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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> John, R v [2008] EWCA Crim 2022 (19 August 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2008/2022.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Crim 2022 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE TREACY
MR JUSTICE BEAN
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R E G I N A | ||
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ISHMAEL JOHN |
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"On your behalf, Mr Jacobs has urged in your favour your plea of guilty, which I take into account and give full credit for. He also says you had rather have worked honestly. That may be true, but the fact is that you did work dishonestly. And although you have not claimed support from the National Asylum Support Service, although you would be entitled, I am satisfied that there was a reason for that, namely that you wanted to keep your remuneration out of sight of the authority."
"All these offences strike at the heart of immigration policy and deterrent sentences are called for."
In the circumstances he imposed the sentences to which we have previously referred.
"Judge Murphy [the sentencing judge] was faced with, on all the evidence, a decent young man, looking to find work and to earn more than £35 weekly subsistence allowance vouchers. He felt that he was a burden to his family and he wished to lift the burden. So he bought these false documents in order to enable him to obtain work. He knew he should not be doing so; he pleaded guilty. We emphasise, he was not someone hiding or trying to avoid removal out of this country, or using the documents for that purpose. His status may appear clear enough in law but in practice it was, to put it neutrally, confused. Precisely what his legal status is does not matter for the moment, but what is clear is that the authorities in this country were not prepared to, and did not intend to do anything to procure his removal because of the situation in his home country."
"Dziruni is a quite different case. The decision of Judge Murphy is not, in our judgment, open to the slightest criticism. The facts which he spelled out with such care speak for themselves. Suspending a sentence and requiring the offender to do some work for the country will sufficiently punish him and offer practical value to the community.
We understand that, in the light of the authorities and in the way in which a number of courts (we are told Manchester and Sheffield) have been approaching these issues, this application was justifiably made. We must, however, record that the sentence of Judge Murphy was not a lenient sentence at all. It was therefore certainly not an duly lenient sentence. It was a merciful sentence, in a case where the exercise of the judicial quality of mercy was entirely appropriate."
Accordingly the court refused to interfere with the sentence.
"10. These four appellants had failed in their applications for asylum. It may be that they had subsequently renewed them. They remained in the United Kingdom. They knew they could not work. In order to deceive and to avoid their true status being discovered, they used false passports. That is a matter which in our view merits a more serious penalty than that that was substituted by this court in Mutede. It seems to us that the judge was entitled to impose sentences of twelve months' imprisonment and that they were not manifestly excessive or wrong in principle."