⌂ Home News Raising the Age of Criminal Responsibility: A Call for Reform

Raising the Age of Criminal Responsibility: A Call for Reform

Raising the Age of Criminal Responsibility: A Call for Reform
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The Bar Council of England and Wales has completed an expert review recommending that the minimum age of criminal responsibility be raised from 10 to 14.

Currently, England and Wales have the lowest age in Europe, a relic of Victorian-era attitudes that experts say harm children and fail to protect society.

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Kirsty Brimelow KC, chair of the Bar Council, argues that bringing young children into the criminal justice system is counterproductive.

Data shows that two-thirds of young offenders reoffend, and 80% of adult persistent offenders first entered the system as children.

Children as young as 10 can be arrested and detained by police, subjected to the same initial detention periods as adults.

In the year to March 2024, 45% of arrested children were held overnight, with an average detention of 11.5 hours.

Research indicates that children struggle to engage with the cognitive demands of the legal process, raising concerns about the fairness of their convictions.

The Case of Dylan: A Life Under Sentence

One case illustrates the long-term impact.

Dylan, now in his 30s, was sentenced to detention for public protection (DPP) at age 13 for a bag-snatching incident.

He spent most of the next two decades under the shadow of that sentence, facing repeated recalls to prison for minor breaches, even without committing new offenses.

He was finally unconditionally released earlier this year, nearly 20 years after the sentence was imposed.

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J
Editors Team
Author: Johan Robert
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