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Watchdog Urges CCRC to Improve After Malkinson Case Failings

Created at 1 Jul · 11:10 PM1 source↑ Market-relevant
IN SHORT

A watchdog has called for urgent improvements at the Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC) following significant failings in the Andrew Malkinson case. An independent inspection highlighted weaknesses in casework quality assurance and delays, recommending 34 changes to prevent future miscarriages of justice.

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Key Numbers

34recommendations made by watchdog
60cases examined by watchdog staff
17years Andrew Malkinson served in prison
10years Malkinson could have been released earlier
21year prison sentence for real rapist Paul Quinn
102long-running cases at CCRC
1,841applications made in 2025-26

Who's Involved

Anthony Rogers
chief inspector of the Crown Prosecution Service
Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC)
body investigating potential miscarriages of justice
Andrew Malkinson
wrongfully convicted rape victim
Dame Vera Baird
interim chair of the CCRC
Paul Quinn
convicted rapist

↳ Why This Matters

The findings highlight critical systemic issues within the body responsible for reviewing potential miscarriages of justice, directly impacting individuals wrongly convicted and the public's trust in the legal system.

Key facts

  • The Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC) must urgently improve its casework quality assurance and address delays.
  • A watchdog's inspection found significant weaknesses and made 34 recommendations for the CCRC.
  • The CCRC faced heavy criticism for its handling of the Andrew Malkinson case, where he served 17 years for a crime he did not commit.
  • Malkinson could have been released 10 years earlier if the CCRC had acted on new DNA evidence in 2009.
  • The CCRC is dealing with 102 long-running cases and has seen a sustained rise in applications.

The Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC) must urgently improve its investigative processes to prevent a recurrence of failings like those seen in the Andrew Malkinson case, according to a report by the Crown Prosecution Service's chief inspector, Anthony Rogers.

The watchdog's inspection found a significant gap in proactive, effective casework quality assurance and identified 34 recommendations to address weaknesses, delays, and inefficiencies. The CCRC has faced intense criticism following the Malkinson case, one of Britain's worst miscarriages of justice, which led to the resignation of its chief executive and chair. Dame Vera Baird has been appointed interim chair to lead an overhaul.

Malkinson spent 17 years in prison for a rape he did not commit. A review indicated he could have been released a decade earlier had the CCRC obtained crucial DNA evidence sooner. The real perpetrator, Paul Quinn, was sentenced to 21 years last month.

Rogers noted that while the CCRC has a 'chequered history' and 'cultural issues', it is ultimately 'fit for purpose'. He stated that improvements in quality assurance, case strategy, progress monitoring, and challenging unnecessary work could prevent cases from reaching the severity of the Malkinson situation. The CCRC is currently managing 102 long-running cases and has experienced a rise in applications.

Frequently asked questions

The CCRC is an independent body in the UK that investigates potential miscarriages of justice and can refer cases to the Court of Appeal.

The CCRC was criticised for its slow handling of new DNA evidence that could have freed Malkinson 10 years earlier from a wrongful conviction for rape.

The watchdog made 34 recommendations focusing on improving casework quality assurance, case strategy, progress monitoring, and reducing unnecessary work.

What Happens Next

01The CCRC must implement the 34 recommendations from the watchdog's inspection.
02The CCRC will continue to review its 102 long-running cases.
03The CCRC will manage a sustained rise in new applications.

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Cadence

How It Developed

A watchdog found the Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC) must urgently improve its investigations.
The warning follows failings in the Andrew Malkinson case, a severe miscarriage of justice.
An independent inspection identified a lack of proactive casework quality assurance as a significant gap.
The watchdog made 34 recommendations to address weaknesses, delays, and inefficiencies.
The CCRC's chief executive and chair resigned following criticism of its handling of the Malkinson case.
Dame Vera Baird was appointed interim chair to overhaul the organisation.
Andrew Malkinson served 17 years for a rape he did not commit, potentially being released 10 years earlier.
The real rapist, Paul Quinn, was sentenced to 21 years last month.

Sources

T1
Criminal Cases Review Commission told to urgently improve after Malkinson failingsThe Guardian

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