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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Barratt, R. v [2018] EWCA Crim 1603 (19 June 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2018/1603.html Cite as: [2018] 4 WLR 127, [2018] EWCA Crim 1603, [2018] WLR(D) 374 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE NICKLIN
HIS HONOUR JUDGE MAYO QC
(Sitting as a Judge of the CACD)
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R E G I N A | ||
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AARON BARRATT |
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Epiq Europe Ltd 165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
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(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr N Ogborne appeared on behalf of the Crown
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE NICKLIN:
Offence of prison mutiny.
(1) Any prisoner who takes part in a prison mutiny shall be guilty of an offence and liable, on conviction on indictment, to imprisonment for a term not exceeding ten years or to a fine or to both.
(2) For the purposes of this section there is a prison mutiny where two or more prisoners, while on the premises of any prison, engage in conduct which is intended to further a common purpose of overthrowing lawful authority in that prison.
(3) For the purposes of this section the intentions and common purpose of prisoners may be inferred from the form and circumstances of their conduct and it shall be immaterial that conduct falling within subsection (2) above takes a different form in the case of different prisoners.
(4) Where there is a prison mutiny, a prisoner who has or is given a reasonable opportunity of submitting to lawful authority and fails, without reasonable excuse, to do so shall be regarded for the purposes of this section as taking part in the mutiny.
(5) Proceedings for an offence under this section shall not be brought except by or with the consent of the Director of Public Prosecutions."
(i) s.1(4) of the Act required that a mutiny was already taking place at the time when the actus reus of the offence under that section was committed;
(ii) as the actus reus is that "prisoner who has or is given a reasonable opportunity of submitting to lawful authority ... fails without reasonable excuse to do so", the prosecution had to prove there was such an opportunity at a time after the mutiny had started and
(iii) there was no such opportunity in this case because there were no orders to bang up after the mutiny had started. The only command or order was made by Officer Spencer which was made before the mutiny had started.
"Before the riot began [the Appellant] encouraged other prisoners not to 'lock up' and shortly thereafter that chaos ensued."
On that basis, he contends that the prosecution could not demonstrate the required synchronicity between the mutiny and the failure to submit to unlawful authority. He relies upon the Court of Appeal statement in Mason & Cummins [19]:
"[The] significance in the present case is related to the need of the prosecution to synchronise the mutiny and the failure on the part of each appellant to submit to lawful authority. Thus, if the disturbance only ripened into a mutiny after such a failure, which was the defence case, the failure would not be caught by section 1(4)."
(1) Section 1 creates a single offence of prison mutiny which can be committed either:
i. by conduct with the requisite purpose under section 1(2) or
ii. on a deemed basis pursuant to section 1(4): [12].
(2) To be guilty of an offence on the deemed basis:
i. the prosecution must prove that a mutiny is taking place, (i.e. at least two prisoners engaged on the mutiny) with the requisite intent, but
ii. it is not necessary to prove that a person failing to submit to lawful authority shares the purpose of "overthrowing lawful authority": [13].
(3) "Overthrowing" is a stronger word than by subverting and is not synonymous with refusing to obey lawful orders or mere defiance of or challenge to lawful authority. The word was chosen deliberately to confine offences of prison mutiny to serious disturbances: [16]-[18].
(4) The prosecution must prove 'synchronicity' between the mutiny and the failure to submit to lawful authority. If a disturbance only 'ripened into a mutiny after such a failure' the failure would not be caught by s.1(4): [19].
"[The appellant] faces a charge of having been given a reasonable opportunity of submitting to lawful authority and failed without reasonable excuse to do so ... You will hear the instruction from the prison officer for all prisoners on A Wing to lock up. They didn't. These prisoners watched the ringleaders start the disorder and joined in, thus making them guilty of this offence say the Crown."
"The purpose of Clause 1(4) is to deal with the real problem which arises in a serious situation when large numbers of onlookers congregate and refuse to disperse. Protests about food or other conditions would not fall within the definition of mutiny.
A prison disturbance becomes more dangerous as the numbers involved grow. The disruption caused is greater, and it becomes more difficult to quell the disturbance and to restore order. Clause 1(4) is designed to stop the numbers growing. It provides a clear incentive for prisoners who may not be actively involved to leave the scene and get out of the light when a mutiny begins. Their departure - whether or not it is in response to an order from the prison officers - makes it much easier to resolve an incident peacefully and to restore order. If they will not disperse and their presence adds fuel to the mutiny, then it seems to me to be only fair to regard them as taking part and to make them liable to the same penalty...
Under Clause 1(4), once it has been established that there is a mutiny and that there was a reasonable opportunity to leave the scene in safety but that some people did not do so, all prisoners who remain would be regarded as taking part in the mutiny unless they had a reasonable excuse for not leaving...
It is also not unknown for ring-leaders to try to pass themselves off as bystanders. A prisoner who does not take a reasonable opportunity to leave the scene of a mutiny and deliberately remains there without reasonable excuse cannot in any reasonable view properly be described as an innocent bystander. In my view he is a guilty bystander.T he purpose of clause 1(4) is to deal with the real problem which arises in a serious situation where large numbers of onlookers congregate and refuse to disperse. Protests about food or other conditions would not fall within the definition of mutiny. A prison disturbance becomes more dangerous as the numbers involved grow. The disruption caused is greater and it becomes more difficult to quell the disturbance and to restore order. Close 1(4) is designed to stop the numbers growing. It provides a clear incentive for prisoners who may not be activity involved to leave the scene and get out of the light when a mutiny begins. Their departure - whether or not it is in response to an order from the prison officers - makes it much easier to resolve an incident peacefully and to restore order. If they not disperse their presence add fuel to mutiny then it seems to me to only fair to regard them as taking part and make them liable to the same penalty ... under clause 1(4) one it has been established there was a mutiny and there was a reasonable opportunity to leave the scene in safety but that some people did not do so, all prisoners who remain would be regard as taking part in the mutiny unless they had a reasonable excuse for not leaving...
That does not mean that all those who are present will necessarily be found guilty of mutiny. Of course, there may well be prisoners who are unwittingly caught up in a mutiny, who wish to leave the scene but who might be attacked by their fellows if they did so... If they are unable to leave in safety then the offence will not apply to them. It is a necessary safeguard to protect the innocent.
Clause 1(4) does not reverse the burden of proof. The prosecution will need to prove beyond reasonable doubt that there was a prison mutiny and that the prisoner concerned remained on the scene despite having a reasonable opportunity to surrender in safety. If the accused gives evidence that he had a reasonable excuse for his behaviour, the prosecution will also need to convince the court that he did not have such an excuse. Clause 1(4) is designed to catch the culpable bystander (and I make no excuse for that) while providing adequate safeguards for the genuinely innocent bystander."
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