Guest guest Posted October 12, 2005 Report Share Posted October 12, 2005 " Lori Price " <lrprice Tue, 11 Oct 2005 23:55:05 -0700 (PDT) Summary justice needed to fight crime says Blair Breaking News and Commentary from Citizens for Legitimate Government 12 October 2005 http://www.legitgov.org/ http://news.scotsman.com/politics.cfm?id=2075882005 Summary justice needed to fight crime says Blair JAMES KIRKUP AND GERRI PEEV TONY Blair yesterday threatened to impose " summary justice " on people accused of offences including terrorism, organised crime and neighbourhood yobbery. Claiming that the criminal justice system was " passing through a watershed, " the Prime Minister suggested a radical and far-reaching shift in legal practice, hinting that many traditional legal protections could be swept away. Mr Blair identified terrorism, brutal, violent, organised crime and antisocial behaviour as " new types of crime " that require new rules. " You can't do it by the rules of the game we have at the moment, you just can't, " he told a Downing Street press conference. Mr Blair's increasingly hardline stance on legal matters has drawn criticism from civil rights groups. Yesterday appeared to put the Prime Minister at odds with Charles Clarke, the Home Secretary, over the new Terrorism Bill which would give police sweeping new powers to detain suspects. Going beyond that proposal, Mr Blair suggested that police could get more powers to impose fines on suspected offenders, or expel people accused of drug crimes from public rented housing. Only after the penalty had been imposed would the accused have the right to mount a legal appeal to prove their innocence. " Now that is summary justice, " Mr Blair told journalists in Downing Street. " It is tough and it is hard, but in my judgment it is the only way to deal with it, and that comes first. " Hinting at a shift away from the presumption of innocence as the foundation of the legal code, Mr Blair said: " You have got to put the ability to protect the law-abiding citizen at the centre of it. " Mr Blair said he had lost patience with the traditional judicial process, because it made convictions too hard to secure. While Mr Blair gave no details of his plans for organised crime, he admitted that " some people " will find them " difficult " because they will change long-established rules. New rules for organised crime and anti-social behaviour will come in the next few months, but the government's immediate project is the Terrorism Bill published yesterday. The bill's most contentious clause would allow police to detain suspects without charge for up to three months. Mr Blair insisted there could be no compromise on that plan, which is based closely on a request to government from senior police officers. Mr Blair insisted that he was not simply doing everything he was told by the police. " If they are right, then how can I responsibly refuse to do something that will actually protect, the most basic civil liberty, which is the right to life? " The apparent split in the Cabinet over the measure was exposed when the Prime Minister said there was a " compelling " case for police to be granted the powers. The detention clause remains the main stumbling block to reaching cross-party consensus on the Terrorism Bill, and despite Mr Blair's stance, many MPs expect the government will eventually water down the proposal. • Mr Blair also signalled that a controversial plan to dock the housing benefits of so-called neighbours from hell is back on the government's agenda. The measure, floated and dropped two years ago, could re-appear in a government paper on welfare reform later this year, the Prime Minister said. " There's nothing that is ruled out, " he said when asked if the plan could be resurrected. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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