SafeSpeed wrote:
For years the Magistrates Court Service have been a significant partner in camera partnerships. And the Magistrates Court Service has been responsible for Court Clerks' salaries.
They were responsible for salaries for decades before SCPs came in to being.
HMCS now pays all clerks and judges, as far as I am aware that includes the Law Lords. Are you suggesting that every legal decision is unreliable because a percentage of SCP cash finds its way into a part of HMCS that the judiciary have no control over?
I have no knowledge of how much cash my part of HMCS gets from SCPs or what that cash is spent on. I have no control over how any cash is spent or influence over anyone who does decide that sort of thing. Just as they have no control over my judicial decision making.
SafeSpeed wrote:
1) Do you really believe that this is a healthy relationship?
Its an entirely administrative relationship which has no input into, or control over the judicial side of things.
SafeSpeed wrote:
2) Do you really believe that this is an entirely lawful relationship, when the independence of the judiciary and its advisers has to be above the possibility of suspicion?
I assume it to be lawful because it came from parliament and they make the laws.
I know from the day job that it is not possible to prevent a small percentage of people from assuming conspiracy where none exists.
SafeSpeed wrote:
3) What's the relationship (if any) between HMCS and the partnerships?
Entirely administrative as far as I am aware.
SafeSpeed wrote:
The problem here is that Clerks and others, possibly including Magistrates, can be influenced to believe that camera partnerships are doing 'good work' via canteen gossip, notice boards, salary payments and so on.
In my county the court buildings are entirely separate from admin.
The courts are next door to police stations near town centres. The magistrates courts offices are on an industrial estate where the rent and/or taxes are less.
I don't know where the ticket office is - other than its in a specific town.
Although all our courts are next door to police stations we are not allowed to share the police canteen. JPs eat sandwiches in the court retiring rooms, the clerks eat theirs in the clerks room. Or we go out to a pub or cafe. Never to the same one as the clerks, CPS or defence lawyers.
This situation exists in every court I have ever served in.
A huge effort goes into avoiding any appearance of bias or partiality however remote the chance of that suspicion arising.
Its common during the course of a day to swap with a colleague from another court because 1 of us doesn't want to deal with someone who lives in the same street, even if we have never met them.
Until a couple of years ago we were not allowed to wear poppies in court in case it was thought that we might favour ex-service people or be unfair to those not wearing poppies.