Barrister Criticizes Crown Prosecution Service in Sharp Parliamentary Exchange
Senior Legal Figure Highlights Systemic Delays
LONDON — A senior barrister with more than two decades of experience at the Crown Prosecution Service delivered a blunt critique of the agency during a parliamentary committee hearing, describing it as a major source of inefficiency in Britain’s criminal justice system.

The exchange occurred during a discussion on the effectiveness of prosecutions and case preparation. The barrister pushed back against suggestions that the CPS was operating efficiently, arguing that problems often begin at the earliest stages of case review.
Prosecutors Accused of Adding Bureaucracy
The lawyer stated that when police submit case files, reviewing lawyers frequently demand additional material instead of moving cases forward promptly. She described this as the starting point for many of the delays that plague the system, contradicting claims that external factors are primarily responsible.
Her comments reflected growing frustration among practitioners with the layered approval processes that have developed over time. She suggested that the CPS, rather than streamlining justice, sometimes creates unnecessary obstacles before cases even reach court.
Personal Experience Fuels Criticism
In the video that accompanied the hearing discussion, a commentator shared his own encounter with the CPS. After assisting a victim of assault by gathering witness statements, camera locations and suspect identification within hours, he said the police investigation stalled for months. The case took nearly a year to reach court, a delay he attributed largely to CPS requirements.
He contrasted this with the faster, more direct approach used by police in earlier decades, before the CPS assumed greater control over charging decisions.
Shift from Police-Led to Prosecutor-Led System
The speaker recalled that in the past, police inspectors had more authority to advance cases quickly. While acknowledging that the old system had flaws, including potential inconsistencies, he argued it was far more efficient than the current bureaucratic model dominated by the CPS.
The barrister appeared to support this view, noting that even routine tasks such as preparing jury bundles or witness orders now involve excessive back-and-forth between police, prosecutors and counsel.
Concerns Over Reduced Jury Trials


Committee members raised the possibility that fewer jury trials could ease administrative burdens. The barrister responded that such changes would not address root causes, arguing that the CPS must improve its own internal processes before seeking reforms elsewhere.
Her tone suggested deep disillusionment with the agency she had served for 21 years, indicating that internal culture and procedures needed urgent reform.
Broader Debate on Criminal Justice Efficiency
The hearing reflects wider concerns about the slow pace of justice in Britain. Critics argue that lengthy delays undermine public confidence, reduce conviction rates and allow offenders to remain free for extended periods.
Supporters of the current system maintain that thorough case preparation protects against miscarriages of justice and ensures stronger prosecutions. However, practitioners increasingly complain that the balance has tipped too far toward caution and bureaucracy.
Political Context and Public Frustration
The discussion comes amid ongoing scrutiny of the Labour government’s handling of crime and policing. Reform UK and other opposition voices have highlighted what they see as systemic failures in the justice system, using cases like the one described to argue for fundamental change.
Public sentiment, particularly in communities affected by rising crime, has grown increasingly impatient with long court backlogs and perceived leniency.
Calls for Structural Reform
The barrister’s testimony adds weight to arguments that the CPS requires significant internal reform. Suggestions include reducing unnecessary paperwork, restoring more authority to frontline police officers and streamlining charging decisions.
Some commentators have gone further, proposing a return to elements of the pre-CPS model where police had greater discretion in bringing cases to court.
Implications for Rule of Law
The exchange underscores a fundamental tension in modern British justice: how to balance thoroughness and fairness with speed and efficiency. When delays become routine, public trust erodes and the deterrent effect of law weakens.
As Parliament continues to examine the performance of the Crown Prosecution Service, the candid remarks from a long-serving insider are likely to fuel further debate about whether the agency is fit for purpose in its current form.
The hearing served as a reminder that behind the procedural language of committee rooms lie real consequences for victims, communities and the credibility of Britain’s legal system.