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Murderers could be compelled to appear in court for sentencing under new laws

Justice Secretary Dominic Raab said he is considering new legislation after meeting with the family of Zara Aleena, whose killer avoided court.

Laura Parnaby
Thursday 23 February 2023 22:59 GMT
Deputy Prime Minister Dominic Raab (PA)
Deputy Prime Minister Dominic Raab (PA) (PA Wire)

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Murderers could be compelled to appear in court or face longer jail terms under new legislation proposed by Justice Secretary Dominic Raab.

After meeting with the family of Zara Aleena, whose killer was legally allowed not to attend his sentencing hearing, Mr Raab said he hoped to ensure murderers face longer prison sentences if they opt to skip court in future.

Ms Aleena, a 35-year-old aspiring lawyer, was sexually assaulted and killed by Jordan McSweeney as she was walking home in Ilford, east London, on June 26 last year, days after his prison release.

We are looking carefully at changing the law to compel offenders to attend their sentencing ā€“ making sure they face up to their actions and victims can see justice being served.

Justice Secretary Dominic Raab

On Thursday, Ms Aleenaā€™s aunt Farah Naz met with Mr Raab, who is also deputy prime minister, alongside Labour MP for Ilford South Sam Tarry.

In a statement following the meeting, Mr Raab said the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) is ā€œlooking carefullyā€ at changing the law to ensure defendants can no longer ā€œhideā€ from hearings.

He said: ā€œThis was a despicable crime and we apologise unreservedly to Zara Aleenaā€™s family for the unacceptable failings in this case.

ā€œDefendants who hide from justice can prolong the suffering of victims.

ā€œThat is why we are looking carefully at changing the law to compel offenders to attend their sentencing ā€“ making sure they face up to their actions and victims can see justice being served.ā€

Speaking with the BBC, Mr Raab also said that making convicts appear at sentencing hearings was ā€œthe very least the victims deserveā€ and a ā€œbasic principle of British justiceā€.

He added that he is considering granting judges the power to impose longer terms on those who refuse to appear.

Ms Naz said McSweeneyā€™s absence at the sentencing hearing was a ā€œslap in the faceā€ for her family.

She told the BBC: ā€œHe needed to look at our faces and see how he hadnā€™t just killed Zara, he had killed a whole family.ā€

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