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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Turner, R v [2011] EWCA Crim 3201 (13 December 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2011/3201.html Cite as: [2011] EWCA Crim 3201 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE BURNETT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE SCOTT GALL
(Sitting as a Judge of the CACD)
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R E G I N A | ||
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MARTIN KEVIN TURNER |
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"46.We can now summarise the principles to be derived from statute, the authorities which purport to provide guidance, and fact specific decisions. In the search for principle it is impossible to reconcile them all. We suggest that with the exception of Millberry and Others, and the definitive sentencing guideline (used in the measured way we shall suggest) that the following considerations should be treated as guidance. We further suggest that reference to earlier decisions is unlikely to be helpful, and, again dealing with it generally, to be discouraged. Subsequent decisions of this court which do not expressly state that they are intended to amend or amplify this guidance should also be treated as fact specific decisions, and therefore unlikely to be of assistance to court.
47. (a) Sentence will be imposed at the date of the sentencing hearing, on the basis of the legislative provisions then current, and by measured reference to any definitive sentencing guidelines relevant to the situation revealed by the established facts.
(b) Although sentence must be limited to the maximum sentence at the date when the offence was committed, it is wholly unrealistic to attempt an assessment of sentence by seeking to identify in 2011 what the sentence for the individual offence was likely to have been if the offence had come to light at or shortly after the date when it was committed. Similarly, if maximum sentences have been reduced, as in some instances, for example theft, they have, the more severe attitude to the offence in earlier years, even if it could be established, should not apply.
(c) As always, the particular circumstances in which the offence was committed and its seriousness must be the main focus. Due allowance for the passage of time may be appropriate. The date may have a considerable bearing on the offender's culpability. If, for example, the offender was very young and immature at the time when the case was committed, that remains a continuing feature of the sentencing decision. Similarly if the allegations had come to light many years earlier, and when confronted with them, the defendant had admitted them, but for whatever reason, the complaint had not been drawn to the attention of, or investigated by, the police, or had been investigated and not then pursued to trial, these too would be relevant features.
(d) In some cases it may be safe to assume that the fact that, notwithstanding the passage of years, the victim has chosen spontaneously to report what happened to him or her in his or her childhood or younger years would be an indication of continuing inner turmoil. However the circumstances in which the facts come to light varies, and careful judgment of the harm done to the victim is always a critical feature of the sentencing decision. Simultaneously, equal care needs to be taken to assess the true extent of the defendant's criminality by reference to what he actually did and the circumstances in which he did it.
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(g) Early admissions and a guilty plea are of particular importance in historic cases. Just because they relate to facts which are long passed, the defendant will inevitably be tempted to lie his way out of the allegations. It is greatly to his credit if he makes early admissions. Even more powerful mitigation is available to the offender who out of a sense of guilt and remorse reports himself to the authorities. Considerations like these provide the victim with vindication, often a feature of great importance to them."
"For more than 10 years I kept what Martin did to me a secret. I wasn't ready to deal with the trauma and so putting it to the back of my mind was the only option.
Since I have told my mum and the police, my life has become a misery. I have had to accept what he did to me and re-live memories I wish I didn't have. I have on-going support from Victim Support and I have recently had over 4 months counselling with a local charity where it became apparent that I had been suffering with depression for a long time because of this. Not only has Martin put me through 2 court trials, he has also shown no remorse for what he did.
He took away my childhood innocence and I will always have the memories of what he did to me. I feel like I am serving a life sentence for his wrongdoing.
I hope that one day I will truly be able to move on from this but I fear it is a long time away yet."