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Terror and spy cases to be televised for first time

Lady Chief Justice The Right Honourable the Baroness Carr of Walton-on-the-Hill and Deputy Prime Minister and Justice Secretary David Lammy (right) attend the annual Judges Service in Westminster Abbey, London, which marks the start of the new legal year. Picture date: Wednesday October 1, 2025. PA Photo. Photo credit should read: James Manning/PA Wire
David Lammy and Baroness Carr are spearheading the reforms (Picture: James Manning/PA Wire)

Terrorism and spy cases tried by the UK’s top magistrate will be televised for the first time.

The sentencing remarks of the country’s chief magistrate – who hears high-profile lawsuits such as terrorism and extradition cases – will be broadcast live.

Controversial judicial reviews challenging the government and local authorities will also be shown on TV.

The major expansion of courtroom cameras is part of a drive to boost transparency and improve diversity within the judiciary, the Telegraph reports.

The sentencing remarks of the chief magistrate at Westminster magistrates’ court will be televised (Picture: REUTERS)

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The current chief magistrate, Paul Goldspring, sits at Westminster magistrates’ court and has heard some of the most talked-about lawsuits of the day.

This includes the not guilty verdict on Tommy Robinson, the far-Right activist, after he refused to give police access to his phone in July 2024.

Now his sentencing remarks will be televised when the media applies for those cases to be broadcast in the public interest.

Justice Secretary David Lammy hopes the initiative will ‘deliver more transparent justice, by expanding broadcasting and bringing the work of our justice system closer to the public than ever before’.

Cameras have already been allowed into the Supreme Court since 2009, the Court of Appeal from 2013 and for major criminal trials in the Crown Court since 2022.

More than 30 cases were beamed into nation’s living rooms in the first 12 months after Crown Court sentencing was broadcast in July 2022.

Baroness Carr, the Lady Chief Justice, and Lammy also want to increase diversity among the predominantly white, male judiciary. Nearly half, 44 per cent, of judges are now women.

The pair co-chaired the first meeting of a new diversity board last week that is working to make the legal profession reflect ‘modern Britain’.

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