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The Plymouth Law and Criminal Justice Review

Authors

David Cox

Document Type

Article

Abstract

This article investigates the circumstances surrounding a dramatic petition read out in the House of Commons in the late spring of 1845 which detailed the alleged ill-treatment of a heavily pregnant young married woman from Brierley Hill, Staffordshire by two parish constables acting upon the instructions of a county magistrate. What began as a minor squabble in two competing provincial magistrates' courts in the rapidly urbanizing Black Country resulted in a Parliamentary Enquiry and quickly escalated into a nationally aired debate on the capability and legality of the methods used by both the provincial magistracy and police to arrest, detain and physically constrain crime suspects. This discussion aims to show how various mechanisms of power and politics at local and national levels were utilized both explicitly and implicitly in attempts to apportion responsibility and militate culpability following the publication of the findings of the Parliamentary Enquiry. It also examines the extent to which the local magistracy attempted to control the discretion and activities of an untrained and unprofessional local police force at a time when the future of the lay magistracy and the parish constabulary system was being questioned.

Publication Date

2010-01-01

Volume

3

Issue

1

First Page

109

Last Page

127

ISSN

2054-149X

Deposit Date

April 2017

Embargo Period

2024-11-01

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

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