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Appeals in crim courts
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Harriet Marris
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Cards (17)
Defence
Solicitor
or
barrister
working for D
Prosecutor
Solicitor or
barrister
working on behalf of the
state
(CPS-Crown Prosecution Service)
Point of law
When appealing to Supreme Court, when there is a
misunderstanding
or
incorrect
interpretation.
Case Stated
Where facts of the state are reviewed, not a
retrial.
Appeals
from the magistrates hierarchy
European Court of Human Rights (
ECtHR
)
^^^
Supreme Court (
UKSC
)
^^^
King's Bench Division (
High Court
/Court of Appeal)
^^^
Crown
Court
^^^
Magistrates
Court
Crown Court (Who by)
Defence
Crown Court (Why)
Found
guilty
in magistrates, OR sentence too
high.
Crown Court
(Outcome of appeal attempt)
Could be
reheard
by judge and/or
jury.
Crown Court
(Other info)
No
application
,
automatic route
King's Bench Division (Who appeals)
Defence
or
Prosecution
King's Bench Division
(Why)
D- Appeals
verdict
/
sentence
/ both.
P-
Order
new trial.
King's Bench Division (Outcome of appeal attempt)
3
judges confirm a safe verdict,
reduce
the sentence, or allow a retrial.
King's Bench Division (Other info)
Need to apply to appeal > time limit to apply of
28
days.
Need
new
or
compelling
evidence
V can apply for appeal if an undually
lenient
sentence
Undually
Lenient
Sentence
Sentencing is too
lenient
for the crime committed and the
circumstances.
Supreme Court
Of great
public
importance
On a point of
law
to change
current
laws in some way.
ECtHR
Only if courts hadn't been applying to the
Human Rights standards
No change but highlights to
lower
courts
Appeals from Crown Court hierarchy
European Court of Human Rights (
ECtHR
)
^^^
Supreme
Court
^^^
King's
bench division
^^^
Crown
Court