MOJ announces that the new Legal Aid Act has today been given Royal Assent
The new Legal Aid, Sentencing & Punishment of Offenders Act 2012 was given Royal Assent today and is now law.
The Ministry of Justice gives the following information:
"The Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders (LASPO) Act 2012 introduces a wide range of reforms to the justice system as well as delivering structural reforms to the administration of legal aid.
The Act:
• Ensures that legal aid is available for those who require formal legal advice and assistance and provides access to a range of alternative sources of dispute resolution in appropriate cases
• Increases mediation funding to £25 million a year and provide an additional £20 million a year for the next three years for third sector advice and assistance organisations
• Reforms civil litigation procedures by dealing with disproportionate legal costs, and by capping the amount that lawyers can take in success fees
• Makes referral fees illegal in personal injury cases
• Makes it an offence to threaten people with a knife in public and at schools, with offenders receiving a minimum prison sentence (6 months for adults and a 4 months Detention Training Order for 16 and 17 year olds)
• Makes prisoners work harder, longer and on meaningful tasks, earning money for victims
• Makes it a crime to squat in people's homes
• Creates a new offence to appropriately punish drivers who seriously injure others by driving dangerously.
The Act also contains a number of new measures to protect the public and reduce reoffending including:
• Creating a new youth remand and sentencing structure, which gives more flexibility to courts to decide on appropriate disposals
• Creating tougher community sentences with longer curfews for offenders
• Giving prosecutors the right to appeal against bail decisions when they think the defendant could be dangerous, or might flee the country
• Reforming the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act, to help ex-offenders reintegrate into society after their sentences.
• Creating a tough new sentencing regime to replace the inconsistent Imprisonment for Public Protection (IPP) sentence.
• Doubling to 30 years the starting point for sentences for murders motivated by hate on grounds of disability or transgender – in line with other hate crime murders.
The Bill was introduced in the House of Commons on 21 June 2011 and received Royal Assent on 1 May 2012."
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