Some rare good news in The Guardian. The start of the piece:

The Ministry of Justice has rejected calls for a ban on rape complainants’ sexual history being revealed in court, saying cross-examination should continue to be allowed in exceptional circumstances. The MoJ report did however recommend that the Crown Prosecution Service update its mandatory training for prosecutors and asked the criminal procedure rule committee to review the relevant courtroom rules. Concerns about the way section 41 of the 1999 Youth Justice and Criminal Evidence Act was being operated emerged after the acquittal of the footballer Ched Evans last year. Evans’s retrial heard evidence from two other men who testified about the complainant’s sexual preferences and the language she used during sex. The Labour MP Harriet Harman proposed altering the law in order to prevent those who make allegations of rape from being questioned in court about their past relationships and sexual history.

Some months ago a feminist organization – I can’t remember which – claimed to have undertaken some research showing that it was customary for rape complainants’ sexual history to be revealed in court. I assumed it was fraudulent feminist research – they would presumably have had a bias to selecting such trials, exaggerating their proportion of all rape trials – and the Guardian article proves me right. Another extract:

Section 41 restricts the circumstances in which evidence relating to a complainant’s sexual history can be introduced. It was claimed that victims of sexual offences could be discouraged from reporting attacks to police if they were at risk of having intimate details exposed in court, albeit anonymously. The defence has to make an application to the court to introduce any evidence or questions about a complainant’s sexual history. The application is then decided upon by the judge in the case. The inquiry, carried out by the Attorney General’s Office and the MoJ, found the law on such lines of questioning in sexual offence trials was working effectively. The report analysed more than 300 rape cases completed in 2016 in England and Wales. It showed that in 92% of them, no evidence of the complainant’s sexual history was introduced by the defence. Applications to introduce such evidence were only made in 13% of the cases. Of the 40 applications made by the defence, in 12 cases the prosecution either agreed or partially agreed.

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