Short Title: | Central Criminal Court Act 1856 |
Type: | Act |
Parliament: | Parliament of the United Kingdom |
Long Title: | An Act to empower the Court of Queen's Bench to order certain Offenders to be tried at the Central Criminal Court. |
Year: | 1856 |
Citation: | 19 & 20 Vict. c. 16 |
Territorial Extent: | England and Wales |
Status: | Current |
Legislation History: | https://api.parliament.uk/historic-hansard/commons/1856/mar/10/trial-of-offences-bill |
Use New Uk-Leg: | no |
The Central Criminal Court Act 1856[1] (19 & 20 Vict. c. 16), originally known as the Trial of Offences Act 1856 and popularly known as Palmer's Act, was an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. The Act allowed a crime committed outside the City of London or the County of Middlesex to be tried at the Central Criminal Court, the Old Bailey, rather than locally.[2]
The act was passed in direct and urgent response to anxieties that doctor and accused murderer William Palmer would not be able to have a fair trial at the assize court in his native Staffordshire because of public revulsion at the allegations. By conducting Palmer's trial at a neutral venue, there could be no appeal for a retrial on the basis that the court and jury had been prejudiced against the defendant.[2]
However, an alternative hypothesis is that Palmer was a popular figure in Rugeley and would not have been found guilty by a Staffordshire jury: the implication being that the trial location was moved for political reasons so as to secure a guilty verdict. Lord Chief Justice Campbellthe senior judge at Palmer’s trialsuggested in his autobiography that, had Palmer been tried at Stafford Assizes, he would have been found not guilty.[3]