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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 >> BPO, R. v [2024] EWCA Crim 517 (14 May 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2024/517.html Cite as: [2024] WLR(D) 250, [2024] 4 WLR 77, [2024] EWCA Crim 517 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT CAMBRIDGE
HIS HONOUR JUDGE GREY
T20207191
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE MORRIS
and
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER JOHNSON
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BPO |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Rex |
Respondent |
____________________
Louis Mably KC (instructed by CPS Appeals and Review Unit) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 11 April 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Morris:
Introduction
The Facts
The Sentencing remarks
"I start with the type of sentence you are likely to have received, or indeed, not the type, the actual sentence you are likely to have received at the time of these offences."
"I therefore consider myself applying Ahmed bound to reach a conclusion that the total sentence I impose today should be no higher than the total sentence that adjudge would have been imposed in 1978."
"The release provisions are a matter for Parliament, not for the courts, and I have to sentence, and I regard this still as good law notwithstanding the changes wrought by Ahmed, I have to sentence in accordance with current sentencing law.… The circumstances do not take this case outside of the normal principal approach, namely that changes in release dates brought about by legislation should be put entirely out of a sentencing judge's mind."
The Grounds of Appeal
Relevant sentencing provisions in 1978/1979
Imprisonment
Detention under section 53
Borstal Training
The case law
Patel
"It would defeat the statutory purpose of the early release provisions if their effect were ordinarily to be taken into account when passing sentence. The clear intention underpinning the 2020 Order (as is clear from the text of the Order itself and as is spelt out in the Explanatory Memorandum) is that, where it applies, the offender should, before being entitled to release, serve a further one-sixth of the sentence than was previously the case. If the sentencing judge reduced the length of sentence to reflect the harsher effect of the early release provisions then that would directly undermine the legislative purpose."
Accordingly, the courts have consistently made it clear that a sentencing judge should not ordinarily take account of the early release provisions when deciding the length of a determinate custodial sentence…"
"the general principle that early release, licence and their various ramifications should be left out of account upon sentencing is, as it seems to us, a matter of principle of some importance.
The wide possible range of regimes for early release and licence strongly reinforces the undesirability, never mind the impracticability, of courts being required to reflect the differences in their sentences.
…
Our clear conclusion is that it is not wrong in principle for a judge to refuse to consider early release possibilities when calculating his sentence or framing the manner or order in which they are expressed to be imposed. We are quite satisfied that it is neither necessary, nor right, nor indeed practicable, for a sentencing court to undertake such examinations. Ordinarily, indeed, it will be wrong to do so, although there may be particular cases in which an unusual course is justified" (emphasis added).
"25. This represents an extensive, consistent and binding body of authority, rooted in principle, that has been considered and endorsed by the Supreme Court. It is based on the different roles played by the judiciary and the executive. It recognises the different considerations that influence, on the one hand, individualised sentencing decisions, and, on the other hand, generally applicable statutory early release provisions that reflect broad government policy. The approach of leaving release provisions out of account when setting the sentence has been applied even where that might be said to cause a harsh effect in an individual case. It has been applied where the results are anomalous, and where (as in Dunn (Tony)) that is directly contrary to the intention of the sentencing judge and contrary to an expectation raised in the offender by the sentencing judge, and where (as in Francis) a delay to the sentencing hearing beyond the control of the Appellant has resulted in a change to the applicable provisions." (emphasis added)
"37. Nothing in the authorities explicitly rules out the possibility that there may be exceptional cases where it is appropriate to take account of the impact of early release provisions."
"42. A change in the early release regime is different. It is a legislative change that is introduced by Parliament (or by a Secretary of State with Parliament's authority). The authorities we identify at [24] above show that the early release provisions may not ordinarily be taken into account by a sentencing judge - they do not amount to a mitigating factor for the purposes of sentencing. That is for the principled reason identified at [23] above. Mr Evans' invitation to re-write art.5 of the 2020 Order so that it does not apply if the sentence hearing was (or perhaps should have been) first listed for hearing before 1 April 2020 (or to pass adjusted sentences that would have that effect) is directly contrary to that principle. The broader approach adopted by the advocates for all the Appellants is no different in effect to the exercise in legislating that Mr Evans asks us to undertake. That is because if the courts were to adjust the sentences imposed on offenders whose hearings were adjourned from before 1 April 2020 until after that date, then the courts would thereby change the intended impact of art.5 of the 2020 Order. The Secretary of State could have legislated to achieve the result that the Appellants seek. He chose not to do so (although he could still do so with retroactive effect). It is not open to the courts to thwart that legislative choice.
43. If there is any exception to the principle that Hughes LJ identified in Round then the exception must, itself, be rooted in principle and consistent with the legislative framework that governs sentencing. The mere fact that the sentencing process has been delayed is not sufficient, as the authorities show. Nor is it sufficient that the process has been delayed for reasons that are beyond the control of the individual Appellant, as Francis shows. Nor is it sufficient that the reason for the delay was unforeseen or unforeseeable. …" (emphasis added).
Ahmed and others
"21. … . Those who are under the age of 18 when they offend have long been treated by Parliament, and by the courts, differently from those who are adults. That is because of a recognition that, in general, children are less culpable, and less morally responsible, for their acts than adults. They require a different approach to sentencing and are not to be treated as if they were just cut-down versions of adult offenders. The statutory provisions in force from time to time have frequently restricted the availability of custodial sentences for child offenders, whether by prohibiting them altogether for those below a certain age or, more commonly, by restricting on a basis of age the type and maximum length of custody in all but grave cases. All such provisions are in themselves a recognition by Parliament of the differing levels of culpability as between a child and an adult offender: that is one of the reasons why we are respectfully unable to agree with the distinction drawn in Forbes between cases where no custody would have been available, and cases where some form of custody (however far removed from modern sentencing powers) would have been available. There is, in our view, no reason why the distinction in levels of culpability should be lost merely because there has been an elapse of time which means that the offender is an adult when sentenced for offences committed as a child.
22. Section 59(1) of the Sentencing Code requires every court, when sentencing or dealing with an offender who was under the age of 18 at the time of the offending, to follow the Children guideline except in the rare case when the court considers it would be contrary to the interests of justice to do so. Paragraphs 6.1 to 6.3 of that guideline are relevant in such circumstances, and we are unable to see any justification in logic or principle for the submission that those paragraphs should only be followed where the offender has only recently attained adulthood. They remain relevant, and therefore to be followed, however many years have elapsed between the offending and the sentencing. That is because the passage of time does not alter the fact of the offender's young age at the time of the offending. It does not increase the culpability which he bore at that time. We naturally hesitate to differ from the decisions in H and Forbes; but insofar as those cases adopted a different approach, it is our respectful view that the court did not have regard to the passages in the SGC Youth guideline which were to substantially the same effect as paragraphs 6.1 to 6.3 in the current Children guideline. In our view, the application of the Children guideline requires sentencers to adopt a different approach between sentencing for historical offending committed as a child and sentencing for historical offending committed as an adult. That difference, and the resultant difference (which may be substantial) in the respective sentences, is in accordance with principle and reflects the special approach to the sentencing of child offenders." (emphasis added).
"24. First, we recognise that the approach set out in Limon and Priestley requires a sentencer to undertake what may be a difficult exercise in considering what would have been likely to happen in a sentencing process many years ago. In a case in which some form of custody would have been available for the child offender, advocates will accordingly need to research not only the statutory maximum sentence for the offence but also the types and lengths of custodial sentences which would have been available in the offender's case. However, judges are experienced in grappling with the various difficulties which can arise in the context of sentencing for historical offences. In any event, if principled application of the law requires difficulties to be confronted, then they must be." (emphasis added).
"31. We would add that the approach to a sentence of Borstal training available at the time of offending became common ground before us. In determining what length of custodial sentence should now be imposed to reflect the sentence which was likely at the time of the offending, a sentence of Borstal training (which would have comprised detention for up to two years, followed by supervision for a further two years) can properly be reflected by a sentence of up to four years' imprisonment. That would reflect current early release provisions." (emphasis added).
"32. We therefore answer as follows the question posed at the start of this judgment:
i) Whatever may be the offender's age at the time of conviction and sentence, the Children guideline is relevant and must be followed unless the court is satisfied that it would be contrary to the interests of justice to do so.
ii) The court must have regard to (though is not necessarily restricted by: see (v) below) the maximum sentence which was available in the case of the offender at or shortly after the time of his offending. Depending on the nature of the offending and the age of the offender, that maximum may be (a) the same as would have applied to an adult offender; (b) limited by statutory provisions setting a different maximum for an offender who had not attained a particular age; or (c) limited by statutory provisions restricting the availability of different types or lengths of custodial sentence according to the age of the offender.
iii) The court must take as its starting point the sentence which it considers was likely to have been imposed if the child offender had been sentenced shortly after the offence.
iv) If in all the circumstances of the case the child offender could not in law have been sentenced (at the time of his offending) to any form of custody, then no custodial sentence may be imposed.
v) Where some form of custody was available, the court is not necessarily bound by the maximum applicable to the child offender. The court should, however, only exceed that maximum where there is good reason to do so. In this regard, the mere fact that the offender has now attained adulthood is not in itself a good reason. We would add that we find it very difficult to think of circumstances in which a good reason could properly be found, and we respectfully doubt the decision in Forbes in this respect. However, the point was not specifically argued before us, and a decision about it must therefore await a case in which it is directly raised.
vi) The starting point taken in accordance with (iii) above will not necessarily be the end point. Subsequent events may enable the court to be sure that the culpability of the child offender was higher, or lower, than would likely have been apparent at the time of the offending. They may show that an offence was not, as it might have seemed at the time, an isolated lapse by a child, but rather a part of a continuing course of conduct. The passage of time may enable the court to be sure that the harm caused by the offending was greater than would likely have been apparent at that time. Because the court is sentencing an adult, it must have regard to the purposes of sentencing set out in section 57 of the Sentencing Code. In each case, the issue for the court to resolve will be whether there is good reason to impose on the adult a sentence more severe than he would have been likely to have received if he had been sentenced soon after the offence as a child."
(emphasis added)
The individual appeals in Ahmed
"As to counts 3 and 4, the judge bore in mind that they were offences of attempt. He assessed them as falling within category 2B of the guideline for rape of a child under 13, because C2 was particularly vulnerable due to her extreme youth. At the time of the offending, the maximum custodial sentence which the applicant could have received was two years' borstal training. The judge considered whether this was one of those rare case in which a longer sentence than that maximum should be imposed but concluded that it was not."
"45. Counts 3 and 4 were two offences committed by a teenager of 14 against a very young victim. Although they were attempts, it appears that the applicant came close to penetrating C2's vagina. In those circumstances, we are not persuaded that there can be any criticism of the judge's decision that the likely punishment at the time would have been Borstal training. On the other hand, we do not think it necessary to increase the sentences imposed on the basis that a sentence of Borstal training could be treated as equivalent to four years' imprisonment."
"125. The maximum sentence for indecent assault during the indictment period was five years. … the offence was not one for which long term detention [i.e. section 53(2)] would have been available had the appellant been sentenced at the time of the commission of the offences. Rather, the available custodial sentence would have been Borstal training. We have already considered the effect of such a sentence in our determination of the appeal of Ahmed. The effect of a sentence of Borstal training is the same in the appellant's case as in the case of Ahmed. Counsel for this appellant concedes that the combination of the maximum initial period of custody of two years coupled with a period of supervision expiring four years from the date of the imposition of the sentence corresponds to a determinate term of four years' custody, with release on licence at the half way point of the term. Applying the principles we have set out earlier in this judgment, the appellant should not have been sentenced to a custodial term in excess of four years. There is nothing exceptional about his case which would justify a departure from those principles."
Ground 2: the Ahmed principle and early release provisions
The Appellant's arguments
The Respondent's arguments
Discussion
Ground 1: renewed application for leave: sentence manifestly excessive in any event
The Appellant's arguments
The Respondent's arguments
Discussion
Qualifying curfew
Disposal