[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Ali, R v [2019] EWCA Crim 856 (02 May 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2019/856.html Cite as: [2019] EWCA Crim 856 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE LAVENDER
HIS HONOUR JUDGE HILLIARD QC
(Sitting as a Judge of the CACD)
____________________
R E G I N A | ||
v | ||
MUZAFFER ALI |
____________________
Mr J E Cox appeared on behalf of the Crown
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
express consent of the Authority. All rights are reserved.
WARNING: Reporting restrictions may apply to the contents transcribed in this document, particularly if the case concerned a sexual offence or involved a child. Reporting restrictions prohibit the publication of the applicable information to the public or any section of the public, in writing, in a broadcast or by means of the internet, including social media. Anyone who receives a copy of this transcript is responsible in law for making sure that applicable restrictions are not breached. A person who breaches a reporting restriction is liable to a fine and/or imprisonment. For guidance on whether reporting restrictions apply, and to what information, ask at the court office or take legal advice.
LORD JUSTICE SIMON:
The gravity of gun crime cannot be exaggerated. Guns kill and maim, terrorise and intimidate. That is why criminals want them: that is why they use them: and that is why they organise their importation and manufacture, supply and distribution. Sentencing courts must address the fact that too many lethal weapons are too readily available: too many are carried: too many are used, always with devastating effect on individual victims and with insidious corrosive impact on the wellbeing of the local community.
... as a matter of sentencing reality, whenever a gun is made available for use as well as when a gun is used public protection is the paramount consideration. Deterrent and punitive sentences are required and should be imposed.
Where however the statutory intent involving danger to life has been established, and it is clear that the firearms were subsequently used with homicidal intent by others to whom they were supplied or who obtained them in the criminal firearms market, the sentences on the importer or supplier should always reflect these dreadful consequences. In the context of section 225 of the 2003 Act the fact that the importer or supplier is not an individual who pulled any trigger, or discharged any firearm, or caused serious injury himself, does not resolve the issue of future dangerousness in his favour. Criminals who are prepared to deal in such lethal weapons invariably represent a serious public danger, and it cannot be assumed that the danger they represent will have dissipated when the determinate element of their sentences has been completed. We therefore supplement the guidance in Avis and others by emphasising that for criminals involved in this level of gun crime along with very lengthy determinate sentences, indeterminate sentences, whether discretionary imprisonment for life or IPP, inevitably arise for consideration. We shall apply this guidance to the present appeals.
Some of these offences may involve a significant risk of serious harm to the public, but are not included within the list of 'specified' offences in the dangerousness provisions in the 2003 Act.
In reality, the occasions when [this] form of discretionary life sentence is likely to be imposed will be rare ...
(1) where the offence or offences are in themselves grave enough to require a very long sentence; (2) where it appears from the nature of the offences or from the defendant's history that he is a person of unstable character likely to commit such offences in the future; and (3) where if the offences are committed the consequences to others may be specially injurious, as in the case of sexual offences or crimes of violence.
The first is that the offender should have been convicted of a very serious offence. If he (or she) has not, then there can be no question of imposing a life sentence. But the second condition is that there should be good grounds for believing that the offender may remain a serious danger to the public for a period which cannot be reliably estimated at the date of sentence.
I am entirely certain that there is a high likelihood of Ali committing further offences, and such a risk will continue indefinitely. At the level of criminality he has operated until now, I am satisfied that the gravity of any further offending by Ali is likely to be very serious indeed. In his case, in my judgment, a life sentence is not only warranted but indeed is needed to properly protect the public from the risk of further serious harm, until the Parole Board has adjudged him safe...