Toggle menu

Essential website maintenance for up to an hour between 10.00am Saturday 22 February and 1pm Sunday 23 February.

This may affect your ability to report problems with bins, pay for Garden waste, report fly-tipping and view aspects of My Breckland

Explanatory Notes on the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974

The Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974 provides that convictions for criminal offences are to be regarded as 'spent' for certain purposes after a certain lapse of time. However, all criminal convictions are relevant for hackney carriage and private hire licensing purposes and must be declared. The Council will consider the offence committed and the time elapsed since conviction for that offence.

Custodial sentence/disposal

Buffer period for adults (18 and over at the time of conviction or the time the disposal is administered).  This applies from the end of the date of the sentence (including the licence period).

Buffer period for young people (under 18 at the time of conviction or the time the disposal is administered).  This applies from the end date of the sentence (including the licence period).

Custodial sentence of over 4 years, or a public protection sentence

Never spent

Never spent

Custodial sentence of over 30 months (2½ years) and up to and including 48 months (4 years)

7 years

3½ years

Custodial sentence of over 6 months and up to and including 30 months (2½ years)

4 years

2 years

Custodial sentence of 6 months or less

2 years

18 months

Community order or youth rehabilitation order

1 year

6 months

 

Non-Custodial sentence/disposal

Rehabilitation period for adults (18 and over at the time of conviction or the time the disposal is administered)

Rehabilitation period for adults (under 18 at the time of conviction or the time the disposal is administered)

Fine

1 year

6 months

Conditional discharge

Period of the order

Period of the order

Absolute discharge

None

None

Conditional caution and youth conditional caution

3 months or when the caution ceases to have effect if earlier

3 months

Simple caution/youth caution

Spent immediately

Spent immediately

Compensation order

On the discharge of the order (i.e. when it is paid in full)

On the discharge of the order (i.e. when it is paid in full)

Binding over order

Period of the order

Period of the order

Attendance centre order

Period of the order

Period of the order

Hospital order (with or without a restriction order)

Period of the order

Period of the order

Referral order

Not available for adults

Period of the order

Reparation order

Not available for adults

Period of the order

The periods of time which must elapse before the conviction becomes spent vary considerably according to the nature of the offence and other circumstances.  The rehabilitation period may be extended by the commission of a further offence during the rehabilitation period.  The summarised provisions here are intended only as a general guide.  Further guidance on this may be obtained from the Home Office publication 'Guidance on the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974', from a Solicitor or the Citizens Advice Bureau. 

Applicants should note that to make a false statutory declaration is a serious criminal offence, punishable upon conviction by imprisonment and/or a fine.  This statutory declaration may be forwarded to the police for examination.

 

 

Share this page

Facebook icon Twitter icon email icon

Print

print icon
Last modified on 14 May 2024