The Covid-19 pandemic had a devastating impact on wait times for the prosecution of sexual offences, according to a new report for the Department of Justice.
The research found that, according to judges, lawyers and others working in the criminal justice sector, the pandemic severely exacerbated existing delays caused by underfunding of the courts.
The pandemic was an âabsolute disasterâ for court lists, according to one of five judges interviewed by researchers. Before Covid-19, judges said they had managed to reduce wait times for sexual assault trials down to nearly a year. However, the post-pandemic lists were âworse than everâ.
Despite the fact that âeverybody put their shoulder to the wheelâ, judges were pessimistic of the waiting times being reduced, the report states.
âI donât know how weâre going to recover the ground we lost through Covid other than if we get a whole load more judges and all the support services,â one judge said.
âAt this stage now, thereâs such a mountain to climb, you just feel oh you know, almost whatâs the point.â
Other stakeholders described how Covid-19 had caused serious delays in the pretrial stage. Gardaà said there was a shortage of child specialist interviewers as specialist garda training was halted during the pandemic.
Other gardaà blamed the special Covid-19 garda roster for contributing to delays.
Some saw a âsilver liningâ to the pandemic as it forced courts to quickly adapt by adopting new technology, such as video conferencing, âwhich had the potential to help the system become more efficient in futureâ.
The use of Croke Park for trials during the height of the pandemic was also described as hugely beneficial as it allowed several cases to proceed which otherwise would have been adjourned, the report states.
The research, which is being launched on Friday by the department, was carried out by Dr Marie Keenan, Dr Deirdre Healy, Dr Kate Keenan and Gemma McLoughlin-Burke BL.
All 73 stakeholders who were interviewed said delays in the prosecution of sexual assault allegations were a serious problem, with âa lack of investment in and under-resourcing of the criminal justice systemâ identified as the main cause.
A lack of proper protocols regarding disclosure between the Garda and Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) and other parties are also a major contributing factor.
This includes a lack of âclear timelines, capacity and management within some statutory third party agenciesâ such as Tusla, âdespite the existence of the memorandum of understanding between the DPP and Tusla, the HSE and some counselling service providers.â
The report also identifies âa culture of last minute-ismâ by overstretched lawyers as a factor in delays. Low fees mean lawyers are forced to take on a large caseload, âresulting in adjournments and delays when disclosure materials are examined and issues arise.â
Inadequate fees also arguably reduce the number of legal practitioners practising as criminal layers, âas practitioners decide to specialise in more lucrative fields,â the report states.