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Lammy Says Judges and Magistrates Will Use More AI While Jury Trials Are Reduced

Plans include judge-only trials, expanded magistrate powers, and AI use to reduce 80,000 case backlog, with reforms expected to start in 2028 and full impact by 2035.

  • On Tuesday, David Lammy, Justice Secretary and Deputy Prime Minister, confirmed Labour will axe half of jury trials and urged `to see more AI` at the Microsoft AI Tour in London.
  • Facing a record backlog of nearly 80,000 cases, ministers argue the bill to be published on Wednesday aims for judge-only trials starting in 2028 to reduce backlogs rising to 100,000 next year.
  • Under the legislation, the right to elect a jury would be removed for many either way offences, saving 16,000 Crown Court sitting days and increasing magistrates' powers to save 8,000 more.
  • Justice chiefs admitted victims of crime will wait nearly a decade and the bill is yet to go before Parliament, facing opposition from Brett Dixon, vice-president of the Law Society, and about 60 backbench MPs.
  • The government has pledged unlimited sitting days next year and a £287 million investment in court estate, while experts warn of risks after a Microsoft Copilot 'AI hallucination' last month.
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The Telegraph broke the news in London, United Kingdom on Tuesday, February 24, 2026.
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