MB, APPEAL AGAINST SENTENCE AGAINST HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE [2017] ScotHC HCJAC_87 (22 November 2017)


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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> MB, APPEAL AGAINST SENTENCE AGAINST HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE [2017] ScotHC HCJAC_87 (22 November 2017)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2017/[2017]_HCJAC_87.html
Cite as: 2018 SCCR 70, 2017 GWD 40-615, [2017] ScotHC HCJAC_87, [2017] HCJAC 87

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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
Lord Brodie
Lord Drummond Young
[2017] HCJAC 87
HCA/2017/000277/XC
OPINION OF THE COURT
delivered by LORD BRODIE
in
APPEAL AGAINST SENTENCE
by
MB
against
HER MAJESTY’S ADVOCATE
Appellant
Respondent
Appellant: Markie; Paterson Bell Solicitors, Edinburgh
Respondent: K Harper (sol adv) AD; Crown Agent
22 November 2017
[1]       This is an appeal at the instance of MB, who went to trial in the Sheriff Court at
Dunfermline on 24 February 2017 on an indictment containing nine charges of what is
described by the sheriff in his report as indecent exposure towards young girls
(contraventions of section 35 of the Sexual Offences (Scotland) Act 2009). On 3 March 2017
the jury returned verdicts of guilty on charges 1, 2, 4, 6 and 7 (which related to the period
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2
30 December 2014 to 29 October 2015). The sheriff adjourned sentencing for the purpose of
the preparation of reports, including a forensic psychologist’s report. On 24 April 2017,
having considered these reports and a plea in mitigation on behalf of the appellant, the
sheriff, being satisfied that no other method of disposal was suitable because of the nature of
the offences, imposed an extended sentence in terms of section 210A of the Criminal
Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995, that being a sentence of 33 months comprising a custodial
term of 21 months (of which 3 months related to the bail aggravation in respect of charge 7)
and an extension period of 12 months.
[2]       The appellant now appeals on the grounds that the sentence imposed was excessive.
That proposition is elaborated by submissions in the Note of Appeal that alternatives to a
custodial disposal were available; that the offences were not contact offences and therefore
bizarre rather than sinister; that the appellant had only one previous conviction, albeit for
sexual assault on an adult complainer; that the appellant had observed a curfew condition
imposed in a bail order; that esto a custodial disposal was appropriate, a 21 month custodial
period was excessive; and esto a custodial disposal was appropriate, the test for imposition
of an extended sentence was not met.
[3]       As appears from the appellant’s case and argument, he departs from his contention
that the imposition of a custodial sentence was inappropriate. He limits his submission,
first, to the contention that the length of the custodial sentence was excessive and, second,
that the imposition of an extended sentence was inappropriate, if not incompetent. In
elaborating the first of these contentions under reference to the case and argument,
Mr Markie, on behalf of the appellant, pointed to: the fact that the offences were not contact
offences; the fact that the appellant had never served a custodial sentence; the fact that the
appellant had observed a curfew condition imposed in a bail order; the fact that the
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3
Criminal Justice Social Work Report assessed the appellant as at the bottom of the medium
grade of risk of reoffending and as only just meeting the criteria for the Scottish Government
approved sex offender group work programme Moving Forward Making Changes; the
fact that the appellant had a number of protective factors; and the fact that the psychological
report prepared by Dr Flynn assessed the appellant as at moderate risk of reoffending. In
support of the second contention Mr Markie pointed to the terms of section 210A of the
1995 Act and what had been said in S (D) v HM Advocate [2017] HCJAC 12 at paragraph [21],
following what had been said in Wood v HM Advocate 2017 SLT 190 at pages 195 to 196. Mr
Markie also drew attention to the terms of the report by Dr Flynn and the terms of the
sheriff’s report.
[4]       We propose to give effect to Mr Markie’s second contention. He submitted that the
sheriff had failed to explain in his report why the license period which would relate to an
appropriate determinate sentence would not have been sufficient to protect the public from
serious harm. We see force in that. However, in addition, despite Mr Markie’s concession to
the contrary, we are not satisfied that the sheriff had sufficient material before him to
conclude that the appellant does indeed present a risk of “serious harm” to the public as that
expression is to be understood in the context of section 210A of the 1995 Act. In saying that
we do not intend in any way to trivialise the offences in respect of which the appellant has
been convicted. We recognise that Dr Flynn appears to have accepted that the appellant
does present a risk, albeit a moderate risk, of what she describes as “serious harm to the
publicbut what is or is not serious harm to the publicas that expression is to be
construed in terms of section 210A, is a matter for the court rather than for any witness. The
sheriff addresses risk in the penultimate page of his report and expresses the opinion that
the appellant does present a risk of serious harm. That opinion is based on the sheriff’s view
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4
that the appellant may in future commit contact offences. While we note that the appellant
has a conviction for a contact offence towards an adult complainer (an indecent touching),
we do not see that single conviction as a sufficient basis for the conclusion that the sheriff
reached. While we would accept that a conviction for a contact offence may be an indicator
of the possibility of the appellant committing a further contact offence in future we do not
see that conviction, even when taken with the more recent offences, as justifying the
conclusion that the appellant presents a risk of “serious” harm to the public. Accordingly,
as we have already foreshadowed, we shall quash the sentence in so far as it makes
provision for an extended sentence in terms of section 210A of the 1995 Act.
[5]       The question then arises as to what sentence should be substituted for the sentence
that has been quashed, it not now being argued that a custodial disposal was inappropriate.
The appellant was convicted of a series of five offences over a period of some 10 months,
which although not involving contact will have been distressing to the young girls who
witnessed his behaviour. The appellant has a previous conviction for assault by touching a
woman’s buttocks under her clothing in respect of which he was made subject to a
Community Payback Order. The offence described in charge 7 was committed during the
course of that Community Payback Order and when the appellant was subject to a bail
order. We consider that to be significance. In the circumstances, as previously indicated,
while we shall quash the extended sentence, we have not been persuaded that the 21 month
period of custody including the 3 months attributable to the bail aggravation was other than
appropriate. We shall therefore substitute the sentence imposed by the sheriff with a
determinate sentence of 21 months’ imprisonment to run from the date selected by the
sheriff.




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