Criminal process: England & Wales vs Scotland
Court structure, juries, verdicts, prosecutor independence, and key procedural differences in criminal cases.
Overview
Criminal procedure in Scotland is one of the most distinctive features of UK law. Scotland has its own prosecution service (the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service), a different court hierarchy (Sheriff Court / High Court of Justiciary / Court of Criminal Appeal), and the unique 'not proven' verdict — though Parliament passed legislation in 2024 to abolish it in due course. Juries of 15 (not 12) decide by simple majority. The High Court of Justiciary is the final court of criminal appeal in Scotland; there is no appeal to the UK Supreme Court on Scots criminal matters (except for devolution / human rights points).
Side-by-Side Comparison
England & Wales
Pros
- Indictable offences tried before judge and jury of 12, unanimous or 10–2 majority
- Right of appeal to the Court of Appeal Criminal Division and (with permission) UK Supreme Court
- Sentencing guidelines published by the Sentencing Council provide consistency
Cons
- Magistrates' Court can have a high conviction rate for unrepresented defendants
- CPS independence sometimes questioned
Best For
Cases tried in England or Wales
Scotland
Pros
- Procurator Fiscal Service is fully independent of police and provides early case-marking
- Jury of 15, simple majority (8/15) — a higher threshold for unanimous-verdict critics
- Strict pre-trial disclosure regime
Cons
- 'Not proven' verdict (being abolished by the Victims, Witnesses, and Justice Reform (Scotland) Act 2024 in stages) creates uncertainty for victims
- No appeal to the UK Supreme Court on most Scots criminal points
- Different bail/custody review patterns
Best For
Cases tried in Scotland
Key Differences
Our Recommendation
If charged in Scotland, instruct a Scots solicitor and (for solemn cases) an advocate. Cross-border criminal cases (extradition, mutual legal assistance) are governed by separate frameworks. Note the 'not proven' verdict abolition timeline if your case is mid-process.