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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> HM Advocate v Boyle & Ors [2009] ScotHC HCJAC_89 (26 November 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2009/2009HCJAC89.html Cite as: [2009] ScotHC HCJAC_89, 2010 SLT 29, 2009 GWD 39-674, [2009] HCJAC 89, 2010 SCCR 103, 2010 JC 66 |
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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
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Lord Justice General Lord Reed Lord Clarke Lord Mackay of Drumadoon Lady Dorrian
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[2009] HCJAC 89Appeal Nos: XC614/07,XC615/07 and XC654/07
OPINION OF THE COURT
delivered by THE LORD JUSTICE GENERAL
in
APPEAL
by
HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE
Appellant;
against
BRIAN ROBERT BOYLE First Respondent;
GREIG MADDOCK Second Respondent;
and
ROBERT KELLY Third Respondent:
_______
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Appellant: Lord Advocate, G Balfour; Crown Agent
First Respondent: Sudjic, Hay, Solicitor Advocates; Martin Johnston and Socha, Glenrothes
Second Respondent: Ferguson, Q.C., Niven-Smith; Dewar Spence, Leven
Third Respondent: Macara, Considine, Solicitor Advocates; Fitzpatrick & Co., Glasgow
26 November 2009
The penalty for murder
[1] Of
all crimes in Scotland murder is the most
heinous. It is constituted by any wilful act causing the destruction of human
life, by which the perpetrator either wickedly intends to kill or displays
wicked recklessness as to whether his victim lives or dies (Drury v HM
Advocate 2001 SCCR 583). The mandatory penalty for murder is
imprisonment (or, in the case of young persons) detention)
for life.
[2] Section 2 of the Prisoners and
Criminal Proceedings (Scotland) Act 1993 (as amended) provides:
"(1) In this part of this Act 'life prisoner', except where the context otherwise requires, means a person -
...
(aa) sentenced to life imprisonment for murder ...
...
and in respect of whom the court which sentenced him for that offence made an order mentioned in subsection (2) below.
(2) The order referred to in subsection (1) above is an order that subsections (4) and (6) below shall apply to the life prisoner as soon as he has served such part of his sentence ('the punishment part') as is specified in the order, being such part as the court considers appropriate to satisfy the requirements for retribution and deterrence (ignoring the period of confinement, if any, which may be necessary for the protection of the public), taking into account -
(a) the seriousness of the offence, or of the offence combined with other offences of which the life prisoner is convicted on the same indictment as that offence;
...
(b) any previous conviction of the life prisoner; and
(c) where appropriate, the matters referred to in paragraphs (a) and (b) of section 196(1) of the 1995 Act.
(3) A court which imposes life imprisonment for an offence such as is mentioned in subsection (1) above ... shall make such order as is mentioned in subsection (2) above and such order shall constitute part of a person's sentence within the meaning of the 1995 Act for the purposes of any appeal or review.
(3A) An order such as is mentioned in subsection (2) above -
(a) shall specify the period that the court considers appropriate under that subsection in years and months; and
(b) may specify any such period of years and months notwithstanding the likelihood that such a period will exceed the remainder of the prisoner's natural life.
(4) Where this subsection applies, the [Scottish Ministers] shall, if directed to do so by the Parole Board, release a life prisoner on licence.
(5) The Parole Board shall not give a direction under subsection (4) above unless -
(a) the [Scottish Ministers have] referred the prisoner's case to the Board; and
(b) the Board is satisfied that it is no longer necessary for the protection of the public that the prisoner should be confined.
...
(6) Where this subsection applies, the life prisoner may ... require the [Scottish Ministers] to refer his case to the Parole Board."
[3] Section 196(1) of the "1995 Act" (the Criminal
Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995) provides:
"In determining what sentence to pass on, or what other disposal or order to make in relation to, an offender who has pled guilty to an offence, a court shall take into account -
(a) the stage in the proceedings for the offence at which the offender indicated his intention to plead guilty, and
(b) the circumstances in which that indication was given."
The convictions
[4] The
first and second respondents were on 1 June 2007 each convicted after trial of
the murder of Robert Bowie on 14 October 2006. The terms on which they were
respectively convicted were different. The first respondent was convicted as
charged that at an address in Dunfermline he "did assault [Mr Bowie] and
repeatedly strike him on the head with a bottle, repeatedly kick and stamp on
his head, drag him down a set of stairs, stab him on the leg with a knife,
strike him with a pole, pour accelerant over him and set fire to same, set fire
to magazines and debris all to his severe injury, permanent disfigurement and
permanent impairment and as a consequence thereof he died of said injuries on
19 October 2006 at St John's Hospital, Livingston and you did murder
him". The second respondent was convicted on the same charge but under
deletion of the words "repeatedly strike him on the head with a bottle,
repeatedly kick and stamp on his head, drag him down a set of stairs, stab him
on the leg with a knife, strike him with a pole". The first respondent was on
19 July 2007, he then being 19 years of age, sentenced to be detained
for life and an order made under section 2(2) of the 1993 Act (as amended)
that he serve a period of fifteen years before subsections 2(4) and (6)
should apply. On the same date the trial judge sentenced the second respondent,
who was then 21 years of age, to be imprisoned for life and made an order
under section 2(2) that he serve a period of twelve years before subsections 2(4)
and (6) should apply. At the date of the murder the first and second respondents
were 18 and 20 years of age respectively.
[5] The third respondent on 25 May 2007 pled guilty before a
different judge to the murder on 30 August 2002 of Mrs Agnes Mechen, then aged 64. The charge to
which he pled was that he "did assault [Mrs Mechen] and did seize her by
the body, struggle with her, place a cord around her neck and tighten same, rob
her of a handbag, the contents thereof and a quantity of money and you did
murder her and you did previously evince malice and ill-will towards
[Mrs Mechen]." On 25 July 2007 the judge sentenced him to life imprisonment and
ordered that a period of fifteen years be served before subsections 2(4)
and (6) of the 1993 Act (as amended) should apply. The plea of guilty had been
tendered at the first preliminary hearing. The judge stated on sentencing that,
but for that plea, the punishment part would have been twenty years. At the
date of the offence the third respondent was 27 years of age, at the time
of sentencing 32.
[6] The Lord Advocate has appealed under
section 108 of the 1995 Act against the punishment parts in each of these
sentences on the ground that the disposal in each case was "unduly lenient".
She has also sought to make use of the opportunity presented by these appeals
to invite this court to give guidance under section 118(7) of the 1995 Act
on punishment parts in murder cases. Because of the potential importance of
the issues arising and because reconsideration might require to be given to
certain views expressed by three-judge benches, a bench of five judges was
convened for the purpose of hearing these appeals.
Punishment parts - discussion
[7] Section 2
of the 1993 Act (as amended) prescribes no minimum or maximum for the period of
a punishment part. All that it prescribes is that the period must be specified
in years and months (subsection (3A)(a)). Subsection (3A)(b) makes
it plain that the specified period may exceed the likely extent of the
remainder of the prisoner's natural life. Thus, while the statute does not
empower the judge to specify a "whole life" period, in an appropriate case a
prisoner in Scotland may be sentenced to a
period which in practical terms will extend until his or her death.
[8] In Walker v HM Advocate 2002 SCCR 1036 the appellant appealed against a punishment part specified by the
sentencing judge (Lord Reed). The appellant had deliberately planned the
robbery and murder by machine gun of three serving soldiers. In his report
Lord Reed observed:
"Bearing in mind that the appropriate punishment part in the present case had, in my view, to be substantially in excess of 20 years, and taking account of the periods imposed in the cases which I have mentioned [Robert Francis Mone and Howard Charles Wilson], I reached the conclusion, albeit with hesitation, that the extreme end of the scale must be about 30 years, and that a period of that length was justified in the present case."
In allowing the appeal and substituting a punishment part of twenty seven years, the court said:
"[8] In the absence of significant mitigation most cases of murder would, in our view, attract a punishment part of 12 years or more, depending on the presence of one or more aggravating features. In the individual case account has also to be taken of the seriousness of the offence combined with other offences of which the accused has been convicted on the same indictment, along with any previous convictions of the accused, in accordance with the terms of section 2(2) of the 1993 Act, as amended, to which we have referred. As the sentencing judge suggests in his report in the present case a number of murder cases might be of such gravity - for example where the victim was a child or a police officer acting in the execution of his duty, or where a firearm was used - that the punishment part should be fixed in the region of 20 years. However, there are cases - which may be relatively few in number - in which the punishment part would have to be substantially in excess of 20 years.
[9] We are in no
doubt that in the present case the factors highlighted by the sentencing judge
put it clearly into the latter category of case. We have taken into
consideration that in the case of the murders committed by Robert Francis Mone
and Howard Charles Wilson the punishment part was fixed at 25 years. However,
these cases have not been the subject of consideration by the appeal court, and
there is, as in many instances, difficulty in comparing the nature and gravity
of one case with those of another.
[10] In all the
circumstances we are satisfied that the sentencing judge was well justified in
selecting as the punishment part a period in excess of 25 years. In
saying that we have particularly in mind the fact that this was a deliberately
planned execution of a number of soldiers acting in the course of their duty
and that it was done in order to achieve gain. On the other hand, it is not
impossible to conceive circumstances in which there might be even greater
aggravation, let alone the existence of significant previous convictions. In
all the circumstances we have reached the view that the punishment part of 30
years, which the sentencing judge fixed with some hesitation, was excessive.
We will quash the order for that period and substitute an order of 27 years."
[9] The court does not state in terms that
thirty years is the maximum for a punishment part but its reasoning has been
interpreted as if it had reached a conclusion to that effect. The editor's
commentary to the case in the Scottish Criminal Cases Reports is in the
following terms:
"It is difficult to envisage a case of murder which will be such that one cannot envisage a still worse case. Be that as it may, it appears that the view of the court is that 30 years is the maximum for a penalty part (sic), and that there is no room for a longer period. Such a view is in line with the Lord Chief Justice's Guidelines of 21 May 2002, in which he says that 'there might even be' a minimum term of 30 years which, he comments, is equivalent to a sentence of 60 years, and is a period which would offer little or no hope of release."
[10] In HM Advocate v Al Megrahi (24 November 2003, unreported) the court,
having referred to Walker, said:
"While it is not said in terms, the implication in that is that 30 years should be regarded as virtually the maximum that should be imposed as the punishment period. The overwhelming factor in the present case is the deliberate and planned use of an explosive device to cause multiple deaths and corresponding anguish to relatives of victims."
It later added:
"On one view it is difficult to imagine a worse case of murder and on that view it may be argued that on the basis of the authorities quoted the appropriate punishment part would be 30 years. We must, however, have regard to such mitigating factors as are before us, in particular the age of the accused, and on that basis we are prepared to restrict the punishment period to one of 27 years ...".
[11] The view that a period of thirty years is or
may be the maximum length, or virtually the maximum length, of a punishment
part of a sentence for murder may be traced to the Practice Statement (Crime:
Life Sentences) [2002] 1 W.L.R. 1789, by which on 31 May 2002 the Lord Chief
Justice (Lord Woolf) issued guidelines to judges in England and Wales on what
was referred to as "the minimum term" in murder cases. He notices
(paragraph 3) that "for the purpose of calculating the earliest date of
normal release on licence the minimum term is approximately the equivalent of a
determinate sentence of twice its length". In discussing (at
paragraph 18) "very serious cases" he said:
"In suitable cases, the result might even be a minimum term of 30 years (equivalent to 60 years) which would offer little or no hope of the offender's eventual release. In cases of exceptional gravity, the judge, rather than setting a whole life minimum term, can state that there is no minimum period which could properly be set in that particular case."
The reference in the latter sentence to a statement that there is no minimum period anticipated section 269(4) of the Criminal Justice Act 2003 which required a sentencer in certain circumstances to make an order that the early release provisions were not to apply to the offender. It is accordingly clear that the Lord Chief Justice envisaged that, in cases of exceptional gravity, there might be no minimum term fixed.
[12] The Scottish legislation requires the
sentencer to specify a punishment part in years and months - though, as we have
said, it would be open to him or her to specify a period which was in excess,
even well in excess, of the offender's anticipated lifespan. Although in one
sense there is an equivalence between a punishment part and a determinate
sentence of twice its length - the point of time at which the offender first
qualifies for consideration for release on parole is the same - there is a
measure of unreality about speaking of a determinate sentence of sixty years.
It is difficult to envisage such a sentence being passed in Scotland; almost certainly in
such cases a discretionary life sentence or an order for life long restriction
would be passed. Moreover, murder is so special a crime that comparison with
crimes for which there is no mandatory sentence of life imprisonment is of
limited value.
[13] In our view there may well be cases (for
example, mass murders by terrorist action) for which a punishment part of more
than thirty years may, subject to any mitigatory considerations, be
appropriate. In so far as Walker and Al Megrahi may suggest that
thirty years is a virtual maximum punishment part, that suggestion is
disapproved. On the other hand we endorse the exemplification given in the
penultimate sentence of paragraph [8] of Walker of the types of murder which might
attract a punishment part in the region of 20 years.
[14] The first sentence of paragraph [8] of Walker
may carry the implication that a punishment part of twelve years is the norm or
starting point for determining the punishment part in most cases of murder: the
reference to "12 years or more, depending on the presence of one or more
aggravating features" might be read as suggesting that "in most cases" the
period would be longer than twelve years only if there was one or more
aggravating features. We doubt whether it was the court's intention to set any
such norm. In any event we would not regard twelve years as an appropriate
"starting point" for "most cases of murder". A substantial number of murders -
we have in mind in particular those arising from the use by the offender of a
knife or other sharp instrument with which the offender has deliberately armed
himself (discussed below) - would justify a starting point of a significantly
longer period of years. A punishment part as low as twelve years would not be
appropriate unless there were strong mitigatory circumstances, and a punishment
part of less than twelve years should not be set in the absence of exceptional
circumstances - for example, where the offender is a child.
[15] The Lord Advocate emphasised that murders
committed with knives, swords and similar weapons were currently a matter of
grave concern in Scotland. Although there were no figures available specifically for murder
cases, she advised us that police figures for homicides as a whole indicated
that for 2007/08 there were 22 per million in Scotland as against 14.6 for England and Wales and 14 for Northern Ireland. Just under half of the
Scottish figures represented deaths caused by a pointed weapon.
[16] We agree that at the present time knife
crime is a scourge in the Scottish community and that the court should be
acting, and be seen to be acting, in a way which discourages the carrying of
sharp weapons, the use of which may lead to needless deaths. Sentences which
may cause individuals to think more carefully before arming themselves and
which reflect public concern at such killings are appropriate. Other than in
exceptional circumstances we would expect punishment parts in cases of that
kind to be at least sixteen years, and they might be
significantly longer depending on the circumstances.
[17] The foregoing are guidelines and should be
treated as such. The circumstances in which murders are committed and the
circumstances of offenders vary substantially. It is important that sentencers
should retain sufficient discretion in selecting a punishment part as to allow
them to take the particular circumstances appropriately into account.
[18] We were referred to a number of other
statistics and to the treatment of sentences for murder in a number of other
jurisdictions. We did not find these statistics particularly helpful. It is
of interest to notice how other legislatures have provided for disposals in
murder cases. However, the Scottish Parliament has for this jurisdiction set
the basic provision against which parameters are appropriately set by the High
Court of Justiciary to meet Scottish conditions as they may prevail from time
to time.
[19] The remaining question of general importance
which arises is the proper approach to discounts for early pleas of guilty in
murder cases. At one time it was very rare indeed for persons accused of
murder to plead guilty to that offence. But times have changed and it is
appropriate that we say something about the proper approach. In Spence
v HM
Advocate 2008 JC 174 (where the
offender was convicted of culpable homicide) the court gave at paragraph [14]
further guidance on the discounts which might, following Du Plooy v HM Advocate 2005 1 JC 1, be given when pleas of
guilty were tendered at certain stages and thereafter adhered to. At
paragraph [15] it was recognised that special circumstances might apply to
particular sentences, including to indeterminate sentences. Reference was made
to HM
Advocate v Alexander 2005
S.C.C.R. 537. In that case (where the offender had murdered his estranged wife
and her partner in circumstances of extreme violence) the sentencing judge,
having started with a punishment part of twenty four years, had discounted it
by seven years, resulting in a specified period of seventeen years. The
respondent had intimated his intention to plead guilty after being indicted for
trial, although he had given an indication earlier that pleas would be offered
and there had been delay in obtaining psychiatric advice. On appeal by the
Crown the court reduced the discount to four years, so that the specified
period was twenty years. The discount accordingly amounted to one-sixth of the
"gross" punishment part. The court does not expressly state how it came to
that figure - though it notices certain factors which the sentencing judge had
failed to take into account.
[20] In England and Wales the Sentencing Guidelines Council has issued a Definitive
Guideline entitled "Reduction in Sentence for a Guilty Plea" (revised 2007).
In relation to reduction for a plea of guilty to murder the Council recommends
an approach, in circumstances other than where there would be a whole life
term, which includes "where it is appropriate to reduce the minimum term having
regard to a plea of guilty, the reduction will not exceed one-sixth and will
never exceed five years" (paragraph 6.6.1(b)); it then recommends a sliding
scale of deduction starting at its highest at one-sixth, which is only
available "where there has been a willingness to plead guilty at the first
reasonable opportunity" (paragraph 6.6.1(c)). That one-sixth appears to
be in parallel with the maximum of one-third in non-murder cases (paragraph 4.2).
Thus it is suggested that, subject to the maximum of five years, the discount
should in murder cases be half of that in equivalent circumstances in
non-murder cases.
[21] There is a certain logic to this approach -
based upon the relative stages at which prisoners on determinate and
indeterminate sentences first become entitled to be considered for parole.
But, as Mr Macara for the third respondent argued, the arithmetic can be
approached in a different way which might result in the discounts in murder and
non-murder cases being in equivalent circumstances the same. As we have said
earlier, murder is a special case and a strictly mathematical approach may be
inappropriate. That said, we are not persuaded that the same discount should
be allowed from a punishment part as from a determinate sentence of the same
length. We agree that in murder cases the maximum discount should be about
one-sixth, reducing in some cases to nil. We also see force in there being a
limit on the total number of years which can be discounted from a punishment
part in a murder case. We agree that this should be set at five years - which,
of course, could only be reached in very serious cases.
[22] Sentencers pronouncing sentence at any time
after the issue of this opinion should have, in so far as relevant to the
circumstances, regard in terms of section 197 of the 1995 Act to the views
here expressed.
[23] We turn now to the particular circumstances
of the cases under appeal. Mr Ferguson for the second respondent
submitted, under reference to Locke v HM Advocate 2008 S.C.C.R. 236 (particularly per
the Lord Justice General at paragraphs [18] and [19]), that in addressing
the issue whether any punishment part was too lenient regard should be had to
the practice sanctioned by the appeal court as at the original date of
sentencing (in the case of the first and second respondents, 19 July 2007)
and not to any guidelines which might be laid down in these appellate
proceedings. We doubt whether the guidelines which we have now given are inconsistent,
or at least materially inconsistent, with any practice pertinent to the
circumstances of the present appeals and prevailing at the time when these
sentences were passed. However, we see the force of Mr Ferguson's
submission and shall address the matter of sentence in these appeals without
regard to these guidelines. We also bear in mind the observations by Lord
Justice General Hope in HM Advocate v Bell 1995 S.S.C.R. 244 at
pages 250-1 in relation to the limited circumstances in which this court
should interfere on the grounds of undue leniency with the disposals of
sentencing judges.
The first and second respondents
[24] These
respondents were associates. They had been together on the evening of 14 October 2006 but had then separated.
The first respondent had attacked the deceased in the flat at 289 Inchkeith Drive, Dunfermline. This was a sustained attack which
involved repeated striking of the victim on the head with a bottle and repeated
kicking and stamping on his head. The first respondent then dragged the victim
in a semi-conscious state down the stairs from the flat. He then stabbed the
victim on the leg with a knife and struck him with a pole. At about this time
the second respondent arrived on the scene. A decision was then taken to burn
the defenceless victim. He was dragged or carried to the side of the building
where a pyre of magazines and other combustible materials was raised. The
victim, who was still alive, was placed on it. Lighter fuel was then poured
over the victim and the pyre, which was then set alight. Leaving the victim
smouldering there the two respondents together with a girlfriend of one of them
left to catch a train. Some time later children detected smoke from the fire
and shortly thereafter heard the victim moaning. The emergency services were
alerted. Ambulance men and later fire fighters attended the scene. The
ambulance men were unable because of the heat to move the victim from the
pyre. He could only be moved with the assistance of the fire fighters. He was
still alive but died in hospital five days later.
[25] The trial judge's report is unsatisfactorily
short in detail on the nature and extent of the victim's injuries and on the
causes of death. We were, however, provided with copies of the post mortem
report spoken to at the trial. It discloses that, in addition to other less
serious blunt-trauma injuries to the head and neck, the victim had sustained
three lacerations to the left fronto-parietal scalp with bruising of the muscle
underlying the scalp. There was a comminuted and slightly depressed fracture
of the left temporal bone with moderate extradural haemorrhaging. There was a
stab wound 30mm in length in the left upper thigh. The most clinically
significant injury was, however, severe widespread burning of the skin of the
left cheek, the entire left upper limb, the left side of the chest, the back,
the buttocks and thighs. The cause of death was given as "Head Injury, Effects
Of Fire And Stab Wound To Thigh". The main focus of his hospital treatment was
on the victim's burning injuries.
[26] It is clear that a cause, probably the major
cause, of death was the burning injuries sustained on the pyre. The jury's
verdict carries the inference that each of these respondents was party to
placing on the pyre a living human being with the wicked intention of killing
him by burning or with wicked recklessness as to whether or not he died by that
means. It is inconsistent with the verdicts that, when they put him on the
pyre and set light to it and to him, they believed or had any reason to believe
that he was already dead. The circumstances are redolent of the medieval
horrors of execution by burning. It is difficult to envisage more cruel or
sadistic treatment of another human being.
[27] Neither of these respondents has shown any
remorse for his crime. Shortly after leaving the victim the second respondent
telephoned the police complaining about the confiscation of a bottle of vodka;
no attempt was made to alert the police to the fate of the victim. Their
conduct during the trial showed no respect for the family of the deceased.
Each sporadically refused to attend in court, with consequent disruption to the
proceedings.
[28] The first respondent has one minor
conviction for assault, not significant in the context of the present offence.
He was 18 years of age at the time of the murder and was accordingly an
adult. We do not consider that his offending is mitigated by his age. The
second respondent has, in addition to a long record of road traffic offences,
two prior convictions for assault. Again, these are in context not
significant.
[29] A distinction must be drawn between the
culpability of these respondents in respect that the second respondent played
no part in the initial blunt-instrument attack on the victim or in the stabbing
of him, both contributory factors to his death. However, the most striking
aspect of this murder is the conduct of both these respondents in deliberately
placing the living but disabled victim on a pyre and igniting it. Such cold-blooded
conduct can only strike horror into the minds of right-minded members of the
community. We consider that the trial judge failed to give proper weight to
the seriousness of that aggravating conduct and that the punishment parts
specified by him were so lenient that this court is entitled, having regard to HM Advocate v Bell, to interfere with
them. We shall quash the punishment parts specified and substitute in their
place twenty years in the case of the first respondent and eighteen years in
the case of the second respondent.
The third respondent
[30] The victim of this crime was a 64-year-old grandmother. She had
part-time employment as a collector of monies payable to a Provident company.
This work involved calling at the homes of customers to collect payment. The
third respondent was one of her customers. The victim was friendly with his
mother; her son had gone to school with him.
[31] In the early evening of 30 August 2002 Mrs Mechen set off
on her collection round. Having called at the homes of various other
customers, she arrived at the third respondent's door. She was carrying a
black leather shoulder bag containing two purses and a folder with lists of
customers. The third respondent was waiting for her. He invited her in. He
then closed the door and put a length of electrical flex round her neck,
pulling it tight. Despite the victim's protests, including her reminding him
that they were known to each other, he strangled her until she died. The
murder was premeditated. The third respondent had the previous evening told
his partner that he intended to "mug" Mrs Mechen because she had money and
that he would have to kill her. He said he would attack her from behind,
strangle her and put her body under the floor. His partner at that stage
thought he was joking. However, the following afternoon he told her that he
had decided to go ahead with the killing. His partner told him repeatedly to
do no such thing. She thought he had accepted that advice. She was absent
from the house when the attack was made. Later that evening he confessed to
her to having carried out the killing.
[32] The third respondent removed the cash
(amounting to about £180-£200) from Mrs Mechen's bag, later disposing of
the bag. He also disposed of a carpet on to which the victim had bled during
the attack. He took the body through a trap door into the sub-floor area where
he concealed it under a mound of soil or rubble. Several days later police
officers, in the course of extensive enquiries in an attempt to trace the
missing Mrs Mechen, called at the third respondent's flat. He denied
having seen her on the day of her disappearance. Over the succeeding months
the third respondent was observed constantly to bleach and paint the common
close - perhaps in an attempt to disguise any smells of decomposition. Later
that year he confessed his deed to his sister and in 2005 made a like
confession to a friend. In 2006 he spoke to another acquaintance about it but
was not at that time taken seriously. In December of that year the third
respondent's partner, who had by then left him and formed another relationship,
recounted his confession to her new partner. Through that partner's employment
news of the third respondent's confession became known to the police. On 23 January 2007 Mrs Mechen's body
was found where it had been concealed. Its concealment under a mound in a cool
and undisturbed environment had resulted in the body being largely mummified.
On being questioned by the police the third respondent repeatedly denied that
he had been involved in the murder or in the concealment of the body.
[33] From the time of her disappearance until her
body was found Mrs Mechen's family made extensive enquiries in an attempt
to find her. Her family was distraught at her disappearance and ultimately at the
discovery of her body.
[34] The third respondent plead guilty to her
murder at the first preliminary hearing. It was said that a plea could not
reasonably be tendered before that time as the third respondent's legal
advisers were awaiting the views of a consultant psychiatrist and of a
consultant psychologist. Both ultimately advised that there was no basis for a
plea of diminished responsibility. Immediately thereafter the plea was
tendered. The third respondent has no previous convictions. He has expressed
remorse.
[35] In his case the issue is whether the
punishment part of fifteen years ultimately imposed was unduly lenient. In our
view it was. This was a premeditated murder of a very vulnerable victim
perpetrated for the purposes of robbery. It was aggravated by the steps taken
to conceal the crime and by the distressing consequences for the family of the
victim. We consider that an appropriate initial figure for the punishment part
would have been twenty two years with a discount of three years for the early
plea, giving a specified period of nineteen years. This discount represents a
little more than one-eighth of what would otherwise have been specified. The
period specified by the sentencing judge will accordingly be quashed and
nineteen years substituted.