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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Aziz, R. v [2019] EWCA Crim 1568 (17 September 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2019/1568.html Cite as: [2019] EWCA Crim 1568, [2020] Crim LR 356, [2020] EMLR 5 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT WOLVERHAMPTON
Mr Justice Jeremy Baker
Indictment no: T20187131
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
THE RT HON THE LORD BURNETT OF MALDON
THE HON MR JUSTICE WARBY
and
THE HON MR JUSTICE EDIS
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Respondent |
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- and - |
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Ayman Aziz |
Applicant |
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Louise Oakley for the Respondent
Hearing date: 25 July 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
The Lord Burnett of Maldon:
Introduction
Facts
Sentence
Reports
Sentencing remarks
The grounds of appeal
Discussion
"… It is clear that this is intended to reflect the different place from which sentencing children and young persons for murder should start. It identifies a starting point of 12 years, whatever the category of murder into which the case would fall ... which can then be varied up or down according to the aggravating and mitigating factors by taking them into account 'to the extent that it has not allowed for them in its choice of starting point' (para 8 of Schedule 21)."
The court agreed with the sentencing judge that the offending in that case was considerably aggravated by planning, the use of knives taken to the scene, the circumstances in which the murders were committed and the behaviour afterwards. Even allowing for the mitigating psychiatric and psychological problems, an increase from 12 to 21 years was neither wrong in principle nor manifestly excessive.
Identification
Merits
"direct that no matter relating to any person concerned in the proceedings shall while he is under the age of 18 be included in any publication if it is likely to lead members of the public to identify him as a person concerned in the proceedings" (our emphasis)
"if it is satisfied
(a) that their effect is to impose a substantial and unreasonable restriction on the reporting of the proceedings, and
(b) that it is in the public interest to remove or relax that restriction;
but no excepting direction shall be given under this subsection by reason only of the fact that the proceedings have been determined in any way or have been abandoned."
"for the future, submissions in this area of the law should focus on the facts of the particular case relevant to the exercise of the court's judgment, rather than the siren calls of abstract principles that have already informed the approach which the courts adopt."
"(i) In deciding whether to impose or thereafter to lift reporting restrictions, the court will consider whether there are good reasons for naming the defendant. (ii) In reaching that decision, the court will give considerable weight to the age of the offender and to the potential damage to any young person of public identification as a criminal before the offender has the benefit or burden of adulthood. (iii) … the court must "have regard to the welfare of the child or young person." (iv) The prospect of being named in court with the accompanying disgrace is a powerful deterrent and the naming of a defendant in the context of his punishment serves as a deterrent to others. These deterrents are proper objectives for the court to seek. (v) There is a strong public interest in open justice and in the public knowing as much as possible about what has happened in court, including the identity of those who have committed crime. (vi) The weight to be attributed to the different factors may shift at different stages of the proceedings and, in particular, after the defendant has been found, or pleads, guilty and is sentenced. It may then be appropriate to place greater weight on the interest of the public in knowing the identity of those who have committed crimes, particularly serious and detestable crimes. (vii) The fact that an appeal has been made may be a material consideration."
"First, neither article has as such precedence over the other. Secondly, where the values under the two articles are in conflict, an intense focus on the comparative importance of the specific rights being claimed in the individual case is necessary. Thirdly, the justifications for interfering with or restricting each right must be taken into account. Finally, the proportionality test must be applied to each."
"18 … the ordinary rule is that the press, as the watchdog of the public, may report everything that takes place in a criminal court. I would add that in European jurisprudence and in domestic practice this is a strong rule. It can only be displaced by unusual or exceptional circumstances. …
30. … A criminal trial is a public event. The principle of open justice puts, as has often been said, the judge and all who participate in the trial under intense scrutiny. The glare of contemporaneous publicity ensures that trials are properly conducted. It is a valuable check on the criminal process. Moreover, the public interest may be as much involved in the circumstances of a remarkable acquittal as in a surprising conviction. Informed public debate is necessary about all such matters. Full contemporaneous reporting of criminal trials in progress promotes public confidence in the administration of justice. It promotes the values of the rule of law. It is, however, not a mechanical rule. The duty of the court is to examine with care each application for a departure from the rule by reason of rights under article 8."
(1) The general approach to be taken is that reports of proceedings should not be restricted unless there are reasons to do so which outweigh the legitimate interests of the public in receiving fair and accurate reports of criminal proceedings and knowing the identity of those in the community who have been guilty of criminal conduct and may, therefore, present a danger or threat to the community in which they live: R v Leicester Crown Court ex p S (A Minor [1993] 1 WLR 111, 156 (Watkins LJ); Markham [80].
(2) The fact that the person before the court is a child or young person will normally be a good reason for restricting reports of the proceedings in the way permitted by the legislation; and it will only be in rare cases that a direction under section 45(3) will not be given or, having been given, will be discharged: ibid.
(3) Very great weight must be given to the welfare of such a child or young person. Power to dispense with anonymity must be exercised with very great care, caution and circumspection; the court must be clear in its mind why it is in the public interest to dispense with the restrictions, which will very rarely be the case: McKerry v Teesdale and Wear Valley Justices (2000) 164 JP 355 [2001] EMLR 5, Markham [81].
(4) It is not the case, however, that the welfare of the child or young person will always trump other considerations. Even in the youth court, where the regime requires that proceedings should be held in private, with the public excluded, the court has power to lift restrictions. When a juvenile is tried on indictment in the Crown Court there is a strong presumption that justice takes place in open and the press may report the proceedings, as made clear by the House of Lords in Re S: Markham [82].
Jurisdiction
"A person aggrieved may appeal to the Court of Appeal, if that court grants leave, against— … (c) any order restricting the publication of any report of the whole or any part of a trial on indictment or any such ancillary proceedings; and the decision of the Court of Appeal shall be final."
"In this section "appellate court", in relation to any proceedings in a court, means a court dealing with an appeal (including an appeal by way of case stated) arising out of the proceedings or with any further appeal."
In Markham the Court gave leave to appeal against sentence (and indeed allowed the appeal in one respect). There was no doubt that it was "dealing with an appeal". The question arises whether, given that we refused leave to appeal against sentence, we are in the same position. The Criminal Appeal Act 1968 differentiates between what constitutes an appeal and what constitutes an application; and the phrase "decision of the Court of Appeal on appeal" in section 33 of that Act refers only to a decision following the grant of leave: R v Garwood (Reece) [2017] EWCA Crim 59 [2017] 1 WLR 3182. We express no view on whether similar reasoning applies to the phrase "dealing with an appeal" in section 45(11) of the 1999 Act, except to note that it may need consideration in future. It may be that it should be understood as encompassing applications for leave to appeal. Yet circumstances will arise in which a convicted youth has no complaint at all about the sentence imposed in the Crown Court but nonetheless wishes to challenge a decision allowing him to be named; or as in this case, has an application for leave to appeal against sentence which fails but wishes to challenge his being named. There is little doubt that multiple proceedings are untidy and expensive.
(1) The first concerns the form of the order originally made by the judge. It was recorded as follows:
"1. That no newspaper report of the proceedings shall reveal the name, address or school, or include any particulars calculated to lead to the identification of any child or young person in the proceedings, either as being the person by or against, or in respect of whom the proceedings are taken, or as being a witness therein.
2. That no picture shall be published in any newspaper as being or including a picture of any child or young person so concerned in the proceedings as aforesaid.
Except insofar (if at all) as may be permitted by the court."
This form of order prohibits reports in newspapers but not in any other form of publication. We strongly suspect the order was based on a template created some time ago, reflecting the old regime under the 1933 Act. If so, such templates should be updated. Newspapers are but one medium for publication. The protection was, no doubt, intended to be wider. There is no suggestion that other publishers took advantage of the narrowness of the order, but in the future those concerned with applications for directions of this kind should be alert to ensure that they are framed in appropriate terms.
(2) Secondly, it appears that no formal order was drawn up to reflect the decision of the trial judge to make an excepting direction. It should have been.