THE Home Office has done a swift U-turn over making wrongfully convicted prisoners pay for their living costs while in jail.
It comes after Andrew Malkinson was released from prison recently after serving 17 years in prison for a rape he did not commit.
Home Office policy was that the cost of wrongly convicted prisoners’ food and lodging while in jail be deducted from any compensation prisoners are subsequently paid.
The government’s case for abolishing most jury trials doesn’t stand up to scrutiny, argues KIM JOHNSON MP – and it must be stopped before it does lasting damage to democracy
Former judge ANSELM ELDERGILL examines the details and controversy of Lucy Letby’s trial and appeal in the context of famous historical wrongful convictions that prove both the justice system and legal activists make errors
ANSELM ELDERGILL examines the government’s proposals to further limit the right of citizens to trial by jury


