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December 1, 2004:
Conditional Cautioning Code Issued
A new Code of Practice on Conditional Cautioning for England and Wales has been
published. Conditional Cautioning in essence allows offenders to be given a
suitable disposal without the usual court involvement. The Code governs the use
of Conditional Cautions under Part 3 of the
Criminal Justice Act
2003. The Act defines a Conditional Caution as ‘a caution which is given in
respect of an offence committed by the offender and which has conditions
attached to it’. If an offender fails, without reasonable excuse, to comply with
the conditions attached to a Conditional Caution the Act provides for criminal
proceedings to be instituted and the caution cancelled. Restorative justice
processes can be used as a condition of the caution (where the contact with the
victim, direct or indirect, is itself the condition) if both victim and offender
consent to this.
The basic criteria which must be satisfied before a Conditional Caution can be
considered are:
- the offender is 18 or over
- the offender admits the offence to the
authorised person
- there is, in the opinion of the relevant
prosecutor, sufficient evidence to charge the offender with the offence
If the above criteria are satisfied, a
Conditional Caution may be an alternative to charge, taking into account the
factors outlined in the Code.
A Conditional Caution is a statutory development of the non-statutory police
caution (or ‘simple caution’) which has long been available, at police or
Crown Prosecution Service discretion, as an
alternative to prosecution. A Conditional Caution may only be given by a
suitably trained authorised person, that is a constable; a person designated as
an investigating officer under section 38 of the
Police
Reform Act 2002; or a person authorised for the purpose by a relevant
prosecutor.
Where rehabilitative or reparative conditions (or both) are considered
preferable to prosecution, Conditional Cautioning offers a statutory means of
enforcing them through prosecution for the original offence in the event of
non-compliance. The key to determining whether a Conditional Caution should be
given – instead of prosecution or a simple caution – is that imposing specified
conditions will be an appropriate and effective means of addressing an
offender’s behaviour or making reparation for the effects of the offence on the
victim or the community.
Download the full Code
here.
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