Family Court Chronology Templates (UK Guide for Litigants in Person)

In Family Court, clarity often determines credibility. Judges must understand complex histories quickly — patterns of conflict, safeguarding concerns, missed contact, financial movements, and escalation over time. A well-structured chronology transforms scattered documents into a coherent timeline. For litigants in person, mastering chronology drafting is one of the most powerful procedural tools available. This guide explains what a family court chronology is, how it should be structured, the drafting standards expected by the court, and provides practical templates you can use immediately.

Family Court Chronology Templates (UK Guide for Litigants in Person)

Key Takeaways

  • A chronology is not a story — it is a structured, date-ordered record of significant events.
  • Judges rely on chronologies to understand patterns, risk, escalation and context quickly.
  • For court filing, recent events should usually appear first (reverse chronological order).
  • Each entry should contain: Date, Event, and Evidence Reference as a minimum.
  • Chronologies must be factual, concise, and cross-checked against documentary evidence.
  • Different cases require different chronologies: core, issue-based, safeguarding, and financial disclosure.

Introduction: Why Chronologies Matter in Family Court

In Family Court, clarity is power.

Judges read hundreds of pages in limited time. They are required to identify patterns, assess risk, apply statutory tests, and make decisions affecting children and families — often under intense time pressure.

A well-drafted chronology can become the backbone of judicial understanding.

A poorly drafted chronology can undermine credibility, obscure risk, or create confusion.

This guide explains:

  • What a chronology is (and is not)
  • The minimum drafting standards
  • How to structure different types of chronologies
  • Best practice for accuracy and updating
  • Four ready-to-use templates aligned with UK family proceedings

What Is a Family Court Chronology?

A chronology is a succinct, date-ordered record of significant events in a child’s or family’s life. It is an analytical tool — not a narrative statement.

It should:

  • Identify significant dates
  • Describe events factually
  • Cross-reference documentary evidence
  • Enable rapid extraction of key facts
  • Highlight patterns or escalation

It should not:

  • Contain argument
  • Contain emotional commentary
  • Duplicate entire witness statements
  • Include irrelevant minor incidents

Core Drafting Principles

1. Minimum Required Fields

At a minimum, every entry should contain:

  • Date
  • Event Description (concise and factual)
  • Evidence / Bundle Reference

Optional but often useful additions:

  • Issue relevance
  • Impact on child
  • Multi-agency source (police, GP, school, CAFCASS)

2. Ordering

  • For court filing: Most recent events first (reverse chronological order).
  • For running case management: Oldest events first (system chronology).

3. Tone

Use neutral, factual language. For example:

Not: “The father violently attacked me.”
Instead: “Police attended address following alleged assault by father. Crime reference no. XXXX. No charges brought.”

The evidence speaks for itself.


Template 1: Core Chronology (Date / Event / Evidence Reference)

This is the foundational structure suitable for most private law children cases.

Date Event Description Evidence / Bundle Reference Relevance (Optional)
15/03/2023 Police attended family home following reported verbal altercation. Police log ref 12345 (Bundle p.67) Safeguarding concern
01/06/2023 Child commenced counselling at GP referral. GP letter dated 28/05/2023 (Bundle p.112) Emotional impact

Drafting Note: Keep entries short — ideally one to three lines.


Template 2: Issue-Based Chronology

Where proceedings involve multiple disputed themes (e.g., domestic abuse, non-compliance, relocation, schooling), a grouped chronology can improve clarity.

Structure:

Issue 1: Alleged Domestic Abuse

Date Event Evidence Reference
12/02/2022 Alleged pushing incident witnessed by child. Witness Statement para 23; School note p.145

Issue 2: Missed Contact

Date Event Evidence Reference
03/09/2023 Contact did not take place; father texted 30 mins prior cancelling. WhatsApp screenshot p.210

This structure helps the judge see patterns within specific disputes.


Template 3: Safeguarding-Focused Timeline

This is used where there are allegations of domestic abuse, neglect, coercive control or child risk factors.

Date Incident Child Impact Agency Involvement Evidence Ref
10/11/2021 Alleged verbal abuse during exchange. Child tearful; reported fear. School informed next day. Email p.178

This template helps align your chronology with safeguarding frameworks and PD12J considerations.


Template 4: Financial Disclosure Timeline

In financial remedy proceedings, chronology helps identify asset acquisition, disposal, non-disclosure or significant financial decisions.

Date Financial Event Amount / Asset Evidence Ref
04/05/2020 Transfer from joint savings account £18,000 Bank statement p.302

Financial chronologies are particularly useful in contested Form E cases.


Multi-Agency Cross-Referencing

Where appropriate, cross-check chronology entries against:

  • Police logs
  • GP records
  • School reports
  • CAFCASS safeguarding letters
  • Social services assessments

Accuracy builds credibility.


Updating and Maintenance

A chronology should be treated as a running record throughout proceedings.

  • Update after each hearing.
  • Update after significant incidents.
  • Review monthly in ongoing cases.
  • Ensure bundle page references remain accurate after pagination.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Writing essays instead of entries.
  • Failing to reference evidence.
  • Using inflammatory language.
  • Listing trivial disputes.
  • Forgetting to update page references after bundle revisions.

Using Chronologies Strategically

A chronology is not just administrative.

It can:

  • Reveal patterns of escalation.
  • Highlight non-compliance.
  • Demonstrate consistency.
  • Identify gaps in evidence.
  • Support applications for fact-finding hearings.

Used correctly, it sharpens your advocacy.


Conclusion

Chronologies are often the backbone of judicial understanding.

When structured properly — factual, concise, cross-referenced and regularly updated — they crystallise the issues before the court.

Litigants in person who master chronology drafting gain procedural confidence and strategic clarity.


Book a 15-Minute Consultation

If you would like assistance structuring your chronology or preparing it for filing:


Regulatory & Editorial Notice

This article is provided for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Every case depends on its own facts and procedural history.

JSH Law provides litigation support services to litigants in person. JSH Law is not a firm of solicitors and does not undertake reserved legal activities.

Family Court Tools, Templates & Research Support for Litigants in Person (UK Guide)

Family Court is not won by emotion or volume — it is navigated through structure. For litigants in person, the absence of formal legal representation does not mean the absence of strategy. The right tools, templates and targeted legal research can transform overwhelm into clarity. From chronologies and witness statement frameworks to safeguarding checklists and case law summaries, structured preparation enables you to focus on what the court must actually decide. This guide explains what practical tools are available, how they support compliance with the Family Procedure Rules 2010, and how disciplined preparation strengthens credibility and confidence throughout proceedings.

Family Court Tools, Templates & Research Support for Litigants in Person (UK Guide)

Key Takeaways for Litigants in Person

  • Structure wins cases — not volume. The right template can transform clarity.
  • Checklists prevent missed deadlines and procedural mistakes.
  • Targeted legal research strengthens credibility and focus.
  • Understanding leading cases helps you frame arguments correctly.
  • Evidence mapping and chronology tools reduce overwhelm.
  • Professional templates should align with the Family Procedure Rules 2010 and safeguarding guidance.

Introduction: Structure Creates Confidence

Family Court can feel chaotic. Emotions run high. Documents multiply. Deadlines approach quickly. For litigants in person, the greatest disadvantage is rarely intelligence or commitment — it is structural clarity.

Tools, templates and structured research change that dynamic.

This category is designed to provide practical frameworks: checklists, drafting guides, evidence tools and case summaries that help you approach proceedings methodically rather than reactively.

Templates are not shortcuts. They are scaffolding. They allow you to focus on substance rather than formatting.


Why Tools and Templates Matter in Family Proceedings

Family Court is governed by the Family Procedure Rules 2010. Judges expect compliance, proportionality and clarity.

Common problems for litigants in person include:

  • Overlong witness statements
  • Disorganised evidence
  • Missed directions
  • Emotion-led drafting
  • Failure to align arguments with legal tests

Templates and structured tools reduce these risks.


What We Provide: Practical Tools for Family Court

1. Chronology Templates

  • Date / Event / Evidence Reference structure
  • Issue-based chronologies
  • Safeguarding-focused timelines
  • Financial disclosure timelines

Chronologies are often the backbone of judicial understanding.

2. Witness Statement Frameworks

  • Clear heading structure
  • Issue-by-issue response format
  • Exhibit referencing guidance
  • PD12J safeguarding alignment (where relevant)

3. Position Statement Templates

  • Orders sought
  • Issues in dispute
  • Key evidence references
  • Welfare checklist alignment

4. Evidence Mapping Tools

  • Allegation → Evidence → Legal relevance table
  • Bundle page reference trackers
  • Cross-examination preparation sheets

5. Hearing Preparation Checklists

  • FHDRA checklist
  • Fact-finding preparation sheet
  • Final hearing readiness audit
  • Remote hearing technical checklist

6. Disclosure & Financial Remedy Tools

  • Form E preparation checklist
  • Section 25 factor analysis sheet
  • Asset tracking template
  • Schedule of assets summary format

7. Safeguarding & Domestic Abuse Templates

  • Scott Schedule drafting guide
  • PD12J compliance checklist
  • Child impact analysis worksheet
  • Contact risk assessment structure

Research Support: Understanding the Law Behind Your Case

Templates provide structure. Research provides authority.

We assist litigants in understanding:

  • The Children Act 1989
  • Welfare checklist application
  • Practice Direction 12J (Domestic Abuse)
  • Practice Direction 27A (Bundles)
  • Case management principles
  • Financial remedy factors under s.25 MCA 1973

Research should answer one question: how does this authority support or limit your argument?


Understanding Key Case Law

Many litigants refer to “case law” without understanding what is binding and what is persuasive.

We help interpret leading authorities relevant to:

  • Parental alienation claims
  • Domestic abuse fact-finding
  • Relocation applications
  • Enforcement of child arrangements
  • Financial non-disclosure

Understanding precedent ensures arguments are framed correctly.


AI-Assisted Organisation Tools

Modern litigation benefits from technology.

  • Document indexing automation
  • Timeline extraction from message logs
  • Pattern analysis in communications
  • Bundle structuring guidance

Technology does not replace judgment — it enhances organisation.


Templates We Commonly Draft

  • Pre-hearing email to court
  • Application covering letters
  • Chronology summaries
  • Position statements
  • Fact-finding issue schedules
  • Costs schedules (where applicable)
  • Appeal notice guidance (procedural support)

Common Mistakes Templates Help Prevent

  • Repetition instead of relevance
  • Emotional narrative without evidence
  • Failure to link evidence to legal test
  • Procedural non-compliance
  • Overloading bundles

Templates enforce discipline.


How Research Strengthens Credibility

Judges respond to structured argument anchored in authority.

For example:

  • Aligning submissions with the welfare checklist
  • Identifying risk analysis principles in safeguarding cases
  • Understanding proportionality in contact disputes

Legal authority is not decoration — it is foundation.


Checklists That Reduce Anxiety

Many litigants experience procedural anxiety. Checklists reduce uncertainty:

  • What must I file?
  • By when?
  • In what format?
  • With what attachments?

Preparedness creates confidence.


Case Understanding Support

We help litigants understand:

  • What type of hearing they are attending
  • What the judge is deciding
  • What evidence is relevant
  • What realistic outcomes look like

Clarity prevents unrealistic expectations.


Why This Category Exists

Access to justice depends on practical empowerment.

Legal information alone is insufficient.

Litigants need tools — not just explanations.


How JSH Law Approaches Tools & Templates

  • Aligned to current procedural rules
  • Safeguarding aware
  • Proportionate and focused
  • Structured for clarity
  • Designed for litigants in person

Templates should not inflame conflict. They should improve precision.


Book a 15-Minute Consultation

If you need structured tools or research support tailored to your case, you can book a short consultation.


Useful Links


Regulatory & Editorial Notice

This article is provided for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Every case depends on its own facts and procedural history.

JSH Law provides litigation support services to litigants in person. JSH Law is not a firm of solicitors and does not undertake reserved legal activities.

The “Vibe Lawyer” Moment: AI, Litigants in Person, and the Coming Shockwave for the Family Courts

Litigants in person are being called “vibe lawyers” for using AI to draft complaints and court documents. But behind the headlines lies a harder truth: people are turning to artificial intelligence because they cannot afford representation in an increasingly complex and overstretched justice system. Judges are right to be concerned about fake citations and procedural errors. Yet dismissing AI use outright misses the deeper issue — access to justice has been under strain for years, and technology is now filling the gap.

The “Vibe Lawyer” Moment: AI, Litigants in Person, and the Coming Shockwave for the Family Courts

By Jessica Susan Hill | JSH Law

Key Takeaways (Read This First)

  • AI is already changing litigation behaviour — the judiciary is explicitly preparing for a surge in AI-generated claims across civil, family and tribunals.
  • The risk isn’t “AI” — it’s unverified AI: fabricated authorities and confidently wrong submissions waste court time and damage credibility.
  • LiPs are not “wreaking havoc” for fun. Many are doing what they must to participate in a system they cannot afford to navigate with representation.
  • The solution is guardrails, not barriers: verification standards, procedural literacy, and responsible workflows that help the court as well as the litigant.
  • Family proceedings are high-stakes. Used properly, AI can improve clarity and evidence organisation; used badly, it can derail safeguarding analysis and case management.

1. Why this matters now

“Vibe lawyers” is a catchy label, but it risks obscuring a far more serious reality: litigants in person are using AI tools to draft complaints, defences, witness statements and skeleton arguments at scale — and the courts are already feeling the impact. The phenomenon is now so visible that Sir Geoffrey Vos (Master of the Rolls, Head of Civil Justice) has explicitly warned that the judiciary must prepare for an “AI revolution” that may vastly increase the number of civil, family and tribunal claims the justice system must manage. His speech is worth reading in full. :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}

Let’s be direct: the justice system in England and Wales is already stretched. Many court users already experience the process as opaque, intimidating and unaffordable. That is not a personal failing of litigants — it is a structural reality. AI is entering a pressure-cooker and magnifying what was already there: information asymmetry, procedural complexity, delay and the gulf between a represented party and an unrepresented one.

So, yes — judges and practitioners are right to be concerned about inaccurate AI-generated material clogging lists and adding burden to judges who are already firefighting. But it is also true that, in the medium term, AI could become one of the most significant access-to-justice tools we have ever seen. Both truths can exist at once.

2. The judiciary is not guessing — it is responding to lived reality

We are past the point of theoretical debate. The judiciary has been issuing speeches and guidance precisely because AI use is now operationally relevant. Beyond speeches, the Judicial Office has published updated guidance addressing risks including confidentiality, bias and “hallucinations” — where AI produces plausible but incorrect information. The October 2025 judicial guidance explicitly flags the danger of fictitious citations and misleading legal content. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}

Sir Geoffrey Vos has also repeatedly articulated a simple “core rules” approach: understand what the tool is doing, do not upload private/confidential data into public tools, and check the output before using it for any purpose. He set that out again in October 2025. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}

This is not anti-technology. It is the judiciary doing what it should do: protecting the integrity of the process while acknowledging that new tools are changing behaviour.

3. The real problem: “confidently wrong” submissions

Generative AI tools can draft impressive text quickly. But they do not “know” the law. They predict language. That difference matters profoundly in litigation. A well-written paragraph that contains an invented case, a misquoted statute or an inaccurate procedural route is not merely unhelpful — it can actively undermine a party’s credibility and force the court to spend additional time cleaning up the mess.

The legal profession has already seen what happens when verification fails. In June 2025, the Divisional Court (Dame Victoria Sharp P and Johnson J) dealt with the now widely-reported “fake authorities” problem in Ayinde v London Borough of Haringey and Al-Haroun v Qatar National Bank, where false citations and inaccurate quotations were placed before the court, with suspected or admitted use of AI tools without proper checks. The judgment is publicly available and makes required reading for anyone tempted to treat AI output as “good enough”. :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}

Importantly, that judgment is aimed at lawyers — because professionals are held to professional standards. But the underlying point applies to everyone: accuracy is non-negotiable in court work. You can be passionate, traumatised, exhausted, and still required to file documents that are factually and legally sound.

4. Why litigants in person are using AI (and why the “money pit” narrative is wrong)

Many litigants in person feel they are treated as an administrative inconvenience — or worse, as a “cost centre” rather than a rights-holder. I understand why that perception forms. The system can be brutal: forms, deadlines, practice directions, directions hearings, orders you must interpret and comply with under stress. In private law children proceedings, you may be trying to protect a child, manage safeguarding concerns, and preserve your own mental stability while preparing documents that lawyers train for years to produce.

For a growing number of people, AI has become the first accessible “translator” of legal language. It can explain terminology, propose a structure for a statement, generate headings for a skeleton argument, and help a person who feels overwhelmed take a first step. That is why it feels like a shake-up. It is not because LiPs are trying to harm the system. It is because they are trying to participate in it.

And here is the hard truth: if access to representation continues to shrink in practice — whether by cost, availability, or scope — more people will use AI. That is not something a press headline can reverse. It is a reality the system must incorporate.

5. Family court is the pressure point

Family proceedings are where AI misuse can become most dangerous, because the stakes are often immediate and human: the child’s living arrangements, contact, safeguarding, allegations of domestic abuse, coercive control, substance misuse, mental health, relocation, schooling — the list is endless.

Private law children cases are ultimately governed by the welfare principle in the Children Act 1989, section 1. The court’s job is not to reward the best writer. It is to determine what best meets the child’s welfare needs. But poor drafting can still distort the court’s understanding of what matters. :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}

And family procedure is its own ecosystem. The Family Procedure Rules and associated Practice Directions are not optional reading; they are the architecture of how your case moves through the system. PD12J (domestic abuse and harm) is particularly critical where abuse is alleged, because it shapes fact-finding decisions, safeguarding analysis and protective measures. :contentReference[oaicite:5]{index=5}

Where AI is used badly in family court, I commonly see the same patterns (and judges see them too):

  • Misstating legal tests (e.g., confusing civil and criminal standards, or quoting the wrong threshold framework).
  • Over-inclusion: 30-page narratives where only a small percentage is evidentially relevant.
  • Inflammatory language that escalates conflict rather than centring the child.
  • Procedural fantasy: “applications” and “orders” that do not exist or are not procedurally available.
  • Fake authority: citations that sound real but are not verifiable.

Those problems do not just “waste time”. They can change outcomes. They can harden judicial perceptions. They can reduce a litigant’s credibility. And in safeguarding contexts, credibility matters.

6. But here is the opportunity: structured AI use can help the court

Now for the other side of the ledger, which the “vibe lawyer” framing often ignores.

Used properly, AI can reduce noise and increase clarity. It can help an overwhelmed litigant present their case in a way that judges can actually work with. It can support:

  • Chronology building (dates, events, orders, and key turning points).
  • Document organisation (indexes, exhibit lists, consistent naming).
  • Issue framing (what is the dispute actually about?).
  • Drafting clarity (headings, structure, neutral tone).
  • Summarising communications (WhatsApp/SMS/email) into court-usable bundles.

Those are not cosmetic benefits. They are directly aligned with what the court needs: efficient case management, focused evidence, and parties who can articulate relevant issues.

In other words: the best version of AI in litigation is not “AI replaces lawyers.” It is “AI helps people present usable material so the court can do its job.” That is the access-to-justice promise.

7. The non-negotiable: verification

The line between empowerment and chaos is verification.

Professional regulators have been clear that AI cannot be trusted to judge its own accuracy. The SRA has warned about hallucinations and the risk of plausible but incorrect outputs, including non-existent cases. :contentReference[oaicite:6]{index=6}

For court users, this translates into a simple operating standard:

  • If you cite it, you must be able to prove it exists (case name, neutral citation, and a reliable source).
  • If you quote a statute, check it on legislation.gov.uk (not in an AI chat box).
  • If you refer to rules or practice directions, check the official source (FPR/CPR/PD pages).
  • If it sounds “too perfect”, slow down — AI is very good at confidence, not always good at truth.

After the June 2025 “fake authorities” judgment, the direction of travel is obvious: courts will increasingly treat fabricated or careless citations as serious misconduct where professionals are involved, and as a significant credibility issue where litigants are involved. :contentReference[oaicite:7]{index=7}

8. A real-world cautionary tale: Mata v Avianca

Even outside the UK, courts have reacted strongly when lawyers filed AI-generated fake authorities. The widely-cited US case Mata v Avianca resulted in sanctions after fabricated case citations were submitted. It is not “UK law”, but it is a stark illustration of what happens when verification collapses. :contentReference[oaicite:8]{index=8}

Why mention it here? Because the underlying professional lesson travels: courts do not have time for invented law, and they should not have to spend scarce judicial time correcting avoidable errors.

9. What this means for litigants in person

What This Means for LiPs (Practical Guidance)

1) Use AI to organise, not to “source” law. AI is excellent for structure, headings, summaries, chronologies and drafting tone. It is unreliable as a sole source of legal authority.

2) Keep it child-focused (family cases). Remove insult, speculation and “character assassination”. Judges need facts, evidence, and impact on the child.

3) Treat every AI output as a draft. You are responsible for what you file. Read it. Edit it. Make sure it matches your evidence.

4) Verify every citation. If you cannot open the case or locate it on a reputable database, do not rely on it.

5) Don’t upload confidential material into public AI tools. Safeguarding details and private communications should be handled carefully. Follow the Judicial Office warnings on confidentiality. :contentReference[oaicite:9]{index=9}

6) Aim for shorter, clearer documents. Judges do not reward length. They reward relevance. A focused 6–10 pages often lands better than a sprawling 30.

7) If you’re stuck, get human oversight. A short consultation to sanity-check structure, compliance with directions, and relevance can prevent months of damage.

10. What this means for the justice system: guardrails, not barriers

If the system responds to AI by “closing ranks” and shaming litigants, it will fail. People will still use AI — but they will do so in worse, more chaotic ways. A better approach is to develop common standards that increase quality and reduce burden.

In practice, that means three things.

A) Judicial clarity

Courts and judiciary leadership can help by setting clear expectations about what is acceptable in written submissions — particularly around citation verification and disclosure of AI use where relevant. The Judicial Office guidance is already laying the foundation here. :contentReference[oaicite:10]{index=10}

B) Procedural literacy for court users

Most problems I see are not “bad people”. They are overwhelmed people. The system needs short, accessible, official pathways explaining (for example) what a directions hearing is, how to comply with an order, how to prepare a bundle, and how to draft a witness statement that is relevant rather than reactive.

C) Responsible support models

This is where the best “shake up” lies: hybrid support that uses AI to accelerate organisation and drafting, with human oversight to ensure compliance, accuracy, relevance and tone. That model benefits everyone: the litigant, the other party, and the court.

11. A note on professional standards (and why it still matters to LiPs)

When professionals file inaccurate material, the consequences can be severe, including regulatory referral. That was made explicit in the June 2025 judgment dealing with false citations. :contentReference[oaicite:11]{index=11}

LiPs are not held to the same professional code — but the practical consequences can still be harsh: credibility erosion, judicial impatience, adverse costs risks in some contexts, and (most importantly) a judge simply not trusting what they are reading. In family court, loss of credibility can be profoundly damaging.

This is why “AI literacy” is not an academic luxury. It is a procedural survival skill.

12. Conclusion: the future is responsible AI, not no AI

AI is in the courtroom ecosystem now. The judiciary is preparing for it. Regulators are warning about it. The profession is adapting to it. The question is not whether litigants in person will use AI — they already are.

The question is whether we will build a culture of responsible use.

Used recklessly, AI produces noise: invented authorities, misunderstood legal tests, and sprawling submissions that burden the court. Used properly, it can produce clarity: structured chronologies, coherent statements, and focused issues that help the court get to the real substance of the case.

If we care about access to justice, we cannot treat litigants in person as an administrative irritation. We should treat them as court users with rights and responsibilities — and we should equip them with tools and guardrails that allow them to participate meaningfully.

That is the “AI revolution” that matters: not chaos, but capability.


Useful Official Resources

If you want structured, responsible help using AI to prepare court documents (without risking accuracy or credibility), you can book a short consultation below:


Regulatory & Editorial Notice (JSH Law): This article is published for general information and public-interest commentary only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Where this article refers to third-party sources (including court judgments, guidance, regulator publications, media reporting, or external organisations), those references are provided for context and convenience; JSH Law does not control or endorse third-party content and cannot guarantee its accuracy, completeness, or continued availability. Court users should always consult the original primary sources (including the Family Procedure Rules, Practice Directions, and judgments) and obtain appropriate professional advice for their specific circumstances.

“Is Any Thing Too Hard for the Lord?” — A Come, Follow Me Reflection for Litigants in Person in the Family Court

“Is Any Thing Too Hard for the Lord?” — A Come, Follow Me Reflection for Litigants in Person in the Family Court

By Jessica Susan Hill, Legal Consultant & McKenzie Friend (JSH Law Ltd)

Every Sunday, after I’ve been to church, I want to write something that’s both personal and practical: a long-form reflection that draws on my Come, Follow Me lesson in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and turns it into grounded encouragement for litigants in person navigating the family court. If you are in proceedings right now—especially where there is high conflict, safeguarding concern, or domestic abuse dynamics—this is for you.

Today’s lesson is Genesis 18–23, titled “Is Any Thing Too Hard for the Lord?” (official Come, Follow Me lesson page). It’s a sequence of stories about promise, delay, rescue, consequence, testing, and (interestingly, for a legal mind) the first formal land purchase recorded for Abraham’s family.

Key takeaways for Litigants in Person (LiPs)

  • Do not let “delay” trick you into despair. In Genesis, waiting is not absence—it is formation. Court delay can be brutal; build a system to survive it.
  • Be an advocate like Abraham. Calm, structured, principled advocacy wins credibility. Don’t rant. Don’t spiral. Build your case like a professional.
  • Get out—and stay out—of “Sodom” dynamics. If you’re leaving coercive control or chronic conflict, don’t look back emotionally. Protect your nervous system and your evidence.
  • God provides “means” in motion. If you take the next right step, you’ll often find the next tool, the next contact, the next document, the next insight (see 1 Nephi 17:3).
  • Your weakness is not disqualification. It can become the exact channel for strength (Ether 12:27)—including learning court process, building a bundle, and holding boundaries.
  • Anchor to purpose. You’re not doing this for drama. You’re doing this for safety, stability, and your child’s welfare. Keep that mission statement (Moses 1:39).

Why I’m writing this (and why faith belongs in a court-user toolkit)

Let me be plain: family court can feel like wilderness. It can be confusing, exhausting, and sometimes psychologically destabilising—particularly if you are facing a controlling, manipulative, or hostile other party, or if you’re trying to communicate safeguarding concerns clearly without being dismissed as “emotional” or “difficult.”

In the UK, a significant number of parents and parties appear without representation. Some do so by choice; many do so because they cannot access or afford legal advice. The system expects you to comply with process, deadlines, and evidence standards whether or not you have a lawyer. That is the reality.

Faith—properly understood—doesn’t replace competence. It fuels it. It gives meaning to disciplined action. It helps you hold your nerve, keep your integrity, and make decisions that protect your child long-term rather than “winning” the next argument.

The Church lesson this week is not “soft.” Genesis 18–23 contains joy, horror, fear, grief, and law-like transactions. It speaks directly to anyone trying to remain spiritually grounded while navigating a world that can be unjust, corrupt, or unsafe.

Genesis 18–23: a quick narrative map (and why it matters to LiPs)

The Come, Follow Me reading covers:

  1. Genesis 18 — Sarah is promised a child; Abraham intercedes for Sodom.
  2. Genesis 19 — Sodom falls; Lot’s family flees; Lot’s wife looks back.
  3. Genesis 20 — Abraham’s fear-driven misstep; God intervenes to protect the covenant promise.
  4. Genesis 21 — Isaac is born; conflict and separation happen; a treaty is made.
  5. Genesis 22 — Abraham is tested with Isaac (the “Akedah”).
  6. Genesis 23 — Sarah dies; Abraham negotiates and purchases land formally.

If you’re a litigant in person, you can read that and think: “What has this got to do with my case?” Plenty. This is a blueprint for how humans behave under pressure—and what it looks like to keep moving forward without being destroyed by the environment.

For additional Latter-day Saint commentary on this week’s reading, you may find this helpful: Church News: “What have Church leaders said about Genesis 18–23?”.

1) “Is any thing too hard for the Lord?” — when your case feels impossible

In Genesis 18, Sarah laughs at the idea of pregnancy in old age. It’s not a cartoonish laugh; it’s the laughter of someone whose lived experience tells her that the promise is implausible. And then comes the question: “Is any thing too hard for the Lord?”

In the New Testament, the angel says to Mary: “For with God nothing shall be impossible.” (Luke 1:37). In my own faith tradition, the Book of Mormon offers a parallel logic: God provides means to accomplish what He commands (1 Nephi 17:3).

For a litigant in person, “impossible” often means:

  • “I can’t afford representation.”
  • “I can’t do the paperwork.”
  • “I can’t face him/her in court.”
  • “No one will believe me.”
  • “The system is too slow; my child needs safety now.”

Here is the practical reframe: you may not be able to control the other party, the listing delays, or the court’s resourcing. But you can build a credible, organised, evidence-led case file and present it in a way that the court can act on. That is not “wishful thinking.” That is disciplined stewardship.

If you are applying for a child arrangements order (or related orders under section 8 Children Act 1989), the official application route and forms are here: Form C100 (GOV.UK) and the broader GOV.UK overview here: Making child arrangements if you divorce or separate.

What I want you to take from Genesis 18 is not “pretend it’s fine.” It’s this: God’s question challenges the assumption that your present limitation sets the ceiling for your future. It doesn’t.

2) Abraham’s intercession: what principled advocacy looks like

Abraham doesn’t scream at God about Sodom. He reasons. He appeals to justice. He negotiates down—50, 45, 40, 30, 20, 10—with humility but also firmness. He models something litigants in person desperately need: structured advocacy.

In family court, “structured advocacy” means:

  • Clarity: what orders are you seeking and why?
  • Relevance: what facts directly support the order you want?
  • Proportionality: are you asking for the minimum necessary to protect the child?
  • Evidence discipline: can you prove what you’re saying with dated documents, screenshots, logs, reports, or admissions?
  • Tone control: your credibility rises when you remain calm and factual.

This is not about being “nice.” It is about being effective.

One of the most important judicial frameworks in domestic abuse-related private law children proceedings is Practice Direction 12J (PD12J). PD12J sets out what the court must do where domestic abuse is alleged or admitted, including ensuring that any child arrangements order protects the safety and wellbeing of the child and the parent and does not expose them to further risk. For a plain-English explainer, this UK Parliament briefing is also useful: House of Commons Library: Child arrangements and domestic abuse.

Abraham’s “intercession” reminds me of something I tell clients constantly: you don’t win by being louder; you win by being clearer.

3) Sodom, corruption, and the psychology of “looking back”

Genesis 19 is uncomfortable reading. It is meant to be. It depicts a society with collapsed moral boundaries and a predatory, violent culture. Lot’s family is told to leave urgently. Lot’s wife looks back and becomes “a pillar of salt.”

In the context of modern family court cases, I often see a parallel dynamic—not because “the court is Sodom,” but because many litigants in person are trying to exit:

  • coercive control,
  • chronic conflict patterns,
  • high-conflict co-parenting dynamics,
  • or a wider environment of manipulation, intimidation, and narrative warfare.

The “look back” in real life is often psychological. It can look like:

  • re-reading abusive messages for hours and spiralling,
  • seeking closure from a person who thrives on withholding it,
  • breaking no-contact boundaries “just this once,”
  • arguing in circles to force an apology that will never come,
  • or clinging to the idea that “if I explain it differently, they’ll finally understand.”

If you are leaving a toxic environment, the first stage is physical safety; the second is emotional detachment. Court proceedings can accidentally keep you emotionally tethered because you must keep engaging. That is why you need a system.

A practical “don’t look back” protocol for LiPs

  • Communication boundaries: keep everything in writing and keep it child-focused. No essays. No emotional bait.
  • Evidence hygiene: screenshot, date-stamp, store, and then stop re-reading.
  • Nervous system protection: limit exposure windows. You don’t need to re-traumatise yourself to “prepare.”
  • External support: speak to a grounded friend, therapist, advocate, or support service—someone who brings you back to reality.

If you’re in private law proceedings, Cafcass explains the process and what to expect here: Cafcass: what happens in private law proceedings, and their overview of involvement (including safeguarding letters) is here: Cafcass: overview of our involvement.

4) Delay is not denial: Sarah, Abraham, and the long middle

One of the cruelest features of family court is time. Delay can feel like injustice, especially where there are safeguarding concerns, where children are distressed, or where one party uses process as a weapon.

Abraham and Sarah’s story is, in part, about the long middle: the space between promise and fulfilment. If you are a litigant in person, you may be living in a long middle right now:

  • between separation and stability,
  • between disclosure and findings,
  • between the first hearing and a final hearing,
  • between reporting harm and seeing meaningful safeguards.

Here is the hard truth: waiting will not become easier just because you “accept” it. Waiting becomes survivable when you build structure. A faith-based approach is not passive; it is disciplined.

A “wilderness routine” for court users

  • One admin block per week: evidence filing, chronology updates, statement drafting, or document requests.
  • One wellbeing anchor per day: prayer, scripture, exercise, journaling, a walk—something that brings you back to centre.
  • One support touchpoint: someone who reminds you who you are when the other party tries to rewrite you.
  • One “next right step” list: court is overwhelming when you treat it as one giant problem. Break it down.

If you are struggling to manage forms and process, two practical support resources worth knowing: Support Through Court (a charity helping people who face civil and family courts alone), and AdviceNow’s step-by-step guides: AdviceNow: child arrangements.

5) “Weak things become strong” — applying Ether 12:27 to court survival

The Book of Mormon verse that has carried many people through impossible seasons is Ether 12:27: weakness is given so that we may be humble, and if we come unto Christ, weak things can become strong.

In practice, for litigants in person, “weakness” may be:

  • lack of legal knowledge,
  • fear of cross-examination or confrontation,
  • trauma symptoms and overwhelm,
  • financial insecurity,
  • or the feeling of being “outmatched.”

The transformation often comes through very ordinary means:

  • learning the court vocabulary,
  • building a chronology,
  • identifying the key issues,
  • preparing a concise position statement,
  • and showing up consistently with integrity.

That is how weakness becomes strength: not by magic, but by grace meeting effort.

6) “Provide means” — 1 Nephi 17:3 and the logic of practical faith

1 Nephi 17:3 teaches a pattern I have seen repeatedly in real life: when God commands, He also provides “means” to accomplish it—often discovered after you begin.

For a litigant in person, the “means” may look like:

  • a template for a chronology,
  • a support service that helps you complete forms,
  • clarity from reading the official process guidance,
  • finding the right legal framework (e.g., PD12J) to structure safeguarding concerns,
  • or simply learning how to present your evidence in a coherent, restrained way.

Sometimes the “means” is financial too. If the application fee is a barrier, look at Help with Fees: Get help with court and tribunal fees and the EX160 guidance: Apply for help with fees (EX160).

Faith, in a court context, is not “hoping it all works out.” Faith is: taking the next right step even while you are scared.

7) Abraham’s “test” (Genesis 22): surrender, not self-destruction

Genesis 22 is one of the most confronting passages in scripture. It depicts Abraham’s willingness to obey God in relation to Isaac, the promised son. I won’t attempt to flatten this into a simplistic moral.

But there is a relevant principle for litigants in person: there is a difference between surrender and self-destruction.

In family court, people often destroy themselves trying to:

  • control the other party,
  • force vindication from a system that moves slowly,
  • or “win” every minor point.

Surrender is not giving up your child or tolerating harm. Surrender is releasing what you cannot control so that you can focus on what you can: your evidence, your conduct, your child’s needs, your boundaries, and your long-term stability.

This is where Moses 1:39 helps as a mission statement: God’s work and glory is “to bring to pass the immortality and eternal life” of His children. Translated into court-user language: the purpose is not to “defeat” the other party; it is to protect welfare, build stability, and keep your soul intact.

8) Genesis 23 and the power of paperwork: the first “land deal”

Genesis 23 can look like an anticlimax after the drama of earlier chapters. Sarah dies; Abraham grieves; then he negotiates and purchases the cave of Machpelah as a burial place. But notice the detail: this is formal, witnessed, priced, and legally secured.

That matters.

If you are a litigant in person, you are living in a world where: what is documented is what is real. You can have truth in your heart and still fail if you cannot evidence it. The court does not decide cases on vibes. It decides on evidence, credibility, welfare analysis, and statutory/legal frameworks.

What Genesis 23 teaches the LiP (in plain English)

  • Grief and administration can co-exist: you may be in pain and still need to do the forms.
  • Do it properly: accuracy, dates, copies, and receipts matter.
  • Secure what you can: focus on orders and safeguards that are enforceable and measurable.
  • Think long-term: Abraham was anchoring a future, not just reacting to a moment.

For practical process guidance on applications involving children, GOV.UK also provides a booklet-style explainer here: Making an application: children and the family courts.

A Litigant-in-Person “faith + strategy” checklist for the coming week

If you are reading this after a difficult Sunday—tired, anxious, and carrying the weight of a case—here is a practical checklist you can use this week. (Faith is not a substitute for action. Faith fuels action.)

  1. Define your core aim in one sentence: “I am seeking arrangements that protect X and meet Y need.” Keep it welfare-focused.
  2. Update your chronology: 10–20 lines, dates only, facts only. No commentary.
  3. Create an “evidence index”: label documents clearly, keep them in date order, avoid duplication.
  4. Read PD12J if domestic abuse is relevant: know the framework the court is meant to apply.
  5. Prepare for the first hearing: review Cafcass guidance so you know what to expect.
  6. Reduce reactive communication: shorter, calmer messages. Child-focused. No bait-taking.
  7. Anchor daily: one spiritual practice, one physical practice, one administrative step.

If you need form-filling and procedural support, consider: Support Through Court: how they help and AdviceNow’s practical guides (start here): AdviceNow: apply for a child arrangements order without a lawyer.

Work with me: 15-minute consultation

If you want a calm, strategic second pair of eyes on your case—especially around evidence structure, court-ready positioning, safeguarding framing, or preparing for hearings—you can book a 15-minute consultation below.

Alternatively, you can book via the contact page: https://jshlaw.co.uk/contact/

Final reflection: hope that doesn’t ignore reality

I am proud to be a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. I don’t say that as a marketing device; I say it because my faith teaches me to treat people as eternal beings, and to take suffering seriously—not sentimentally.

Genesis 18–23 is not a fairy tale. It is a record of real human complexity: delay, fear, rescue, consequence, testing, grief, and legal reality. And the thread through it all is this: God is able to do what you cannot.

For the litigant in person: you may feel like you are walking through a wilderness you didn’t choose. But you can still become disciplined, credible, and strong. You can still tell the truth with restraint. You can still build a case file that the court can understand. You can still protect your child’s welfare and your own integrity.

“Is any thing too hard for the Lord?” does not mean everything will be easy. It means you are not limited to what you can currently see—and you are not alone in the work.


When Court Data Disappears: Why Transparency in Family Courts Matters More Than Ever

In February 2026, the Ministry of Justice ordered the removal of a major archive of court listing data, citing data protection concerns and alleged misuse involving AI. On the surface, it looked like a dispute about compliance. In reality, it raises a far more serious question: what happens when the justice system becomes less visible? For families navigating private law disputes, safeguarding allegations and prolonged delay, transparency is not a political slogan — it is the difference between understanding how the system works and feeling powerless within it.

Key points (read this first)

  • “Open justice” is not a vibe. It is a constitutional principle: the public must be able to see justice being done — in practice, not just in theory.
  • The Courtsdesk database mattered because it made magistrates’ court activity discoverable at scale — across regions, trends and time — in a way ordinary listings often do not.
  • The MoJ/HMCTS position has centred on data protection and alleged unauthorised sharing with an AI third party (including potentially sensitive identifiers). That is a serious issue — but it doesn’t automatically justify a “delete the archive” outcome.
  • There is now a live policy tension: privacy compliance vs public scrutiny. The correct answer is not to pick one. It is to design lawful access with safeguards.
  • AI changes the stakes. It can expose systemic court failures (delays, inconsistency, outcomes), but it can also amplify privacy harm if governance is weak.
  • What to watch next: licensing frameworks, official listing portals, retention/archiving rules, and whether any independent oversight is built into the “new” regime.

If you only have 60 seconds: the question isn’t “should court data exist?” — it’s “who controls access, under what rules, with what accountability?”

When Court Data Disappears: Courtsdesk, the MoJ Deletion Order, and What “Open Justice” Means in the AI Age

By Jessica Susan Hill | Legal Consultant & McKenzie Friend | JSH Law Ltd

In February 2026, a story surfaced that should make every lawyer, journalist and court-user sit up: the Ministry of Justice (via HMCTS) instructed a private platform, Courtsdesk, to delete what was widely described as the UK’s largest archive of court reporting data. The dispute was framed as a data protection breach involving AI. Critics called it a major blow to open justice.

This isn’t a niche media row. It’s a governance problem with a constitutional wrapper. Because once court information becomes searchable at scale, it becomes auditable. And once the system becomes auditable, it becomes accountable.

1) What happened — and why the link you saw may have “stopped working”

If you clicked a share link to a paywalled newspaper, you’ll often get a broken experience (or a login wall). But the underlying issue is very real: in early-to-mid February 2026, multiple sources reported that the MoJ/HMCTS instructed Courtsdesk to remove court listing/archival data from its platform. The matter was then debated in Parliament, with ministers stating that action was taken because of data protection concerns and alleged unauthorised sharing with an AI company.

In the House of Commons debate on 10 February 2026, the government position was put bluntly: HMCTS stopped sharing data and instructed the company to remove data from its digital platform because the government considered personal data had been put at risk and/or shared in breach of agreement. (Hansard: “Court Reporting Data”). Read the Commons debate (Hansard).

The House of Lords revisited similar themes on 11 February 2026, referencing alleged sharing of “private, personal and legally sensitive information” with a third-party AI company, including potentially addresses and dates of birth of defendants and victims. Read the Lords debate (Hansard).

Meanwhile, journalist bodies and open justice advocates argued that the deletion demand would reduce practical visibility of magistrates’ courts — the engine room of criminal justice — and undermine reporting capacity nationwide. NUJ response (11 Feb 2026).

Subsequent coverage indicated that the government later paused the deletion/purge approach and explored alternative licensing or arrangements, following significant public pressure and campaigning (including within national media). One example: The Times: MoJ halts purge of court archive (published Feb 2026). (Paywalled, but relevant for context and sequence.)

2) What is Courtsdesk — and why journalists cared

Courtsdesk is typically described as a platform that made it easier for journalists to discover and track magistrates’ court hearings — and to keep a searchable archive of what had been listed. The word “archive” matters. Without it, reporting becomes a daily scramble: you can see “today’s” list (sometimes), but you cannot easily analyse what happened across a month, a year, or a decade, and you cannot robustly check what patterns repeat across courts.

That changes the reporting model. Instead of “we got a tip and attended a hearing”, journalists can ask structured questions like:

  • Which courts are repeatedly listing the same offence type and outcome?
  • Are there geographical disparities in sentencing outcomes (controlling for offence and prior record)?
  • Is a particular safeguarding issue rising (domestic abuse, coercive control, breaches, stalking)?
  • Are certain hearings routinely not listed, listed late, or listed inaccurately?
  • Are “open” hearings being effectively closed by practical invisibility?

In short: a discoverable, searchable dataset turns open justice into something measurable. That is precisely why both open justice advocates and public interest reporters reacted so strongly.

For a short overview of the controversy as reported at the time: Legal Cheek (11 Feb 2026). For a more analytical legal-media perspective: Wiggin LLP commentary (16 Feb 2026).

3) The MoJ/HMCTS case: “data protection” and alleged sharing with AI

The government’s public position, as reflected in parliamentary statements, has been that data protection responsibilities were engaged. The allegation was not merely that the data existed, but that data was used or shared in a way that was not authorised by the relevant agreement — and that the information at issue could include sensitive personal identifiers.

In the Commons debate, MPs referenced the passing of information to an AI company, including addresses and dates of birth. You can read the relevant passages directly in Hansard: Court Reporting Data (Commons, 10 Feb 2026). The Lords debate similarly framed the core concern as sharing private/personal legally sensitive information with a third-party AI company: Court Reporting Data (Lords, 11 Feb 2026).

Let’s be clear: if victim or defendant identifiers were exposed or processed without a lawful basis, proper security, or appropriate contractual control, that is not a minor technicality. UK GDPR compliance is not optional — particularly where data could create direct risk (victim location, stalking risk, retaliation, intimidation, vigilante harm).

But there is a second question — and this is where policy and constitutional principles collide: even if a breach occurred, does the proportionate remedy have to be “delete the archive”? Or is the correct remedy:

  • Stop the unauthorised processing,
  • Investigate,
  • Implement governance, redaction, licensing and audit controls,
  • And preserve the public-interest value of the dataset?

In other regulated sectors, “burn the library” is rarely considered an intelligent response to a governance failure. You fix governance. You don’t erase institutional memory.

4) What “open justice” actually requires (and what it doesn’t)

“Open justice” is often described as a constitutional principle in common law: justice must be administered in public, with reporting permitted, because scrutiny is a safeguard against arbitrariness and abuse. It supports legitimacy and public confidence.

But open justice is not absolute. Courts can restrict reporting, anonymise parties, hold parts of hearings in private, or impose reporting restrictions where necessary and proportionate — especially to protect children, victims, national security, or the integrity of proceedings.

Here’s the practical point: open justice collapses when information is technically “available” but realistically undiscoverable. If court lists are incomplete, delayed, inaccurate, scattered, or accessible only through relationships and workarounds, then public scrutiny becomes selective and fragile.

A searchable archive changes the baseline. It doesn’t guarantee perfect scrutiny, but it makes scrutiny possible at scale.

The NUJ response captures the concern in direct terms: the state must take data protection seriously, but journalists are worried about the effect on their ability to do their job. NUJ: deletion order response.

5) The real issue: discoverability, not secrecy

Most people misunderstand how court reporting works. They think journalists can simply “look up” what is happening in court.

In practice, magistrates’ courts are high-volume. Hearings move. Lists change. Data may be published late, inconsistently, or in formats that are difficult to search. Court staff are under pressure. Press offices (where they exist) are stretched. The result is that what is formally “public” can become practically opaque.

So when people say “this undermines open justice,” they may not mean “the government is hiding a single case.” They mean: remove the infrastructure of discoverability and you reduce systemic scrutiny.

The wider concern is that once the system is not audited at scale, dysfunctional patterns persist:

  • Overlisting and adjournment churn;
  • Chronic delay;
  • Inconsistent listing practices;
  • Variable use of reporting restrictions;
  • Localised cultures that drift without challenge.

This is where AI becomes relevant — not as hype, but as a tool. AI is exceptionally good at extracting patterns from messy, fragmented data. And patterns are exactly what the justice system needs to be forced to confront.

6) AI: the uncomfortable accelerator of accountability

Here is the uncomfortable truth: AI makes “open justice” more powerful, because it can transform raw listings and outcomes into insight:

  • Where are outcomes diverging without explanation?
  • Which courts are systematically underperforming on timeliness?
  • Which offence types are rising or falling?
  • Do bail decisions correlate with geography in ways that look unjustified?
  • Are certain safeguarding concerns being deprioritised?

For the public, this can mean better scrutiny and informed reform. For institutions, it can feel like a loss of narrative control.

But AI also increases privacy risk. Aggregation is a form of power: data that is safe in one context can become dangerous in another when combined, enriched, or made searchable. That is why governance matters.

The question is not “AI or no AI.” It is: who is allowed to process court data with AI, under what licence, with what redaction, with what audit trail, and with what sanctions for misuse?

7) Data protection and open justice can coexist — if you design for both

If there was an unauthorised transfer of personal data to a third-party AI provider, that needs to be addressed. Strongly. But the correct fix is not necessarily deletion. The correct fix is a governance framework that takes seriously both:

  1. Lawful processing and security (UK GDPR; DPA 2018; contractual controls; access logs; DPIAs); and
  2. Open justice functions (discoverability; auditability; press access; public interest research).

A mature framework would include:

(A) Role-based access

Not everyone needs the same level of detail. A press-accredited journalist may need more than the general public. An academic researcher may need a structured dataset but not identifiers. A safety model is tiered access with clear rules.

(B) Default minimisation and redaction

Listings can be published in a way that is still meaningful but reduces harm: names may be necessary for open justice in many cases, but addresses and dates of birth generally aren’t. A “privacy by design” listing format is possible.

(C) Contractual control over processors

If AI tools are used, the relationship between controller and processor must be contractually controlled, audited, and limited. “Testing” is still processing. “Internal development” is still processing.

(D) Audit logs and sanctions

If a platform is given access to sensitive data, there must be a reliable audit trail and enforceable consequences for misuse.

This is the kind of approach the state should model. It’s what we demand of the private sector. The justice system should not be a governance laggard.

8) “Just use official channels” is not a sufficient answer

One argument raised in public discussion is that journalists can still access listings through official HMCTS channels, so the deletion of a private archive is not fatal.

Here’s the hard reality: official availability does not necessarily equal practical usability. The difference between:

  • a fragmented set of daily lists, and
  • a searchable, longitudinal archive

is the difference between “seeing a hearing” and “auditing a system”.

It’s the audit function that scares people — and it’s the audit function that reform needs.

For contemporaneous legal-sector analysis and a timeline-style overview, see: Wiggin LLP commentary.

9) The proportionality question: why “delete it” feels extreme

When government acts, it must act proportionately — especially when its actions collide with constitutional principles.

If the problem was a specific breach, a proportionate response normally looks like:

  • Stop the unlawful processing immediately;
  • Preserve evidence;
  • Investigate scope and impact;
  • Notify where legally required;
  • Fix governance;
  • Implement redaction and access controls;
  • Resume service under a compliant licence.

Deleting a historic archive can be justified in certain cases — for example, if the archive itself is irredeemably unsafe and cannot be lawfully held. But that is a high threshold. And if that threshold is met, the next question is: why was the data shared in that form in the first place, and why was it not already governed appropriately?

Open justice is a public asset. When you destroy an archive that underpins scrutiny, you don’t merely “solve” a compliance problem — you erase a public accountability mechanism.

10) What this means for litigants, victims and the public

This is not only about journalists. It touches:

Victims and vulnerable witnesses

Privacy matters. Safety matters. If addresses/DoBs are handled recklessly, it can cause real-world harm. A governance regime must centre safeguarding and risk. The state is right to be strict about that.

Defendants

Defendants have rights too. Public identification can be lawful and appropriate in open court, but bulk data aggregation can create long-tail harm (employment, housing, vigilantism), particularly where cases end in acquittal or discontinuance. This is why minimisation and careful retention rules matter.

The public

The public interest in open justice is not abstract. It includes the ability to scrutinise how domestic abuse is treated, how repeat offenders are sentenced, how grooming cases are prosecuted, and whether systemic failures are being ignored.

The debate is often framed as “privacy vs transparency.” A better framing is: “privacy and transparency with engineering-grade governance.”

11) A practical blueprint for a lawful court data ecosystem

If we want open justice that survives the AI era, we need to stop improvising and start designing. Here is a blueprint that would satisfy most of the legitimate concerns on all sides:

  1. Define a canonical “public listing dataset” with minimised fields (no addresses; no full DoB; protect victims by default where appropriate).
  2. Publish in a consistent, machine-readable format so that “discoverability” is not dependent on private scraping or informal relationships.
  3. Implement a press and research licence with tiered access, clear contractual controls, audit logs, and enforcement.
  4. Create a secure research environment (think “data safe haven”) where higher-sensitivity data can be used for public-interest research under supervision.
  5. Mandate DPIAs for any new processing at scale, including any AI model training or automated analytics.
  6. Independent oversight: an external advisory panel including press, victims’ advocates, privacy experts and court users.

If you work in legal ops, you’ll recognise this: it is the same control architecture we use for health data, financial data, and regulated client data. The justice system deserves no less.

12) What you can do if you care about this

  • Read the parliamentary record and compare the stated rationale with the real-world impact: Commons Hansard (10 Feb 2026) and Lords Hansard (11 Feb 2026).
  • Track journalist-body positions (NUJ is a good start): NUJ statement.
  • Ask the right question of policymakers: “What is the new lawful access model — and who is responsible for ensuring discoverability in practice?”
  • Watch for licensing/market engagement notices and consultation opportunities. (Legal commentary sites often summarise these quickly.)
  • If you are a court user or practitioner, keep records. Transparency is partly built from bottom-up documentation — hearing notices, listings, orders, reasons, and procedural history.

Because here is the punchline: if the system cannot be seen, it cannot be improved. And if it cannot be improved, it cannot be trusted.

Sources and further reading

Regulatory & Editorial Notice (JSH Law Ltd)

This article is published for general information and public-interest commentary only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. JSH Law Ltd is not a firm of solicitors and does not provide regulated legal services. If you require legal advice, you should consult a suitably qualified and regulated legal professional.

Where this article refers to third-party reporting, parliamentary materials, organisations, or public cases, it does so for journalistic, educational, and research purposes. External links are provided for reader convenience; JSH Law Ltd is not responsible for the content of external sites.

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