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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Woolner, R. v [2020] EWCA Crim 1245 (17 September 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2020/1245.html Cite as: [2020] EWCA Crim 1245 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
ATTORNEY GENERAL'S REFERENCE UNDER SECTION 36 OF THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE ACT 1988
The Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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R E G I N A | ||
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ROBERT ALAN WOOLNER |
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Lower Ground, 18-22 Furnival Street, London EC4A 1JS
Tel No: 020 7404 1400; Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Miss J F Faure-Walker appeared on behalf of the Offender
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE DAVIS:
5. The facts for present purposes can be summarised relatively shortly. On 22nd October 2019, the offender was using Grindr, an online social media application used mainly by members of the LGBT community. In using it, he did not reveal his name. He contacted a person purportedly called "Ben", who described himself as a 13 year old boy. In fact, "Ben" was a police officer. The offender told "Ben" that he was attracted to younger men and said that he was aged 52. At his request, "Ben" then sent a photograph purporting to be of himself. The offender asked for something "more naughty", which "Ben" declined.
6. The same evening, the offender asked "Ben" to visit him. "Ben" said that he was on half term the following week. The offender complained that others which whom he had communicated and arranged to meet had not turned up. He asked "Ben" about his sexual experience and also requested a picture of his penis, which "Ben" declined.
"Sentencers should refer to the guideline for the applicable, substantive offence of arranging or facilitating under sections 9 to 12. … The level of harm should be determined by reference to the type of activity arranged or facilitated. Sentences commensurate with the applicable starting point and range will ordinarily be appropriate. …"
"The starting points and ranges in this guideline are also applicable to offences of arranging or facilitating the commission of a child offence. In such cases, the level of harm should be determined by reference to the type of activity arranged or facilitated. Sentences commensurate with the applicable starting point and range will ordinarily be appropriate. …"
"It would have been 1A had this not been a decoy. But, as I understand the law in relation to this area, that when you have a decoy, you do not put it in category 1, because there is talk about oral sex, where it would go otherwise, but you put it in the lower category, category 3, because nothing was ever going to happen. But it is certainly category A…"
Having so stated, counsel then, understandably, referred to the starting point and range appropriate for category 3A.
"I must treat this as category 3, and I do so."
Accordingly, he passed the sentences we have indicated.
"59. It is necessary, in our judgment, to keep in mind the terms of this offence. It is intentionally arranging or facilitating activity which would constitute a child sexual offence, intending that it will happen. This is a preparatory offence, albeit it could cover the case in which the offence was carried out. However, in that latter situation, the offender would ordinarily be charged as a participant in the full offence.
60. The offence is complete when the arrangements for the offence are made or the intended offence has been facilitated and it is not, therefore, dependent on the completed offence happening or even being possible, and the absence of a real victim does not, therefore, reduce culpability.
…
65. There are clearly some similarities between the position in Baker and the present appeals. There was no actual sexual activity in any of the cases. These four appellants were charged with 'arranging or facilitating the commission of a child sex offence', and (as rehearsed above) sentencers are enjoined to refer to the relevant guideline for the applicable substantive offence of arranging or facilitating under sections 9, 10, 11 and 12. Indeed, under the Guideline, for sections 9 and 10 the level of harm for a section 14 offence should be determined by reference to the type of activity arranged or facilitated ([63] above). In Baker, the offence to which the offender pleaded guilty was one of 'inciting a child to engage in sexual activity' (section 10). Accordingly, whilst in the instant appeal the four appellants were charged under section 14, the relevant guideline to which the sentencer needed to refer was the same as that which applied in Baker. The three categories of harm applicable to both cases are set out at [47] above.
66. Notwithstanding those similarities, the court in the present case is dealing with a different offence and, at least to an extent, different circumstances from those that applied in Baker. We are unable to accept the submission that Baker requires that section 14 offences in which there is no real child must always be treated as category 3A offences under the Guideline. We recognise that aspects of the decision in Baker may well need to be revisited in the light of this judgment, but our present concern is with these section 14 offences.
67. Focusing on the particular issue raised in these appeals, we consider that for a section 14 offence, the position under the Guideline is clear: the judge should, first, identify the category of harm on the basis of the sexual activity the defendant intended ('the level of harm should be determined by reference to the type of activity arranged or facilitated'), and, second, adjust the sentence in order to ensure it is 'commensurate' with, or proportionate to, the applicable starting point and range if no sexual activity had occurred (including because the victim was fictional) ('sentences commensurate with the applicable starting point and range will ordinarily be appropriate')."
The court thus approved the approach taken in section 14 cases such as Bayliss, Collins and Lewis, and disapproved the approach taken in section 14 cases such as Stillwell and Allington. The court went on to say this:
"72. Sentencers in future with section 14 offences in these circumstances should follow the Sentencing Guideline in the way we have described above at [67]. This may lead to the result that a defendant who arranges the rape of a fictional 6-year-old is punished more severely than a defendant who facilitates a comparatively minor sexual assault on a real 15-year-old. In our view, there is nothing necessarily wrong in principle with that result. The sentence should be commensurate with the applicable starting point and range, and in cases where the child is a fiction this will usually involve some reduction (as in Bayliss) to reflect the lack of harm."