My Lords, I beg to move that the draft order, which was laid on 21 October 2024, be approved. This order is the result of collaborative working between the two Governments in Scotland and Westminster, and supports the Scottish Government’s decision to implement the Bail and Release from Custody (Scotland) Act 2023 in Scotland. The order will be made under Section 104 of the Scotland Act 1998, in consequence of the Scottish Government’s 2023 Act.
A Section 104 order is the most common type of Scotland Act order. They are used to make technical amendments to UK reserved legislation to facilitate the policy aims of an Act of the Scottish Parliament or secondary legislation made by Scottish Ministers. Scotland Act orders are a demonstration of devolution in action and I am pleased to say this is the fourth such order to be put to the House by this Government. Officials across the UK and the Scottish Government have worked closely together on this order, with consultation between the Home Office, the Scotland Office, the Office of the Advocate-General, the Scottish Parliament and the Crown Office & Procurator Fiscal Service.
I will explain the effect that this order will have and the provision it will make. I should begin by explaining that extradition proceedings take place in summary courts: these are magistrates’ courts in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, and sheriff courts in Scotland. This means that if there are changes to the legal framework for bail conditions in relation to these courts, it would also impact on extradition cases. That is what could happen in this instance; both our Governments agree that this would not be appropriate, so we are using this order to prevent that. This order does not make changes to extradition law across the UK or affect current extradition policy and legal frameworks in any way. It ensures that courts in Scotland continue to have the ability to consider the question of flight risk as a ground for refusal of bail in the context of extradition proceedings and in line with the rest of the UK.
The order will ensure that a limitation on the courts’ ability to remand persons at risk of failing to appear in court under the new test for bail in Scottish summary courts does not extend to extradition cases. This will mitigate the risks of a person wanted for extradition being granted bail under the new regime when they would not have been under the previous regime. Without this order being in force, individuals accused of serious crimes while wanted for extradition may be granted bail under the new regime, because the courts would not retain their current levels of discretion to consider the question of flight risk. This creates risks in relation to the requested person absconding and evading justice.
The Bail and Release from Custody (Scotland) Act 2023 was passed by the Scottish Parliament in June 2023. It seeks to ensure that, as much as possible, the use of remand for domestic criminal cases within the Scottish criminal justice system is a last resort, reserved for cases where public safety requires it or there is a significant risk of prejudice to the interests of justice. The Act limits the circumstances in which the court in summary proceedings in Scotland can refuse an individual’s bail application by amending Sections 23B and 23C of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995.