Sir Robert Buckland said the 29,383 people fined by the courts should 
have their “slates wiped clean” rather than risk their career prospects 
being hampered by convictions handed out at an “exceptional time”. 
Sir
 Robert’s call has been backed by two former Cabinet ministers and 
charities while a source close to Alex Chalk, the current Justice 
Secretary, said he was also sympathetic to the idea of wiping the slate 
clean. 
Magistrates fined people for breaking Covid restrictions,
 resulting in criminal convictions that could bar them from working as 
teachers, social workers or police officers. 
Police can pass on 
these details to potential employers if they are deemed ‘relevant’ for 
criminal background checks for sensitive jobs where applicants deal with
 vulnerable people or children. 
People are also required to 
declare any criminal convictions when applying for visas to visit 
countries like the U.S. and Canada, both of which reserve the right to 
permanently ban anyone who fails to reveal one. 
Offences 
including attending gatherings, leaving home during lockdowns and 
failing to wear face coverings resulted in fines, with three quarters of
 those handed out between 2020 and 2023 going to people under the age of
 40. 
Sir Robert, who was Justice Secretary from July 2019 to 
September 2021, said any background criminal checks should focus on 
those who might be a threat to public safety, rather than people fined 
in the “exceptional circumstances” of a pandemic. 
He said: “It 
is not proportionate or necessary at a time when we want to encourage 
and support as many people back to work as possible. If it is not being 
recorded in the usual way as a previous conviction, I would wipe the 
slate clean.” 
Sir Robert is among three former Cabinet ministers
 and charities demanding an amnesty following the Government’s previous 
assurances that Covid fines were not intended to criminalise large 
numbers of people. 
Sir David Davis, a former Cabinet Minister, 
said all but the most egregious breaches should be “obliterated” from 
the record. He said: “Much of the Covid regulation was heavy handed, 
unnecessary and penalised people wrongly. For this to turn into a 
lifetime penalty is a shameful disgrace and we should correct it as soon
 as possible.” 
Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg, the former Business 
Secretary, said: “It is time for an amnesty on Covid fines which were an
 unnecessarily draconian measure at the time but with hindsight look 
entirely disproportionate.”...<<<Read More>>>...
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