The decision to prosecute
After the police have investigated a crime and passed the papers to the CPS, our lawyers carefully review the evidence to decide whether or not to go ahead with the case.
Crown Prosecutors are responsible for deciding whether a person should be charged with a criminal offence and, if so, what that offence should be.
This decision is made in accordance with the 'Full Code Test', which is laid out in the Code for Crown Prosecutors. The Full Code Test has two stages:
The Evidential Stage:
Prosecutors must be satisfied that there is enough evidence to provide a realistic prospect of conviction against each defendant on each charge. If a case doesn't pass the evidential stage it will not go ahead, no matter how important or serious it may be.
The Public Interest Stage: If the case passes the evidential stage Prosecutors then decide whether a prosecution is needed in the public interest. A case has to pass both stages before the CPS can start or continue a prosecution.
The Code for Crown Prosecutors

