The Westminster lensArchive · Written questions · 83 tabled · 83 answered

Written questions by Roca.

Every parliamentary written question tabled by Tim Roca this session, with the full answer and department. See how every department answers, or back to the MP page.

Department:All (83)Department of Health and Social Care (19)Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (10)Department for Transport (10)Treasury (9)Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (7)Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (5)Department for Business and Trade (5)Home Office (4)Cabinet Office (3)Ministry of Defence (3)Department for Education (2)Ministry of Justice (2)

Showing 12 of 2 · Ministry of Justice

15 Dec 2025·Ministry of Justice·Answered
Asked

What steps he is taking to tackle the backlog of court cases in Cheshire.

Reply

Chester Crown Court has been allocated an additional 232 sitting days in-region to increase hearing capacity and improve throughput of cases. Additional Legal Advisor recruitment is underway to facilitate an increase in court hearing capacity in Cheshire Magistrates’ Courts.The Government inherited a justice system in crisis, with a record and rising open caseload of nearly 80,000 criminal cases waiting to be heard and too many victims waiting years for justice. Investment alone is not enough - that is why this Government asked Sir Brian Leveson to undertake his Independent Review of the Criminal Courts. On 2 December, the Deputy Prime Minister responded to the first part of that review and set out why reform is necessary, alongside investment and modernisation.

23 Jul 2024·Ministry of Justice·Answered
Asked

Whether he plans to bring forward legislative proposals to compel defendants to attend their sentencing.

Reply

Offenders who refuse to attend their sentencing hearings deny victims and their families the opportunity to explain how their crimes have impacted their lives. This Government wants victims to have faith that justice will be delivered and to see criminals face the consequences of their actions. That is why we intend to change the law so that courts have the powers to order the most serious offenders to attend their sentencing hearings.

Sources
SourceUK Parliament Members API
MethodQuestion and answer text as published. Question preamble (“To ask the…”) trimmed for readability; answers shown in full.