Refusing to participate in the sentenced facial quarantine in prison cells and stay in prison for longer periods of time when new powers are handed over to judges.
Strict sanctions across England and Wales will include restrictions on cells, while less time is spent in the gym in the measures introduced to parliament on Wednesday.
The incident happened when the recently convicted offender refused to attend a sentence hearing and a victim impact statement in a high-profile case.
These measures will be brought in the Victims and Courts Act of the Government, which also extends its qualifications to all cases in the official court. This means that all criminals who try to evade sentencing hearings may be subject to sanctions and up to two years in prison.
The judge ordered the offenders who participated, but their destructive and disrespectful behavior led to their removal from the court will also be punished by the same sanctions.
Keir Starmer promised to continue to guarantee a change of the law, first made by his predecessor, Rishi Sunak, when he met the mother of nine-year-old Olivia Pratt-Korbel.
Cheryl Korbel and her family have campaigned to change the law so that criminals are forced to appear in the dock for verdict.
Gunner Thomas Cashman killed Olivia, who chased a drug dealer who tried to run into her home in Liverpool, who did not hear his life sentence in court in April 2023.
Earlier this year, triple cross and knife killer Kyle Clifford refused to attend the verdict that he received a life order in March.
Southport child murderer Axel Rudakubana refused to leave his cell for a hearing in February and avoided facing the victim's family as he was removed from office and yelled repeatedly in January.
Last year, Lucy Letby told the trial judge through a legal team that she would not appear in the remaining lawsuits after she was convicted of murdering seven babies.
In December 2022, Zara Aleena's killer Jordan McSweeney refused to attend life imprisonment and ordered at least 38 years of service. Aleena's family described his unshow as "a slap on the face."
Under new legislation, judges will be sentenced to up to two years in prison for avoiding the face of justice.
For those who have faced a long term incarceration or a whole life order, a judge can also impose a series of prison penalties on criminals (such as detaining them on a cell) and deprive them of time in the prison gym.
The bill would limit the parental responsibility of child sex offenders who committed serious crimes against their children to promote the protection of victims.
This move will allow them to ask for updates on their children’s studies or attempts to interfere with their lives.
Under the bill, a victim’s commissioner will be required to report independently on whether the agency fulfills its legal obligations to the victim’s regulations to further increase the government’s responsibility.
Helen Newove said reform is important. The victim’s Commissioner for England and Wales said: “It is crucial that it introduces much-needed oversight and accountability to respond to the agency’s response to anti-social behavior – areas where victims often feel unheard of and unsupported.”
A judge can order the defendant to appear in court, and rejecting the judge's order may be prosecuted under the Court Act for contempt. But Justice Department officials say they only know one example of a judge doing so in a decade.
“The bill will undergo long-term overdue reforms to ensure victims see justice and get the important support they need when rebuilding their lives,” Shabana Mahmood said.
The child protection charity NSPCC supports the move, hoping that it will improve the treatment of young victims and survivors and get the support they are entitled to, but says it is not a "full solution."
"These measures must be part of a broader effort to build a truly responsible criminal justice system," said Sam Whyte of the NSPCC.
“This must include the substantial investment needed to use the upcoming comprehensive spending review to make specific support for victims and survivors of child sexual abuse so that every child can get the support they need, when and where they need it.”