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Thursday, July 10, 2025

AG gets cold response to judge alone law change

‘Removal of jury trials not infringing a person’s rights’

by

Gail Alexander
789 days ago
20230512
Attorney General Reginald Armour moves the second reading of the Miscellaneous Provisions (Trial by Judge Alone) Bill, 2023 at yesterday's Senate sitting.

Attorney General Reginald Armour moves the second reading of the Miscellaneous Provisions (Trial by Judge Alone) Bill, 2023 at yesterday's Senate sitting.

OFFICE OF THE PARLIAMENT

gail.alexan­der@guardian.co.tt

The re­moval of ju­ry tri­als is not an in­fringe­ment on a per­son’s con­sti­tu­tion­al rights, says At­tor­ney Gen­er­al Regi­nald Ar­mour.

Speak­ing in the Sen­ate yes­ter­day, Ar­mour sup­port­ed that point by de­tail­ing the Privy Coun­cil’s 1978 de­ci­sion on the Ja­maican case of Trevor Stone and the Queen.

Ar­mour did so while pi­lot­ing de­bate on pro­posed leg­is­la­tion to ex­pand the am­bit of the tri­al by judge alone sys­tem. The bill seeks to amend the Ju­ry and Crim­i­nal Pro­ce­dure Acts.

Ar­mour said it is aimed at re­duc­ing the back­log of cas­es in the crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem by in­tro­duc­ing ju­ry tri­als as the de­fault po­si­tion for all cap­i­tal and non-cap­i­tal in­dictable mat­ters, “with the op­tion for the ac­cused to ap­ply to the court to be tried by a judge and ju­ry.”

It al­so pro­pos­es re­duced ju­ry sizes and lay as­ses­sors with spe­cial ex­per­tise and qual­i­fi­ca­tions with­in a pool of at­tor­neys to as­sist judges.

Ar­mour said the pan­dem­ic pro­vid­ed chal­lenges and op­por­tu­ni­ties to im­ple­ment mea­sures in the crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem that have con­tributed to im­proved ef­fi­cien­cies, and to jus­ti­fy their con­tin­ued use - such as the tri­al by judge alone law, “...which has tremen­dous po­ten­tial to re­duce case back­logs.”

From 2019 when the law was pro­claimed, to Jan­u­ary 31, 2023, he said there were 59 com­plet­ed judge alone tri­als and 35 are pend­ing. On an av­er­age, there were two re­quests per month for such tri­als and 13 re­quests in Jan­u­ary 2023 alone.

Ar­mour said the sta­tis­tics were “self-rec­om­mend­ing” of the suc­cess of the 2017 law. But he said sta­tis­tics from the Ju­di­cia­ry show that the crim­i­nal case back­log has con­tin­ued to in­crease.

“Da­ta from the Ju­di­cia­ry in­di­cates for the pe­ri­od Au­gust 1, 2021 to Ju­ly 21, 2022, there were 15,122 crim­i­nal cas­es filed at the dis­trict courts, in­clud­ing 160 cap­i­tal mat­ters, 207 crim­i­nal cas­es filed at the High Courts in Port-of- Spain, San Fer­nan­do and To­ba­go and 232 crim­i­nal cas­es filed at the Fam­i­ly and Chil­dren Di­vi­sion,” he said.

At Ju­ly 31, 2022, there were 885 crim­i­nal mat­ters pend­ing at the High Courts in PoS, San Fer­nan­do and To­ba­go and 389 crim­i­nal mat­ters pend­ing at the Fam­i­ly and Chil­dren Di­vi­sion.

“Da­ta from the ju­di­cia­ry al­so in­di­cat­ed there are 1,119 de­fen­dants in jail await­ing tri­als,” the AG said.

“These sta­tis­tics are con­cern­ing. The Gov­ern­ment has im­ple­ment­ed sig­nif­i­cant re­forms to ad­dress the crim­i­nal case back­log and we recog­nise there’s more that needs to be done on a con­tin­u­ing ba­sis...”

He added that he’ll be re­turn­ing to Par­lia­ment with oth­er mea­sures very short­ly.

Stat­ing that the re­moval of ju­ry tri­als is not an in­fringe­ment on a per­son’s con­sti­tu­tion­al rights, Ar­mour cit­ed the Ja­maican case.

He not­ed that the Privy Coun­cil dis­missed the ap­peal, af­firm­ing that a Supreme Court judge, “such as our T&T judges,” sit­ting with­out a ju­ry is sim­ply a mat­ter of prac­tice and pro­ce­dure and does not in­volve a fun­da­men­tal right to tri­al by a judge and ju­ry.

Ar­mour said that set­tled prin­ci­ple of law equal­ly ap­plies to T&T.

Ar­mour said ju­ry tri­als re­quire 12 to 18 peo­ple to par­tic­i­pate and some­times go up to months with the pos­si­bil­i­ty of dis­agree­ment, a hung ju­ry or re­tri­al nec­es­sary.

He said the process is lengthy and chal­leng­ing, as of­ten, peo­ple are un­will­ing to be ju­rors and a greater per­cent­age of per­sons present rea­sons against serv­ing.

Ar­mour not­ed a “heinous mur­der” case when he was a young at­tor­ney, when find­ing ju­rors took months be­cause peo­ple were scared. He not­ed ju­rors had to be found on the Ch­aguara­mas beach near where the court was lo­cat­ed.

He said tri­al by judge alone re­duces wait­ing time for tri­als, since ju­ry se­lec­tion isn’t done. Re­sources that might be spent on em­pan­elling ju­rors/al­ter­nates are al­so saved and judges must de­liv­er a ver­dict be­fore ex­piry of 40 days.

Say­ing it pro­vid­ed a more ex­pe­di­tious crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem, Ar­mour added, “Some­thing which I do not think a sin­gle woman or man on the streets of this Re­pub­lic will sug­gest is not a de­sired ob­jec­tive.”

The AG in­di­cat­ed that com­ments were sought on the bill, in­clud­ing from the Of­fice of the Di­rec­tor of Pub­lic Pros­e­cu­tions and Law As­so­ci­a­tion.


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