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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 >> Jackson, R v [2003] EWCA Crim 3251 (31 October 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2003/3251.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Crim 3251, [2004] 2 Cr App R (S) 8, [2004] 2 Cr App Rep (S) 8 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
The Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE CRESSWELL
and
MR JUSTICE JACK
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R E G I N A | ||
- v - | ||
MARK SAMUEL JACKSON |
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Smith Bernal, 190 Fleet Street, London EC4
Telephone 020-7421 4040
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
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Crown Copyright ©
Friday 31 October 2003
LORD JUSTICE POTTER:
".... that there are exceptional circumstances relating to either of the offences or to the offender which justify its not doing so."
"JUDGE: Yes, and I have no option but to pass a life sentence?
COUNSEL: Well, you have an option if there are exceptional circumstances.
JUDGE: There are not.
COUNSEL: I regret to say that I cannot with any degree of ingenuity think of anything that would come within that.
JUDGE: If I have spoken a little too quickly, then of course if you wish to advance anything, you are at liberty to do so.
COUNSEL: No, you have not cut me short. I have considered the matter, and there is nothing I can properly bring to your attention."
"You then returned to the man whose face and head area you struck with a hammer. I appreciate that all that may not have taken very long, but it takes it out of the category of those who happen to have a weapon in their hand and almost instinctively use it, such as for example, as occurs all too frequently, the man in the public house who has a glass in his hand. You deliberately went to get a weapon and then you deliberately used it and drove off, leaving this man with a fractured jaw and a fractured cheek bone, lying on the ground and requiring immediately hospital attention. Fortunately, it seems that those fractures have resolved, although all that took some time, but it does appear from the medical evidence that some psychological symptoms persisted for some time and may not even now have been resolved."
The judge then noted that because of the appellant's previous record there was only one sentence which he could pass, namely life imprisonment. He went on to say that, in the light of the absence of mitigation or any guilty plea, had he passed a determinate sentence it would have been one of six years' imprisonment, and he fixed the period which must be served before any question of the appellant's release could be considered at four years.
"Section 2 establishes a norm. The norm is that those who commit two serious offences are a danger or risk to the public. If in fact, taking into account all the circumstances relating to a particular offender, he does not create an unacceptable risk to the public, he is an exception to this norm. If the offences are of a different kind, or if there is a long period which elapses between the offences during which the offender has not committed other offences, that may be a very relevant indicator as to the degree of risk to the public that he constitutes. Construing section 2 in accordance with the duty imposed on us by section 3 of the 1998 Act and taking into account the rationale of the section as identified by Lord Bingham CJ [in R v Buckland [2000] 2 Cr App R(S) 217] gives content to exceptional circumstances. In our judgment, section 2 will not contravene Convention rights if courts apply the section so that it does not result in offenders being sentenced to life imprisonment when they do not constitute a significant risk to the public. Whether there is a significant risk will depend on the evidence which is before the court. If the offender is a significant risk, the court can impose a life sentence under section 2 without contravening the Convention. Either there will be no exceptional circumstances or, despite the exceptional circumstances, the facts will justify imposing a life sentence.
Under section 2 it will be part of the responsibility of judges to assess the risk to the public that offenders constitute. In many cases the degree of risk that an offender constitutes will be established by his record, with or without the assistance of assessments made in reports that are available to the court. If a court needs further assistance, they can call for it."
"1.The judge failed to consider whether there were exceptional circumstances relating either to the offence or to the appellant which would have justified him not imposing a life sentence.
2.In coming to the conclusion that he had no alternative but to impose a life sentence the judge failed to consider whether the appellant represented a serious risk to the public.
3.Since in the case of Offen the court's approach to the construction of the phrase "exceptional circumstances" has been to give it a much wider meaning, to accord with the policy of Parliament, the appellant now has available to him an argument on a point of law which has not previously been raised.
4.In considering whether the appellant represents a "significant" or unacceptable risk the following factors can now be considered in his favour:
(a)The appellant is not suffering from any psychiatric or other mental disorder which might have a bearing on the sentence.
(b)Prison reports indicate that he has behaved well in prison.
(c)The appellant's previous convictions are largely for theft and motoring offences.
(d)The two relevant offences are different in nature.
(e)The appellant committed both offences when relatively young. Recent reports show that he is maturing and acting responsibly.
5.In imposing a life sentence it was wrong in principle for the judge to impose a consecutive sentence of twelve months for breach of licence.
6. In any event, having indicated that the appropriate determinate sentence would have been on six years' imprisonment, the judge erred in fixing the minimum period before release at a period of four years. It is submitted that the appropriate tariff was three years, ie half the period of the determinate sentence rather than four years (two-thirds of that period), particularly in view of the fact that the effect of the sentence for breach of licence was to increase the period of four years to one of five years to be served as a minimum period before the appellant's release could be considered."
"Two important issues have been established by the Court of appeal following Offen. The first was that the question to be considered, that is whether the offender created an unacceptable risk to the public, had to be considered as at the time when he was sentenced, not at the time the Court of Appeal was considering the matter."
However, the report goes on to say:
"It was fair to say that in many of the cases evidence had been before the court from psychiatrists and others dealing with the history since sentence was imposed and the Court of Appeal had been prepared to apply that evidence back and not to insist that the evidence be itself contemporaneous. In essence the point remained that the question of unacceptable risk must be considered as at the time when the sentence was passed."
".... there is sufficient level of evidential doubt about the index offence, and the previous offence was allegedly committed under compulsion. Mark Jackson has been able to demonstrate that he can live a stable and non-violent life and achieve in employment areas where social skills and intelligence are required for the level of achievement he has attained. A risk assessment has therefore to be kept under review in the light of further information."
No risk assessment by somebody psychiatrically qualified was carried out until the report of Dr Wood, to which we have already referred in paragraph 11 above. Nevertheless, a series of prison reports relating to the behaviour of the appellant demonstrate that he settled down well; that he has displayed no violent or anti-social tendencies; and that he made progress in reconciling himself to his position, in controlling any tendencies to anger or violence, and in addressing himself to the future.
"As a result of a combination of maturation, positive co-operation with efforts to address and modify his behaviour, and a degree of strength of purpose, Mr Jackson has now arrived at a position where I can conclude that he does not represent a serious risk to the public. It will be seen that I am not able to state whether that risk was previously serious, though clearly it was previously higher than is now the case. Even at the time, a number of factors which one might suppose to be associated with serious risk of harm, such as alcohol and drug abuse and mental instability, were not present to any significant extent in Mr Jackson's case, and the principle destabilising factor at that time appears to have been his response to peer pressure. Whether that response of itself marked him out as being at serious risk to the public is something which I doubt, though as the Court will recognise that is a matter of speculation on my part rather than hard evidence. The hard evidence which is currently before me indicates that he is not now an individual who poses a serious risk."