- Recent figures revealed more than 900 criminal cases were dropped last year
- The cases collapsed after the police or the CPS failed to disclose vital evidence
- The figures means the number of dropped cases has risen by 70% since 2015
More than 900 criminal cases were dropped last year due to a failure by police or prosecutors to disclose evidence, figures reveal.
The shocking figure equates to a 70 per cent increase in the number of collapsed cases over the course of two years.
Data obtained under the Freedom of Information Act revealed that 916 people had charges dropped last year due to a failure to disclose evidence – up from 537 in 2014-15 and 732 the following year.
The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) told the BBC that the number of dropped cases represented just 0.15 per cent of the total number of prosecutions, but said there were still ‘systemic disclosure issues’.
Figures revealed that 916 people had charges dropped last year due to a failure to disclose evidence
The investigation comes after the high-profile collapse of several rape trials, with Scotland Yard announcing a review of its sex crime investigations after two rape cases were dropped in the space of a week in December.
The trial of Liam Allan, 22, was halted at Croydon Crown Court, while days later another prosecution collapsed against Isaac Itiary at Inner London Crown Court.
Angela Rafferty QC, chair of the Criminal Bar Association, told the BBC that barristers face ‘a daily struggle in respect of disclosure, delays and all the other disastrous consequences of a system that is openly described by MPs as at breaking point’.
A CPS spokesman told the broadcaster: ‘We are clear that there are systemic disclosure issues across the criminal justice system which will require a collective effort in order to bring about improvement.
‘Getting this right is a priority, and along with the police and other criminal justice partners we are working to improve how we fulfil these vital disclosure obligations.’