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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 >> Moore, R. v [2023] EWCA Crim 1685 (01 December 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2023/1685.html Cite as: [2023] EWCA Crim 1685 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE WHIPPLE DBE
HIS HONOUR JUDGE WATSON
(Sitting as a Judge of the CACD
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REX |
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- v - |
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THOMAS MOORE |
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Lower Ground, 18-22 Furnival Street, London EC4A 1JS
Tel No: 020 7404 1400; Email: [email protected] (Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MISS A BOND appeared on behalf of the Crown
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Crown Copyright ©
"JUDGE MEDLAND KC: ... it is obviously at the moment this is no more than a sort of informal process.
...
It strikes me that your, if I have understood the case correctly, your client [a reference to the appellant] has been in custody for about four and a half months now.
...
The nature of the breaches is, if I understand right, that the supervising officers go round there, and he partially complies but sort of does not really on their account. His contrary account is well if only they had given me more time and been less difficult I would have given them what they wanted."
"... if that analysis of the facts of the case is broadly correct, marrying it up against the sentencing guidelines ... it would fall within a bracket it seems to me whereby to all intents and purposes he has done his time."
"The equivalent of a nine-month sentence although the sentence would probably, after trial, actually be of the order of 12 months or thereabouts ... if he pleads without the evidence being challenged there is room for some credit."
"We can go through this process then [by which he was referring to a time when the appellant would present], but whether it be upon your application for a Goodyear indication or my giving one of my own volition that will be the outcome."
"l I have conveyed your Honour's thoughts to the defendant. Now my learned friend is in Court [a reference to prosecution counsel], can I invite your Honour to repeat those comments in front of the defendant?"
"Prior to the defendant coming into Court, about an hour and a half ago you were in Court on your own Miss Bond being otherwise detained in Court 10, and I expressed certain views to you about this case which I am happy to express again in the presence of the defendant.
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In my view, bearing in mind the facts of this case, and the manner in which the breaches are alleged to have occurred, bearing in mind that the defendant has now been in custody for in round figures four and a half months, that is the equivalent of a nine-month sentence.
In view of that, if the defendant, and this is a Goodyear indication which I am giving of my own volition, in the event of the defendant pleading guilty to the indictment without there being a Newton Hearing, I would take the view that he had effectively served what the public required him to serve, namely a sentence of the order of nine months, and therefore he would be released."
The appellant then asked to speak to his counsel below.
"Now, Mr Farley, departing from the usual format of simply answering either guilty or not guilty, your client [a reference to the appellant] sought to indicate that there was some gloss which he wished to put on it. May I check with you that you are quite satisfied those pleas are entered voluntarily by the defendant?"
"I believe so. Those are my instructions when we were in the cells. I expected him to say guilty and he did."
"... a defendant charged with an offence is personally responsible for entering his plea, and that in exercising his personal responsibility he must be free to choose whether to plead guilty or not guilty ... The principle applies whether or not the court or counsel on either side think that the case against the defendant is a weak one or even if it is apparently unanswerable...
What the principle does not mean and cannot mean is that the defendant, making his decision, must be free from the pressure of the circumstances in which he is forced to make his choice. He has, after all, been charged with a criminal offence...
In addition to the inevitable pressure created by considerations like these, the defendant will also be advised by his lawyers about his prospects of successfully contesting the charge and the implications for the sentencing decision if the contest is unsuccessful...
... the provision of realistic advice about his prospects helps to inform his choice.
In marked distinction, unlike the defendant's lawyers who are obliged to offer dispassionate, even if unwelcome, advice, the judge, subject only to express exceptions must maintain his distance from and remain outside this confidential process. The decided cases ... identify specific exceptions to this rule. They include the discretion in the judge, if invited to do so, to provide the defendant with a 'Goodyear indication' ... If the judge chooses to respond to such a request, that would not constitute inappropriate judicial pressure just because the judge agrees to respond to a request by or on behalf of the defendant. It is also open, and perhaps as far as the judge can ever go, to remind the defence advocate that he is entitled, if the defendant wishes, to seek a Goodyear indication. But if he chooses not to do so, it remains wholly inappropriate for the judge to give, or to insist on giving, any indication of sentence. Goodyear underlines that 'the judge should not give an advance indication of sentence unless one has been sought by the defendant'.
There is one further exception to the general principle which we must mention. There is one situation in which the judge is entitled to use his own initiative to give an indication of sentence. It is where he decides to let the defendant know that the sentence or type of sentence will be the same whether the case proceeds as a guilty plea or following a trial, results in a conviction ... "