The other concern I have seen about "Harper's Law" is that it might actually have the
reverse effect to that intended, in that if an offence has a mandatory life sentence without any judicial discretion, a Jury may be less minded to convict in many cases.
Absolute laws that exclude circumstance are bad laws. But they are popular hence Dominic "Christmas Pud" Raab is cheerleading it.
Useful twitter thread here:-
View: https://twitter.com/BarristerSecret/status/1463420385710460933?s=20
And a nice explainer here as to why it won't even mean that someone who kills a police offer will spend their life in prison:-
https://rozenberg.substack.com/p/harpers-law
I only made the first few replies of that twatter thread, but it looks like routine abuse of the Justice Secretary - every incumbent of that job gets it from a section of the criminal Bar.
Rozenberg appears to be confusing 'life sentence' with 'whole life order'.
As I remarked at the time, the Harper case went Pete Tong the moment the jury declined to convict of murder but convicted of manslaughter.
The resulting sentences and bellows of public disapproval were entirely predictable.
As regards whether cop killers will spend longer in jail, that will depend on the tariff set for the life sentence, but they almost inevitably will.
The tariff must be served in full before parole is considered, whereas someone doing a determinate manslaughter sentence is almost automatically released after two thirds.
Thus the Harper killers will do roughly eight or 10 years inside.
The starting point for murder is a tariff of 12 years, a murdering cop killer will inevitably get nearer double that, which must be served in cold blood.
We don't know what the tariffs will be for a cop killer convicted of manslaughter under Harper's Law, but they could easily be 20+ years, which given they must be served in full, will mean longer than for someone convicted of manslaughter under the current regime.
My personal record is a tariff of 35 years, imposed by an admittedly harsh judge for the murder of an elderly woman.
The punter was also 35 years old, which given the reduced life expectancy of lifers, means he has a very good chance of dying in prison.
Not that I will be around to see it.