Hillsborough Law: Statutory Duty of Candour
Liberal Democrat · what the evidence says
An independent, source-checked look at Liberal Democrat’s policy “Hillsborough Law: Statutory Duty of Candour” — what it would actually do across the things that affect your life. Every claim below quotes the source behind it. How this works.
Crime, justice & national security — Helps
minor · low confidence
This law would legally require police and public officials to be fully honest during investigations and inquests, which could improve justice outcomes and accountability. However, the effect on day-to-day safety and crime rates is indirect, and cultural resistance plus unresolved issues around intelligence services mean the real-world impact is uncertain.
The evidence
- The policy introduces a statutory duty of candour on police officers and all public officials. — libdems.org.uk (manifesto) — “Introducing the Hillsborough Law: a statutory duty of candour on police officers and all public officials.”
- Public bodies and officials will be legally required to provide information with complete honesty during investigations, inquiries, and inquests. — paduffy-solicitors.com (media) — “Public bodies and officials will be legally required to provide information with "complete honesty" during investigations, inquiries, and inquests, including non-statutory inquiries”
- Non-compliance could lead to disciplinary action including dismissal, and criminal offences carry penalties including fines and imprisonment. — dwfgroup.com (media) — “These offenses carry penalties, including fines and imprisonment, to deter cover-ups and ensure accountability”
- The law is intended to prevent cover-ups and miscarriages of justice similar to the Hillsborough disaster. — paduffy-solicitors.com (media) — “seeks to prevent similar miscarriages of justice and cover-ups”
- The Hillsborough disaster showed that a persistent defensive approach by police and failure to provide relevant evidence led to significantly longer and more costly processes including new inquests running 308 days over two years. — policeconduct.gov.uk (government) — “South Yorkshire Police's (SYP) "persistent defensive approach" and failure to provide relevant evidence led to significantly longer and more costly processes, including new inquests that ran for 308 days over two years a…”
- The duty of candour is expected to increase accountability, reduce deliberate misinformation, and help restore public trust in institutions. — paduffy-solicitors.com (media) — “expected to increase accountability, reduce the risk of deliberate misinformation, and help restore public trust in institutions by setting a minimum threshold of honesty”
- Cultural resistance may make the duty of candour difficult to enforce without robust oversight mechanisms. — paduffy-solicitors.com (media) — “Public institutions may resist cultural change, and the duty of candour might be difficult to enforce without robust oversight mechanisms”
- There is unresolved disagreement about how the duty of candour applies to intelligence services, with concerns about balancing transparency with national security, which has already led to the bill's postponement. — weightmans.com (media) — “excluding or weakening the duty for services like MI5 and MI6 would undermine the law's purpose, leading to government amendments to "rebalance" candour against national security concerns, which were then criticized as i…”
Biggest unknown: Whether public institutions will genuinely change their behaviour or find ways to resist the duty, and how far the law's application to intelligence services will be resolved without undermining national security.
Our reading: The Hillsborough Law directly targets a well-documented failure mode in the justice system: institutional cover-ups and non-disclosure that obstruct justice for victims and families. The Hillsborough case itself illustrates the concrete harm — over 300 days of reinvestigation driven by a defensive police posture. By mandating proactive disclosure under criminal sanction, the law strengthens the justice system's ability to establish truth and hold officials accountable, which maps onto O5's indicators of charge/conviction integrity and whether justice works. However, the effect on O5 is narrow and indirect. The policy does not directly reduce crime rates, cut court backlogs, or improve national security. Its main benefit is improving the quality of justice in post-incident inquests and investigations, particularly for bereaved families — a real but limited contribution to the 'justice works' dimension of O5. Two credible constraints reduce magnitude and confidence. First, cultural resistance is a genuine risk: even with criminal sanctions, institutions may find ways to comply minimally or delay. Second, the application to intelligence services remains unresolved and caused the bill's postponement — if that tension is not settled, the law's scope and enforceability will be compromised. These are not manufactured doubts; both are grounded in cited evidence. The direction is nonetheless 'improves' because the mechanism — mandatory disclosure with criminal sanctions — is more than aspirational; it creates enforceable legal duties with teeth. The balance of cited evidence points toward better justice outcomes over time, even if the effect is minor and long-term rather than immediate or population-wide on crime rates.
Equal treatment & democratic rights — Helps
moderate · moderate confidence
This law would legally require police and public officials to be fully honest in investigations and inquests, and give bereaved families equal legal support to challenge powerful institutions. The main caveat is that cultural resistance within institutions and unresolved carve-outs for intelligence services could limit its real-world effect.
The evidence
- The policy introduces a statutory duty of candour on police officers and all public officials. — libdems.org.uk (manifesto) — “Introducing the Hillsborough Law: a statutory duty of candour on police officers and all public officials.”
- The legislation stems from decades of campaigning following the Hillsborough disaster to prevent miscarriages of justice and cover-ups. — paduffy-solicitors.com (media) — “This legislation stems from decades of campaigning following the Hillsborough disaster and seeks to prevent similar miscarriages of justice and cover-ups”
- Public bodies and officials will be legally required to provide information with complete honesty during investigations, inquiries, and inquests. — paduffy-solicitors.com (media) — “Public bodies and officials will be legally required to provide information with "complete honesty" during investigations, inquiries, and inquests, including non-statutory inquiries”
- The duty mandates proactive disclosure of all relevant information, even if unfavourable. — paduffy-solicitors.com (media) — “This mandates proactive disclosure of all relevant information, even if it is unfavorable, with the aim of establishing the truth”
- Non-compliance can lead to disciplinary action including dismissal for gross misconduct. — dwfgroup.com (media) — “Non-compliance could lead to disciplinary action, including dismissal for gross misconduct”
- Criminal offences carry penalties including fines and imprisonment to deter cover-ups. — dwfgroup.com (media) — “These offenses carry penalties, including fines and imprisonment, to deter cover-ups and ensure accountability”
- Breaching the duty to prevent death or serious injury could lead to up to 14 years' imprisonment. — commonslibrary.parliament.uk (government) — “the offense of breaching the duty to prevent death or serious injury could lead to up to 14 years' imprisonment, while seriously improper conduct could result in up to 10 years' imprisonment”
- The policy provides non-means-tested legal aid for families at inquests where a public authority is formally involved, described as the largest expansion of legal aid in a decade for bereaved families. — paduffy-solicitors.com (media) — “It will provide non-means-tested legal aid for families at inquests if a public authority is formally involved in proceedings”
- This legal aid expansion is intended to prevent public bodies from outspending other parties and gaining an advantage in inquiries. — weightmans.com (media) — “This is intended to prevent public sector organizations from outspending other parties and gaining an advantage in the inquiry process”
- The duty is expected to increase accountability, reduce deliberate misinformation, and help restore public trust by setting a minimum threshold of honesty. — paduffy-solicitors.com (media) — “This is expected to increase accountability, reduce the risk of deliberate misinformation, and help restore public trust in institutions by setting a minimum threshold of honesty”
- The IOPC highlights that the lack of candour in Hillsborough led to new inquests running for 308 days over two years and hearing evidence from over 1,000 individuals, illustrating the cost of cover-ups to due process. — policeconduct.gov.uk (government) — “South Yorkshire Police's (SYP) "persistent defensive approach" and failure to provide relevant evidence led to significantly longer and more costly processes, including new inquests that ran for 308 days over two years a…”
- Cultural resistance within public institutions may limit enforcement without robust oversight mechanisms. — paduffy-solicitors.com (media) — “Public institutions may resist cultural change, and the duty of candour might be difficult to enforce without robust oversight mechanisms”
- The bill has faced delays due to disagreements over applying the duty to intelligence services, with concerns about balancing transparency with national security. — publiclawproject.org.uk (media) — “The Bill has faced delays due to disagreements over how the duty of candour should apply to intelligence services (such as MI5 and MI6), with concerns raised about balancing transparency with national security”
- Government amendments to rebalance candour against national security were criticised as insufficient and led to the bill's postponement. — weightmans.com (media) — “government amendments to "rebalance" candour against national security concerns, which were then criticized as insufficient and led to the bill's postponement”
Biggest unknown: Whether enforcement mechanisms and oversight will be robust enough to overcome institutional resistance to cultural change, and how broadly the duty will apply after intelligence-service carve-outs.
Our reading: O9 is concerned with equal treatment, due process, and the rule of law. This policy directly addresses a well-documented failure of due process — the ability of public bodies, particularly police, to withhold or misrepresent information during inquests and investigations, leaving ordinary citizens and bereaved families structurally disadvantaged relative to well-resourced state institutions. The statutory duty of candour creates a legally enforceable obligation of full honesty, backed by criminal sanctions up to 14 years' imprisonment. This is a genuine delivered mechanism, not an aspiration — it creates justiciable rights. The legal aid parity measure directly addresses the inequality of arms between families and public bodies in inquest proceedings, which is a concrete equal-treatment gain within O9's scope. The IOPC evidence on Hillsborough demonstrates the real-world cost of cover-up cultures to due process: a case where the absence of candour produced decades of injustice and vastly extended reinvestigation. The policy's mechanism — mandatory proactive disclosure with criminal liability — is grounded in that documented failure. The magnitude is moderate rather than major for two reasons. First, cultural resistance is a credible constraint: the law targets behaviour that is, by definition, hard to detect and prosecute. Second, the unresolved intelligence-services carve-out represents a genuine gap in coverage, with the bill's own parliamentary progress stalled on this point. These are real limits on how fully the mechanism fires at population scale. Confidence is moderate: the statutory instruments and sanctions are concrete, but their real-world effect depends on enforcement culture and final legislative scope — both genuinely uncertain. The direction nonetheless clearly improves O9: a legally binding honesty requirement with criminal teeth and equal legal aid access materially strengthens due process for ordinary people against institutional power.