Double Jeopardy - UK Law and Politics

Is the Right To Jury Trial Just History? And is the House of Lord’s Assisted Dying Filibuster an Attack on Democracy?

Nov 28, 2025
The discussion dives deep into the controversial proposal to abolish jury trials in serious fraud cases, questioning the evidential basis behind this move. Retired Judge Geoffrey Rivlin critiques these reforms, arguing they risk undermining public confidence in the justice system. The hosts explore whether complex financial cases justify removing juries and highlight significant public support for assisted dying legislation, contrasting it with the political maneuvering of the House of Lords, deemed by some as obstructive to democracy.
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INSIGHT

Government Moves To Limit Jury Trials

  • The government plans to enact most of Sir Brian Leveson's criminal courts reforms, including limiting jury trials in serious fraud cases.
  • Courts Minister Sarah Sackman justified reforms as needed to stop criminals gaming long jury trials and to reduce delays.
ANECDOTE

Former Southwark Judge's Public Rebuttal

  • Geoffrey Rivlin, retired Resident Judge at Southwark, published a detailed Substack critique attacking Leveson's basis for judge-alone fraud trials.
  • Rivlin draws on his long experience trying complex fraud to argue Leveson's evidence is unfounded.
INSIGHT

Leveson's Argument Hinges On Constitutional Claim

  • Sir Brian's recommendation rests on his view that there is no constitutional right to trial by jury.
  • Geoffrey Rivlin and the hosts treat that premise as controversial and central to the recommendation's legitimacy.
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