The act empowered the
Lord Lieutenant of Ireland by
proclamation to name a district within which the act would have force. The other provisions applied only with such "proclaimed areas". The act allowed actions connected to agrarian violence to be tried as
summary offences by a
magistrate without a
jury. On 6 May 1920, as the
Irish War of Independence was escalating, it was reported to the Commons that "Between 1st November, 1918, and 30th April, 1920, 305 cases were dealt with under the Criminal Law and Procedure (Ireland) Act. 1,109 persons were prosecuted in these cases, 454 were convicted, 109 were discharged, 352 were ordered to find bail, 194 are awaiting trial." The act empowered the Lord Lieutenant to proclaim associations to be "dangerous" and to prohibit them. Under this power, the
Irish National League was banned on 19 August 1887; likewise the
First Dáil on 10 September 1919;
Sinn Féin, the
Irish Volunteers,
Cumann na mBan, and the
Gaelic League were proclaimed dangerous on 3 July 1918, and banned in various counties between June and October 1919. ==Repeal==