Scotland Moves to Pardon Gay Men Convicted Under Outdated Indecency Laws
Scotland plans a blanket pardon for gay men convicted under outdated indecency laws, the Guardian reports:
Holyrood’s justice secretary, Michael Matheson, told the chamber on Tuesday afternoon that the parliament would bring forward a Scottish “Turing law” to automatically pardon gay and bisexual men convicted of sexual offences that are no longer criminal.
He added that his officials had also been in discussion with Police Scotland to identify the most effective way of ensuring that past convictions for consensual sex between men no longer appeared on a person’s criminal record.
A similar law intended to apply to England and Wales was scuppered by the Conservative justice minister, Sam Gyimah, on Friday after he spoke so long that it ran out of time.
The BBC reported earlier this week that Gyimah had proposed an alternative bill that “would grant similar pardons for those who have died but would make those still alive go through a ‘disregard process’ to receive official pardons.”
The Scottish MPs hope to avoid that application process and offer a full blanket pardon.
RELATED: ‘Alan Turing Bill’ to Pardon 49,000+ Gay Men Fails in UK Parliament: WATCH
Labour MP Chris Bryant got emotional when talking about the new law, which has been proposed as the Turing Law, after Alan Turing.
Bryant wants the bill named after Ronald Cartland, Jack Macnamara, Anthony Muirhead, Robert Bernays and Victor Cazalet, a group of gay MPs from the 1930s.
The post Scotland Moves to Pardon Gay Men Convicted Under Outdated Indecency Laws appeared first on Towleroad.
Scotland Moves to Pardon Gay Men Convicted Under Outdated Indecency Laws
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