A three-year drive to up-date and consolidate Gibraltar's criminal laws has entered the final stretch and is expected to be completed soon.
The final draft – in the shape of two voluminous parliamentary Bills – will be submitted later this year and should be on the statute book before the end of the end of the year. Many of the existing criminal laws had been left untouched for almost half a century, according to Justice Minister Daniel Feetham, and to sort them out has been a major and complex task for the Government’s team of legal draftsmen.
Mr. Feetham - who initiated the Herculean project soon after he took office and has master-minded its course - recently described it as “the toughest task I’ve ever undertaken”. The two Bills stemming from the consultation process are the bulkiest ever prepared in Gibraltar, he adds.
The four-man team led - by Mr. Feetham and including two government legal draftsmen as well as a specialist consultant - faced a need to harmonise Gibraltar’s criminal laws with current law enforcement legislation in Britain. The four have worked on preparing two Bills which, when enacted later this year, are expected to form a stronger and more resilient backbone of Gibraltar’s criminal laws. The texts of the Crimes Bill and Criminal Procedures and Evidence Bill, each comprise more than 500 pages.
A third document lays down practical guidelines for law enforcement officers and is also several hundred pages long.