England: Collapsing forensic science system is ‘national scandal in the making’

England: Collapsing forensic science system is 'national scandal in the making'

The forensic science system in England and Wales is on the brink of collapse. This stark assessment, expressed by Professor Angela Gallop, has been reinforced today by the House of Lord Science and Technology Committee in a report that found “little to contradict it”.

The committee’s report Rebuilding forensic science for criminal justice: an urgent need reveals a forensic science system in crisis: a near‑monopolised, dysfunctional and fragile commercial market; inconsistent and poorly overseen in‑house police provision; and a digital forensics backlog exceeding 20,000 devices that has barely improved for years.

The committee is calling on the UK government to act immediately rather than wait for the outcome of “long and uncertain changes” recently announced in the Policing Reform White Paper. The committee recommends the creation this year of a National Institute for Forensic Science to oversee best practice, drive research and development, and the preservation of specialist forensic skills and to help ensure the independence of forensic evidence and prevent miscarriages of justice.

The committee found:

  • A dysfunctional forensic science market: Over 80 per cent of external forensic services are now provided by a single large company Eurofins. This comes with risks: for the range and quality of service provision; for the stability of forensic science in the UK should Eurofins exit the market; and for the Forensic Science Regulator who may be unwilling to impose sanctions on a near-monopoly provider. The committee says the government should assess the concentration risks in the market due to this near-monopoly, introduce measures to stabilise the existing provision, lower barriers to entry for new providers, and ensure that contracts from police forces or a National Police Service pay a fair price to the providers.
  • In-house police provision of forensic science and lack of independence: The increase of forensic science services being carried out by police forces raises serious concerns about oversight, quality, transparency, inconsistency across the 43 police forces in England and Wales. Ministers acknowledged they currently have limited visibility over national capacity, quality, or spending. In-house provision by the police also risks unconscious bias in how evidence is analysed. The committee argues that any new national service must be established as a priority and must operate independently from the police. It suggests learning from the Scottish model, where a “sterile corridor” is maintained between forensics analysis and police investigations to maintain impartiality.
  • Inequality of arms and forensic science in the courtroom: There is grave concern about equality of arms for forensic science in the courtroom. The defence community of forensic experts is underfunded, fragmented, varying in quality, small in scale, and it faces significant administrative and financial barriers to taking part in many trials. Rates of pay for defence experts are less than those for the prosecution. This community plays a vital role in ensuring justice is done, but it is being allowed to wither away, risking miscarriages of justice. Among other recommendations, the committee says that the Ministry of Justice should review the legal aid rates that can be paid to forensic experts for the defence.

Lord Mair CBE, chair of the Science and Technology Committee, said: “As the forensic science system continues to atrophy despite repeated warnings, creeping neglect is beginning to resemble a shocking abdication of responsibility by the government, and is a national scandal in the making. If this decline is allowed to continue, further miscarriages of justice are inevitable.

“We welcome the direction of travel in the recently announced Policing Reform White Paper, which presents opportunities for change such as establishing a national forensic science service and rationalising the current complex patchwork of police forces. However, the details on how forensic science will operate within this new system, and critically, how its independence from the police will be safeguarded, remain extremely vague, as do the timelines for implementing these changes.

“These much-needed and long overdue reforms must not be allowed to be kicked into the long grass.

“The need urgently to address the issues our inquiry has identified within the forensic system, both now and as part of these wider reforms, is critical if we are to fix and rebuild what has become an increasingly dysfunctional pillar of criminal justice in England and Wales.”

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