In justice systems worldwide, court backlogs are not mere administrative headaches—they are engines of wrongful convictions. Prolonged delays and overcrowded dockets create intense pressure on defendants to accept plea bargains, even when innocent, writes STEVEN FENNELL.
Pre-trial detention, mounting legal costs, and the looming threat of harsher sentences at trial coerce guilty pleas from people who would otherwise contest weak evidence.
Studies show that the vast majority of convictions (over 90–97% in many jurisdictions) now result from pleas rather than trials, often shielding prosecutorial errors, undisclosed exculpatory evidence, and investigative shortcuts from scrutiny. Reforms that expand court capacity through night, weekend, and evening sessions paired with video hearings can directly counter this dynamic.
By clearing low-level cases off-peak, these measures free daytime dockets for thorough adjudication of serious matters, reduce pre-trial detention times, and ease the coercive squeeze that leads to miscarriages of justice.
Real-world implementations in the United States and India demonstrate measurable savings, faster resolutions, and improved fairness and outcomes that could prevent the very injustices the Wrongful Convictions Report exists to expose.
Proven Efficiency Gains That Reduce Plea Pressure
New York City’s pioneering night and weekend arraignment courts, launched experimentally in the Bronx and Queens in 1971, provide the clearest early evidence. A 1973 analysis by the RAND Institute of New York City found that the added annual operating cost of roughly $1.2 million was more than offset by $1.3 million in savings.
The program disposed of 12,000 cases annually at the arraignment stage, eliminating the need for later transfers and duplicated efforts. It also cut approximately 30,000 court appearances by police, witnesses, victims, and defendants, reduced overnight detentions in police stations by about 5,000, and produced “better judicial decisions” and “more effective defence representation” by alleviating overload in daytime courts.
Los Angeles tested a similar approach in 1986 with a night-court pilot operating criminal trials from 6 a.m. to 11 p.m. Officials described it as far cheaper than building new courthouses. There was $1.6 million allocated for the initial phase, with a projected fullyear cost of $3.3 million which is still a bargain for faster case processing and reduced jail populations amid exploding felony arrests.
More recently, India has scaled the concept nationally. In April 2025, the Union Law Ministry announced a centrally sponsored scheme to establish 785 evening courts (5–9 p.m. on weekdays) in district courts using existing infrastructure. Targeting a staggering 4.6 crore pending cases (44.55% over three years old), the courts will handle minor criminal matters, summary trials, cheque dishonour cases, and simple disputes. Drawing on Gujarat’s successful 2006 model, the three-year program costing ₹333 crore annually this aims to free regular daytime sessions for complex cases while restoring public trust through faster disposal.
These examples confirm that extended hours do not merely add seats they multiply system capacity. Shorter wait times reduce the pre-trial detention that so often compels innocent defendants to plead guilty simply to go home.
Freeing Police Time and Strengthening Investigations
Police officers lose countless productive hours waiting in court for minor matters. That time could be spent on investigations, community engagement, or preventing crime. Extended court sessions allow flexible scheduling, cutting overtime and enabling officers (or trained police prosecutors) to handle lesser offences more efficiently.
Studies of police-court overtime consistently show massive waste; targeted reforms like standby systems or offpeak hearings have yielded savings of hundreds of thousands to millions annually in individual jurisdictions. By diverting routine cases to nights and weekends, police gain breathing room to pursue stronger evidence in serious cases—the very files where wrongful-conviction risks are highest. Better-resourced investigations mean fewer weak prosecutions built on flawed identifications, coerced statements, or tunnel-vision tactics.
Video Hearings: Protecting Victims and Ensuring Fair Process in Domestic Violence Cases
Domestic violence matters present unique risks of intimidation and ongoing harassment that can distort testimony and fuel false or exaggerated claims.
Remote video hearings allow victims to participate safely from secure locations—often with advocate support—without sharing physical space with alleged abusers. Programs in the United States have shown higher victim participation, reduced stress, and preserved due process. Pandemic-era virtual proceedings confirmed these benefits, and many jurisdictions now default to video for protection orders. For relocated victims, video eliminates the risk of courthouse encounters that could lead to renewed intimidation or dropped charges under duress. Fairer, safer proceedings protect both genuine victims and the innocent accused from manipulated outcomes.
Implementation Ideas for Queensland and Beyond
- Targeted pilots with rigorous metrics: Launch limited night/weekend sessions in high-backlog magistrates’ courts (e.g., Brisbane) focused exclusively on minor criminal, traffic, and summary matters. Track pre-trial detention days saved, plea rates, case throughput, police overtime, and exoneration indicators. Use India’s lowcost model, retired judges on contract at reduced pay.
- Police-prosecutor track for lesser offences: Authorise trained officers to prosecute routine matters in extended sessions under judicial oversight, freeing senior prosecutors for serious cases.
- Hybrid video integration: Mandate video options for all domestic violence and family matters, with in-person reserved for cases requiring physical evidence or confrontation rights.
- Data transparency and incentives: Publish weekly backlog and savings dashboards. Offer shift allowances for staff, mirroring 24/7 services like hospitals and policing.
Rebuttals to Common Objections
“Extended hours will increase costs through overtime.” Data prove the opposite. New York’s $1.2 million investment yielded net savings; Los Angeles deemed night courts cheaper than infrastructure expansion. India funds its program centrally because backlogs themselves are far costlier in lost liberty, prolonged detention, and eroded trust.
“Judges, lawyers, and staff won’t accept night/weekend work.” The judiciary’s 9-to-5 model is a century-old relic while every other essential service operates extended hours. Retired judges and contract roles (as in India) solve rostering issues. COVID-era video hearings showed rapid adaptation is possible; backlogs already inflict far greater disruption on defendants’ lives.
“Australian pilots have failed before.” Early attempts lacked modern technology, targeted triage, or stakeholder buy-in. US and Indian results have achieved with proper design that success is feasible. Queensland’s own magistrates’ courts face similar pressures; evidencebased pilots would demonstrate value without broad disruption.
“Serious cases still require full daytime focus.” Precisely. Offloading minor matters to extended hours creates capacity for careful, unhurried handling of high-stakes prosecutions where innocence claims are most vulnerable to being steamrolled.
Court delays do not merely delay justice, they manufacture injustice. Why should a person be in prison waiting a trial in Brisbane for 3 years because of delays in available court time. Night, weekend, and video courts are low-disruption, high-impact reforms that reduce the coercive dynamics driving wrongful convictions. Policymakers in Queensland and across Australia should act on the global evidence: efficiency and fairness are not opposing goals. Implementing these changes would represent genuine progress toward a system that convicts the guilty while protecting the innocent.