Gixxer wrote:
District Judge questions evidence....CPS tells blatant lie to District Judge
Judges should only ask questions to clarify what has been said and not attempt to find new evidence. Not suggesting that happened in this case but it might apply.
Gixxer wrote:
Defendant objects to lies being told and attempts to point out that the proof is right there.....DJ tells defendant that he will have his chance to speak when case is brought back in one month for sentencing.
Defendant should have been given a chance to say that he entered a guilty plea on a specific basis ( ie the offence as charged) and the CPS have changed that understanding without his consent. At the very least there should have been some disscussion and possibly a Newton Hearing.
Gixxer wrote:
Now if a dendant was found to be perjuring themselves, we all know what the score is there.
Are you sure this was a deliberate lie? Is there no possibility that the prosecutor was simply reading from the file which he believed to be true?
Incompetence is one thing, perjury is altogether more serious.
Without taking sides I find it difficult to imagine a prosecutor risking a substantial jail sentence and loss of job and pension just to secure a higher sentence in a minor case which had already gat a guilty plea.
Gixxer wrote:
My question is, what is the procedure to now report the CPS for misleading the DJ over the evidence provided?
As far as I know you can't.
I think you need to go to appeal and explain it all there.
Thats opinion only. There may be something on the CPS website which would help. I do think legal advice is essential in this case. Is there a local law centre or lawyer with a rep for taking on the system who might help.
Magistrates court DJs have huge powers. They are the only case where one person decides what the law is, what the facts are and what the sentence should be.