Historically prosecutions were conducted through a patchwork of different systems. For serious crimes tried at the county level, justices of the peace or the sheriff would issue a presentment to a
grand jury, who would either return a "true bill" resulting in an indictment, or not. If a true bill followed presentment, the individual would be tried by a
petit jury by justices of the
King's Bench,
Common Pleas or
Exchequer as they toured the circuits conducting the
assizes. Individuals could be prosecuted upon indictment by prosecutors ranging from the
attorney general or
solicitor general, king's serjeants or attorneys, prosecutors instructed by the sheriff or justice of the peace. It was more likely that the attorney general or solicitor general would be involved in prosecutions of serious crimes such as high treason at the
Court of King's Bench at
Westminster Hall. The second means of prosecution was by "appeal", which was when the prosecution was initiated not by presentment to a grand jury but by direct private prosecution of an interested party. An "appeal of murder" prosecuted by the widow of a murdered man was typical of this form of prosecution. Sir
John Maule was appointed to be the first
Director of Public Prosecutions for England and Wales in 1880, operating under the
Home Office; his jurisdiction was only for decisions as to whether to prosecute in a very small number of difficult or important cases; once prosecution had been authorised, the matter was turned over to the
Treasury Solicitor. Police forces, which had their own teams of in-house prosecuting lawyers, continued to be responsible for the bulk of cases, sometimes referring difficult ones to the Director. In 1962 a
royal commission recommended that police forces set up independent prosecution teams so as to avoid having the same officers investigate and prosecute a case. Technical barriers were already in place so that those prosecuting did so as private citizens, rendering them open to the range of evidential offences imposable by the court. This royal commission's recommendation was not implemented by all police forces, however, and so in 1977, another was set up, this time headed by Sir
Cyril Philips. It reported in 1981, recommending that a single unified team, the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), be made responsible for all public prosecutions in England and Wales. The example of the
procurator fiscal system in Scotland was influential in encouraging this recommendation. A
white paper was released in 1983, becoming the
Prosecution of Offences Act 1985, which established the CPS under the direction of the Director of Public Prosecutions, consisting of a merger of his old department with the police prosecution departments. It became operational on 1 October 1986. In 1997, the Home Office tasked Sir
Iain Glidewell to inquire into performance of and make recommendations for the CPS. The Glidewell Report of June 1998 found that 12% of charges by police were discontinued by the CPS and that there were failures to communicate between the two. It recommended the CPS: • focus resources more on serious crimes at the Crown Court level • co-operate more with the police in each case • concurring with an existing government plan, restructure the organisation into 42 regional branches, each with own Chief Crown Prosecutor.
Employment tribunal claim Rebecca Lawrence, who was the chief executive of the CPS from 2019 to 2023, brought a claim against the organisation for age and sex discrimination. This was settled after the first day of the tribunal in November 2023. Lawrence then announced that she was leaving the organisation, saying this was a "natural transition point for the CPS". ==Organisation==