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Shopping & Style0 min ago
What exactly does Remanded in Custody mean please?
Does this mean that police will get more time to interview the mother who allegedly murdered her baby boy in a fire?
No best answer has yet been selected by Mowbray. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It means that the accused is kept in prison before a trial begins.
Once arrested the details are taken, then the accused is informed of their rights. These are that they can speak to an independent solicitor free of charge, have someone told that she has been arrested and that they can consult the codes of practice covering police powers and procedures.
A photo is taken and entered onto the system � they are then referred to as a nominal and will have DNA and fingerprints taken. Details will be run through PNC (Police National Computer) to see if they are wanted for any other offences. DNA will also be checked against any outstanding unsolved crimes.
Once this process is done, they are taken to the cells. Shoes and belt are taken away and they now wait to be interviewed. This could take any amount of time up to 24 hours, when they will have to be released if not charged.
Once taken for an interview, the process is then explained and they are then questioned about the offence.
Once the police have finished questioning a suspect, the police have several choices:
Refer the case to the Crown Prosecution Service for a decision on whether the suspect should be charged, or:
Ask the suspect to return at a later date
Give the suspect a formal warning
Release the suspect if there is no evidence to suggest that they committed the crime.
When the court adjourns a case particularly when they are charged with more serious offences. If the court chooses to remand a person, it can remand them:
on conditional bail
on unconditional bail
to custody (secure remand/prison).
Whilst I totally agree with your first paragraph, I don't understand your last two paragraphs, Octavious, if someone is remanded then they're kept locked up, either in police cells or remand centre or prison or other secure unit. To be allowed bail (whether it be police or otherwise) then they're freed, albeit under certain conditons, until the trial.
So "Remanded in custody" means that they're kept locked up, surely?