jury
equity
Suggested mode of implementation. Add the following the proposed new section
74A
of
the
Senior
Courts
Act
1981
(i.e.
within
section
3(1)
of
the
Bill)(3) The trial is to be conducted with a jury if— (a) the offence, or any of the offences, is triable only on indictment, or (b) the court considers that at least one of the conditions in
subsection
(5)
or subsection (6) is met in relation to the defendant, or
any
of
the
defendants
…
(6) The condition in this subsection is met in relation to a defendant if it is
clear
that
the
defendant’s
motivation
was
to
expose
government
or
corporate
wrong-doing
or
otherwise
to
advance
the
public
interest
…
Rationale for proposal My submission to the Committee of 25 March 2026 highlighted the democratic danger
of
removing
jury
trial
from
those
taking
principled
action
to
challenge
the
interests
of
the
powerful.
The practical effect would be to remove the centuries old principle of jury equity, a vital
constitutional
safeguard
against
executive
overreach.
A recent article in the Daily Telegraph made a similar point: “I’m a criminal barrister. This is the real reason jury trials must not be
scrapped”,
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https://www.telegraph.co.uk/opinion/2025/11/28/criminal-barrister-jury-trials-comment/ ‘I’m a criminal barrister, and it is a strange feature of this debate that of all
the
many
benefits
of
the
jury
system,
the
most
highly
prized
is
one
that
cannot
be
spoken
of
in
court:
the
common
law
power
to
acquit
in
spite
of
the
evidence
–
sometimes
called
“jury
equity”.’
Some recent examples of jury acquittals in cases concerning the boundary between the
democratic
right
to
protest
and
the
criminal
law:
In April 2021 a jury acquitted ‘the Shell 6’ of criminal damage, after they spray painted Shell HQ with “Shell Lies” and “Shell Kills”, in protest against the company’s climate
disinformation
campaigns.
In January 2022 a jury acquitted ‘the Colston 4’ of criminal damage after they toppled a statue of the slave trader Edward Colston into Bristol Harbour. In November 2022 a jury acquitted members of Palestine Action for targeting the arms manufacturer, Elbit, which makes drones used to kill Palestinians. In January 2023 a jury acquitted Insulate Britain campaigners of public nuisance after an M4 roadblock, demanding government action on the climate crisis and fuel poverty. In June 23 a jury acquitted ‘the Brook House 3’ of public nuisance, for disrupting deportations to Jamaica. Such verdicts divide opinion. But to the extent that they appear ‘shocking’ to those in
power,
they
also
provide
a
unique
insight
into
informed
public
opinion
(i.e.
opinion
which
has
been
formed
on
the
basis
of
a
careful
consideration
of
the
evidence).
Juries are uniquely well placed to determine the proper boundary of democratic rights,
exercised
in
the
public
interest,
to
expose
alleged
abuses
of
power.
Democratic
participation
and
democracy
would
be
substantially
weakened
by
the
removal
of
jury
trials
in
such
cases.
The proposed additional sub-clause would preserve the principle of jury equity for the
class
of
cases
for
which
it
is
arguably
most
significant,
i.e.
for
those
who
are
prosecuted
for
taking
action
to
hold
power
to
account.
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