Under an
amendment to the Policing and Crime Bill, anyone convicted of now-abolished
criminal offences can apply for a full pardon.
The UK
government is seeking to pardon men convicted of now-abolished same-sex
criminal offences.
The pardons
would come under what the government is calling Turing's Law, which aims to
amend the country's Policing and Crime Bill, Justice Minister Sam Gyimah said in a statement Thursday.
Turing's Law is named in honor of Alan Turing, the brilliant UK mathematician
who laid the basis for much of modern
computing and helped break Germany's Enigma Code
during World War II.
If Turing's Law passes, anyone still living who was convicted of crimes such as "gross indecency" for consensual same-sex relationships will be able to apply to have the offence wiped from the record. Deceased people would be pardoned automatically. The pardons would apply only in England and Wales. Scotland and Northern Ireland handle their own judicial affairs.
Gyimah said
the move builds on the case of Turing,
who committed suicide in 1954 after his conviction of gross indecency. Queen
Elizabeth II officially
pardoned himposthumously in 2013, 31 years after homosexual acts
were decriminalized in all of the UK.
Although
Gyimah called the pardons "hugely important", others say they should
be granted automatically to everyone, not just the deceased. Parliament will debate
a separate bill on Friday that would bring blanket pardons, but Gyimah said the
government would not support it.




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