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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Rafferty v R [2007] EWCA Crim 1898 (26 July 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2007/1898.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Crim 1898 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM The Crown Court at Swansea
Mr Justice Roderick Evans
T20050356
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE BURTON
and
MR JUSTICE FLAUX
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Andrew Paul Rafferty |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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The Crown |
Respondent |
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Mr R Spencer QC and Mr P Griffiths for the Crown
Hearing date: 6 June 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE HOOPER :
Rafferty, you are, of course, in a very different position. You were convicted of manslaughter on what was referred to at trial, as the causation basis. That is the violence which you bear responsibility, made a significant contribution to the death of Ben Bellamy at the hands of Taylor and Thomas, when they drowned him. Either by rendering him unconscious, so he could not resist drowning or if he remained conscious, by reducing his ability to resist drowning at their hands. On the evidence, that I have heard, I am satisfied, so as to be sure, that you bear responsibility, not only for an element of the violence used before you went to the cash point, but also for a degree of violence used thereafter.
I accept of course, that at one stage you said to the other two, 'leave it there boys.' But I am satisfied that you elbowed Ben Bellamy in the back, to keep him on the ground when attempts were being made by somebody else to stop the attack, by Thomas and Taylor. That evidence is your support for the attack that was being carried out. I am also satisfied that you anticipated that you would return to the scene of the robbery to meet up with Thomas and Taylor and that Ben Bellamy would have been kept there against his will, by the other two. That it seems to be followed inevitably from you three robbers agreeing to meet up, a considerable time later, at the spot where the robbery occurred.
I accept, of course, in accordance with the jury's verdict, that not only did you not intend to kill Ben Bellamy but also you did not intend that he received really serious harm. I have read the pre-sentence report, dated 17 May 2006, you were born on 6 November 1987, you are now 18 years of age and seven months. You pleaded guilty to the robbery I am told when you were 17, but you were convicted of manslaughter, when you were 18. You are one of three people who attacked a defenceless person, alone at night. Then you left the scene, intending to return, you were aware of the conduct of Thomas and Taylor.
I bear in mind your guilty plea to the robbery, the fact that you, alone, of the defendants answered questions to the police and you gave an account which was, in essence, demonstrably accurate. I bear in mind your background, and your family support. In sentencing you, I have to consider the question of dangerousness, that is whether there is a significant risk to members of the public of serious harm, occasioned by the commission, by you, of furthe4r specified offences. The presumption of dangerousness, set out in s.229 of the 2003 Act, does not apply in your case, despite your previous conviction for affray. Because you were under 18 at the time that affray occurred. However, I am bound to consider all the relevant information about you in considering the question of dangerousness. In so doing, I consider your previous conviction, I considered these two offences. Also the knife incident in April 2004 and the content of the pre-sentence report.
Having done so, I conclude that the risk identified in chapter five of the 2003 Act, does exist in your case. This however, is not a case which calls for a life sentence, as far as you are concerned. I intend to pass upon you a sentence of imprisonment for public protection, that is an indeterminate sentence. You will be released only when the authorities consider that you are no longer a danger. Again I am required to fix a minimum term which you just serve before you can be considered for release. When you have served that term, you will not be automatically released, you will be released on licence, only when it is safe to release and that licence is liable to remain for the rest of your life. I impose this sentence only on the offence of manslaughter, having considered, in so doing, the associated offence of robbery. The term that I would have passed upon you, had I not been passing this sentence of imprisonment for public protection is one of ten years custody. I am required by statute, to halve that, and to deduct from it, the time that you have spent in custody, which I do. Given paragraph 30 of our judgment allowing the appeal against conviction it seems to us only right not to take into account when sentencing him, any responsibility for the violence used thereafter. Mr Elias submitted that we should also not take into account the reference by the judge to the appellant returning to meet up with the co-defendants and the appellant anticipating that Ben Bellamy would have been kept there against his will. It seems to us as Mr Spencer submits, that we are entitled to take that into account because it is part and parcel of the robbery.
"But when you stabbed that man you knew not where that weapon was going; it could have gone into a vital organ and indeed the very gravest consequences could so easily have flowed from your act."
The sentence passed was a detention and training order for a period of eight months. Insofar as Rafferty was concerned he said:-
"I take the view… that you were a peace maker and you did speak kindly and decently to McNeil and tried to explain to him what the situation was and tried to calm the others down. But at a late point in events you became a belligerent, in other words, you became a fighter rather than a peace maker, and I take that into account."
Taking into account that Rafferty was a peace maker for a substantial period of time he passed a supervision order for the offence of affray.
More than one offender was involved.
The victim was restrained and detained during the course of the robbery.
The offence was pre-planned and committed at night.
There was an element of vulnerability insofar as the victim was concerned.