Old Bailey
The Proceedings of the Old Bailey has been developed by a group of universities
R E L A T E D   C O N T E N T
ADVERTISEMENT

Old Bailey puts criminal cases online

It's a fair cop

Iain Thomson, vnunet.com 28 Apr 2008
ADVERTISEMENT

Records of proceedings at the Old Bailey from 1674 to 1913 have been put online today.

The Proceedings of the Old Bailey has been developed by a group of universities including Sheffield, Hertfordshire and the Open University.

Almost 200,000 cases are on display, mainly as digital images of official documents.

However, as with the attempt to put Census records online, the Old Bailey site appears to have crashed as a result of too much demand from the public.

Professor Robert Shoemaker, head of the Department of History at the University of Sheffield, and co-director of the project, said: "It is now possible to search records of 197,745 individual trials, running to 110,000 pages of text and some 120 million words.

"Up until now this treasure trove of social, legal and family history has only been available to a few dedicated historians who were prepared to spend months peering at microfilm.

"Now everyone from schoolchildren, amateur historians and scholars working in a range of academic disciplines can have easy access to this wealth of information."

Trials are searchable by verdict, crime and punishment and cover a wide variety of cases, from sheep thieves sentenced to death to leading suffragettes.

One of the most popular searches is likely to be the case of Dr Hawley Harvey Crippen, who was sentenced to death in 1910.

Crippen was the first criminal to be caught thanks to wireless communication, after he was recognised on a cruise ship by the captain.

Co-director Professor Clive Emsley, of The Open University, said: "Crime is something that fascinates everyone, and the Old Bailey Proceedings provides people with the opportunity to see what crime was really like in the past.

"They can make comparisons and see close parallels to what is happening today. For example, we think of terrorism as new, but in the Old Bailey Proceedings people will see terrorists who attempted to do the same things 100 years ago."

See also:

Old BaileySpecialist lawyers for cases involving child porn, hacking and ID fraud  21 Oct 2005
Old BaileyLaw firms urged to train staff in computer science  21 Oct 2005
Former IT security employee cleared of £25m blackmail attempt  08 Nov 2001
Barclaycard wants to protect its computer security  19 Oct 2001

All Ecommerce
Tags: Old-bailey, Ecommerce, Innovation

Like this story? Spread the news by clicking below:

Post this to Delicious del.icio.us    Post this to Digg Digg this    Post this to reddit reddit!

Permalink for this story
R E A D E R   C O M M E N T S

M A R K E T P L A C E
Sponsored links
F E A T U R E D   J O B S
Bedford, United Kingdom | BPHA
IT Support Analysts, Bedford, £24,918-£28,477 The Role: bpha is looking for two high calibre IT staff members to join our IT Team at our head office in Bedford to help us deliver new and improved ... more >
London, United Kingdom | HM Prison Services
Programme Planning/Support Manager, London, £29,184-£43927 plus £4,000 London Pay Allowance EXTRAORDINARY JOBS. EXTRAORDINARY WORKPLACE HM Prison Service is looking for suitably experienced Project and Programme Management staff to work in both the Information & Communication ... more >
Ross-on-Wye or Blackpool, United Kingdom | PGL & NST
IT Director, Ross-on-Wye or Blackpool, C£80,000 Holidaybreak Plc Education Division comprises market leading educational holiday's operator PGL and educational tours organiser NST. It is a £100m business employing over 3,000 staff across 2 head office ... more >
United Kingdom | Bloomberg LP
Experience C/C++ Developer - UNIX - 21026 The Company Bloomberg is the leading global provider of financial data, news and analytics. The BLOOMBERG PROFESSIONAL service and Bloomberg's media services provide real-time and archived financial and ... more >
More job opportunities