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Did the U.K. Propose a ‘Two-Tier Justice System’ for Criminal Sentencing? – Peter Gattuso

A proposed sentencing guideline in England and Wales has Brits and social media users roiling over a policy they say would introduce a two-tier justice system that unfairly discriminates against white men. 

The Sentencing Council for England and Wales—established by the U.K. Parliament in 2010 to promote transparency and consistency in sentencing and made up of eight British judges and six experts on criminal law—in early March proposed a “significantly revised” set of guidelines to take effect on April 1. Members in both major U.K. political parties quickly objected to the guidelines’ changes to “pre-assessment reports,” with critics calling the guidance discriminatory because it could bring information about an offender’s gender, ethnicity, and religion into sentencing decisions. As members of Parliament from both parties committed publicly to passing a bill to block parts of the guidelines, the Sentencing Council announced March 31—one day before the new guidelines were to take effect—an indefinite delay on enacting the proposed guidance.

While the United Kingdom is governed by its unitary parliament, the country splits its judiciary into three distinct legal systems. England and Wales share a legal system, while Scotland and Northern Ireland each have their own. 

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