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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Millberry v R [2002] EWCA Crim 2891 (09 December 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2002/2891.html Cite as: [2003] 1 WLR 546, [2003] 1 Cr App R(S) 396, [2003] 2 Cr App Rep (S) 31, [2003] 2 All ER 939, [2002] EWCA Crim 2891, [2003] 2 Cr App R (S) 31, [2003] 1 Cr App Rep 25, [2003] Crim LR 207, [2003] 1 Cr App R 25, [2003] WLR 546 |
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2002/01716/Z2 2002/04256/Z4 |
COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL
DIVISION)
ON APPEALS FROM HHJ WILLIAMS (CROWN COURT, MAIDSTONE);
HHJ
COTTLE (CROWN COURT, EXETER); HHJ TAYLOR (CROWN COURT NEWCASTLE)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE
ROSE
and
MRS JUSTICE
HALLETT
____________________
(1) William Christopher Millberry (2) Paul Robert Morgan (3) Ian Stuart Lackenby |
Appellants | |
- and - |
| |
R |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr D Batcup (instructed by Messrs Stones) for the 2nd
Appellant
Mr D Callan (instructed by Paul Dodds) for the 3rd Appellant
Mr
Robin Johnson for the Crown
Hearing dates : 21 November
2002
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Lord Chief Justice:
INTRODUCTION
"Rape is always a serious crime. Other than in wholly exceptional circumstances, it calls for an immediate custodial sentence. . . . A custodial sentence is necessary for a variety of reasons. First of all to mark the gravity of the offence. Secondly to emphasis public disapproval. Thirdly to serve as a warning to others. Fourthly to punish the offender, and last but by no means least, to protect women. The length of the sentence will depend on all the circumstances. That is a trite observation, but those in cases of rape vary widely from case to case."
" For rape committed by an adult without any aggravating or mitigating features, a figure of five years should be taken as the starting point in a contested case. Where a rape is committed by two or more men acting together, or by a man who has broken into or otherwise gained access to a place where the victim is living, or by a person who is in a position of responsibility towards the victim, or by a person who abducts the victim and holds her captive, the starting point should be eight years.At the top of the scale comes the defendant who has carried out what might be described as a campaign of rape, committing the crime upon a number of different women or girls. He represents a more than ordinary danger and a sentence of 15 years or more may be appropriate.
Where the defendant's behaviour has manifested perverted or psychopathic tendencies or gross personality disorder, and where he is likely, if at large, to remain a danger to women for an indefinite time, a life sentence will not be inappropriate."
The Three Dimensions of the Offence
"…there are, broadly, three dimensions to consider in assessing the gravity of an individual offence of rape. The first is the degree of harm to the victim; the second is the level of culpability of the offender; and the third is the level of risk proposed by the offender to society."
We accept that courts should consider each of these dimensions whenever a sentence for rape is imposed. We endorse what was stated by Lord Lane in Billam, and repeated by the Panel in its advice, that while rape will always be a most serious offence, its gravity will depend very much upon the circumstances of the particular case and it will always be necessary to consider an individual case as a whole taking into account the three dimensions to which we have already referred.
Relationship and Acquaintance Rape
". . . it is important that any new appellate sentencing guidance on rape should deal explicitly with the question of sentencing levels for 'relationship rape' and 'acquaintance rape' as well as 'stranger rape'. We use the term 'relationship rape' to include both marital rape and cases where the offender and victim, although not married to each other, were or had been partners in a consensual sexual relationship at the time of the offence. We use the term 'acquaintance rape' in preference to 'date rape' because it covers a wider range of situations, and also because the latter is sometimes taken as belittling the serious of the offence." (see paragraph 22)
Later the Panel adds:
". . . the Panel proposes that the Court of Appeal should make a clear statement to the effect that the starting point for sentence is that cases of 'relationship rape' and 'acquaintance rape' are to be treated as being of equal seriousness to cases of 'stranger rape', with the sentence increased or reduced, in each case, by the presence of specific aggravating or mitigating factors." (see paragraph 26).
These propositions we generally agree.
Male Rape
". . . the same guidelines should apply in principle to male and female rape, with factors relevant to only one gender (such as pregnancy resulting from the rape of a woman) taken into account on a case by case basis." (see paragraph 12)
We agree.
Anal Rape
Again, we agree.
Giving Effect to These Proposals
"Date rape has recently received much attention in the media and there has been calls for the creation of a separate offence of date rape. Our view is that rape is rape, and cannot be divided in this way into more and less serious offences. It can be just as traumatic to be raped by someone you know and trust who has chosen you as his victim, as by a stranger who sexually assaults the first man or woman who passes by. It is up to the courts to take all particular circumstances of a case into account before determining the appropriate penalty."
The Victim's Behaviour
"The Panel takes the view that although rape is always a very serious crime, the extent of the offender's culpability inevitably differs from case to case, as it does in all other offences. Where, for example, the victim has consented to sexual familiarity with the defendant on the occasion in question, but has said 'no' to sexual intercourse at the last moment, the offender's culpability for rape is somewhat less than it would have been if he had intended to rape the victim from the outset. This is not to say that any responsibility for the rape attaches to the victim. It is simply to say that the offender's culpability is somewhat less than it otherwise would have been. The degree of the offender's culpability should be reflected in the sentence, but, given the inherent gravity of the offence of rape, the sentence adjustment in such a case should, we think, be relatively small." (see paragraph 45)
"In the present case we point out there is a distinction between a husband who is estranged from his wife and has parted from her and returns to the house as an intruder either by forcing his way in or by worming his way in through some device and then rapes her, and a case where, as here the husband is still living in the same house and indeed, with consent occupying the same bed as his wife. We do not consider this class of case is the same as the former class." (at p. 772)
Historic Cases
Length of Custodial Sentence
The 5 Year Starting Point
The 8 Year Starting Point
"i. the rape is committed by two or more offenders acting together;ii. the offender is in a position of responsibility towards the victim (e.g. in the relationship of medical practitioner and patient, teacher and pupil); or the offender is a person in whom the victim has placed his or her trust by virtue of his office or employment (e.g. a clergyman, an emergency services patrolman, a taxi driver, or a police officer)
iii. the offender abducts the victim and holds him or her captive
iv. rape of a child, or a victim who is especially vulnerable because of physical frailty, mental impairment or disorder, or learning disability
v. racially aggravated rape, and other cases where the victim has been targeted because of his or her membership of a vulnerable minority (e.g. homophobic rape)
vi. repeated rape in the course of one attack (including cases where the same victim has been both vaginally and anally raped)
vii. rape by a man who is knowingly suffering from a life-threatening sexually transmissible disease, whether or not he has told the victim of his condition and whether or not the disease was actually transmitted."
(see paragraph 34)
15 Years Starting Point
Life Sentence
Mitigating Factors and Guilty Pleas
The Defendant's Good Character
Young Offenders
Aggravating Factors
"i. the use of violence over and above the force necessary to commit the rapeii. use of a weapon to frighten or injure the victim
iii. the offence was planned
iv. an especially serious physical or mental effect on the victim; this would include, for example, a rape resulting in pregnancy, or in transmission of a life-threatening or serious disease
v. further degradation of the victim, e.g. by forced oral sex or urination on the victim (referred to in Billam as 'further sexual indignities or perversions')
vi. the offender has broken into or otherwise gained access to the place where the victim is living (mentioned in Billam as a factor attracting the 8 year starting point)
vii. the presence of children when the offence is committed (cf. Collier (1992) 13 Cr App R (S) 33)
viii. the covert use of a drug to overcome the victim's resistance and / or obliterate his or her memory of the offence
ix. a history of sexual assaults or violence by the offender against the victim"
(see paragraph 32)
Extended and Longer Than Commensurate Sentencers
The Role of Guidelines
Application of Paul Robert Morgan
Application of Ian Stuart Lackenby
Application of William Christopher Millberry
"It is also of great concern to the court that you have very frankly set out to the probation officer in answer to the questions, no doubt asked, that you cannot, at this stage, give any undertaking that should you feel sexual attraction to someone that you will not act upon those impulses and that means that at the present time you are dangerous."