In a shocking display of cross-Channel legal one-upmanship, the French Republic is now reportedly considering scrapping the statute of limitations for sexual offences, citing her Majesty’s no-limits rape prosecution law as a shiny, progressive benchmark. One can almost hear the ghost of Voltaire cackling into his absinthe as the National Assembly debates whether to let accusers drag defendants into court decades after the alleged crime, long after memories have fermented and evidence has dissolved into the ether.
The proposed abolition, if passed, would mean French prosecutors could chase alleged rapists from the Belle Époque straight into the digital age, a move that makes the British law (enacted in 2022 with all the fanfare of a soggy banger) look like the gold standard of juridical enlightenment. “If the Brits can do it, we can do it, but with better bread and more strikes,” a French justice minister reportedly told a committee, pausing only to light a Gauloises and contemplate the fall of the Fifth Republic.
The British law, of course, was passed with the solemn promise that it would finally address the “systemic failures” of historical sexual abuse cases. Since then, it has mostly served to fill courtrooms with elderly men accused of groping typists in the 1970s, while actual serial predators continue to operate with the efficiency of a royal mail sorting office. But never mind the details: the principle is sound. Why should the guilty ever be allowed to rest? Statute of limitations are nothing but a sop to the ungodly, a bureaucratic loophole for the unrepentant.
The French resistance to the proposal comes from predictable quarters: crusty old magistrates who believe that justice delayed is justice denied, and libertarians who think that the right to a fair trial includes the right not to be tried for something that happened before the internet was invented. But the momentum is real. A poll released last week suggests that 73% of French citizens support removing the statute of limitations for rape, assuming they can pronounce “statute of limitations” without spitting out their baguette.
Meanwhile, across the Channel, British legal experts are watching with a mixture of pride and terror. “We’ve become the poster child for abolition,” said Sir Reginald Piffle-Bottom, a retired judge and occasional after-dinner speaker. “It’s a bit like being the drunkest man at the party. Sure, everyone points at you, but is it a good thing?”
The practical implications are dizzying. Should the French proceed, we may soon see a transcontinental race to prosecute dead people, with each country vying to convict the most corpses per capita. History books will need to be rewritten: Napoleon may be indicted for war crimes, Louis XVI for constructive treason, and Rabelais for obscenity. The courts will be clogged with the spectral defendants of a nation’s collective guilt.
But let us not be churlish. The abolition of statutes of limitations is a noble cause, a bulwark against the passage of time and the decay of memory. Who cares if the defendant can’t remember where they were on the night in question, or if the alibi witnesses have since been cremated? Justice must be served, even if served cold, on a plate of legal gymnastics, with a side of frites.
In the end, the real victim of this legislation will be the statute of limitations itself, that quaint, old-fashioned notion that a man should not be perpetually at risk of being hauled before a court for fisticuffs he engaged in during the Peloponnesian War. But as the French say, "Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose" which roughly translates to "The more things change, the more they stay the same, especially if you ignore the statute of limitations."
So raise a glass of cheap gin to our Gallic cousins. They may be late to the party, but they’re bringing their own anarchic flair. And if the wheels of justice grind slowly, at least they grind with the force of a thousand bad metaphors.








