The Government inherited a justice system in crisis with a record and rising open caseload of nearly 80,000 criminal cases currently waiting to be heard in the Crown Court. Behind those case numbers are victims, many of whom are waiting years for justice.
That is why the Government commissioned Sir Brian Leveson, one of the country’s most esteemed former judges, to undertake an independent review and make recommendations for how to reform our criminal courts.
Sir Brian conducted his review in two parts, with the first part published on 9 July 2025. That set down a blueprint for structural reform in our criminal courts. Today, 4 February 2026, Sir Brian has published Part 2 of his review.
The Government is extremely grateful to Sir Brian and his panel of expert advisers for their work and I will place copies of Sir Brian's Independent Review of the Criminal Courts: Part 2 report (Overview, Volume 1 & 2) in the Library of the House.
Sir Brian’s second report makes 135 recommendations to improve the efficiency of the criminal courts. The report is thorough and I welcome his ambition to see real improvements to the system. The report highlights many areas where existing process can be improved and where we can do more to deliver faster and fairer justice for all. It makes recommendations about new technologies, including Artificial Intelligence, and sets out clear steps to help modernise the system.
As Sir Brian makes clear in his report, “more money and efficiency measures alone will not be sufficient to allow the system to operate as it should.” Efficiency can only be one part of our plan to deliver faster and fairer justice. On 2 December 2025, I set out why I agreed that structural reform is necessary, alongside investment and efficiency. We will bring forward legislation as soon as parliamentary time allows.
We will urgently consider the proposals set out today, alongside Sir Brian’s remaining recommendations from Part 1 and respond to them in the coming months. It is clear that we need to expand the use of technology in our courts and modernise the system to tackle the inefficiencies we inherited. Improving efficiencies alone is not a silver bullet to the crisis victims are facing in our justice system, but they form a key part of our plan. It is only the combination of pragmatic reform, investment and modernisation that will ultimately deliver faster and fairer justice.
https://www.theyworkforyou.com/wms/?id=2026-02-04.hcws1301.0
seen at 09:52, 5 February in Written Ministerial Statements.