PARLIAMENTARY WRITTEN QUESTION
Prosecutions (10 July 2014)
Question Asked
Asked by:
Emily Thornberry (Labour)
Answer
Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) cases are not prosecuted exclusively by self-employed advocates or in-house advocates. Many cases are transferred between self-employed and in-house advocates and therefore it is not possible to report on the number or proportion of cases prosecuted solely by one type of advocate or the other.
However, the CPS does record the proportion of work undertaken across the 13 CPS Areas in the Crown Court by self-employed advocates by value, in accordance with the graduated fee scheme (GFS). CPS records show:
Crown Court Advocacy (13 Area position) | |
SELF-EMPLOYED ADVOCATES | |
% of prosecutions by GFS value | |
2008-09 | 78% |
2009-10 | 75% |
2010-11 | 72% |
2011-12 | 69% |
2012-13 | 70% |
2013-14 | 71% |
The cost to the CPS of fees paid to self-employed advocates in relation to Crown Court and Higher Court advice, preparation and advocacy for each of the last six years is:
2013-14: £114,606,541
2012-13: £110,608,524
2011-12; £111,041,044
2010-11: £134,194,869
2009-10: £135,296,368
2008-09: £127,132,677
Note: Figures include VAT and are all fees paid to self-employed advocates not just those paid under the graduated fee scheme.
All of the cases prosecuted by the Serious Fraud Office in the Crown Court are prosecuted by external counsel. Costs associated with this are detailed in the following table.
2008/09 | 2009/10 | 2010/11 | 2011/12 | 2012/13 | 2013/14 | |
Fees to counsel relating to prosecution work |
£3,146k |
£2,313k |
£3,651k |
£4,008k |
£3,548k |
£4,167k |
Answered by:
Sir Jeremy Wright (Conservative)
1 September 2014
Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0.