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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Privett, R. v [2020] EWCA Crim 557 (29 April 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2020/557.html Cite as: [2020] EWCA Crim 557, [2020] 2 Cr App R (S) 45, [2020] Crim LR 1099, [2020] 4 WLR 111 |
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ON APPEAL FROM CROWN COURT TAUNTON
HHJ TICEHURST
S20190294, 20190225, S20190236, S20190116 & S20190249
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE FULFORD
LORD JUSTICE HOLROYDE
and
SIR PETER OPENSHAW
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Steven Mark PRIVETT |
1stAppellant |
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Tony John WEST Philip Richard SMISSON Marcello BUONAIUTO |
2nd Appellant 3rd Appellant 4th Appellant |
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- and - |
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REGINA |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Nicholas Wragg (instructed by Stone King LLP) for the 3rd Appellant
Mr Will Rose (instructed by Alletsons Solicitors ) for the 4th Appellant
Mr Timothy Cray QC (instructed by CPS Appeals & Review Unit) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 25th February 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Fulford :
The Issue of Principle
Introduction
The Facts
Phillip Smisson
Marcello Buonaiuto
Steven Privett
Anthony West
The Submissions
"34. In our judgment, what happened here did not fall within category 1 at all. In the circumstances, because the offending did not proceed beyond incitement, it was "other sexual activity" within category 3. That accords not only with the judge's rejection of the suggestion that the offender's behaviour justified a starting point of five years but also provides appropriate headroom between the sexual suggestion and any actual activity without necessarily engaging upon the exceptional basis for departing from the Guideline.
35. The offence was undeniably one of high culpability but as category 3 had a starting point of 26 weeks in custody and a range up to three years' imprisonment the sentence passed by the learned judge fell fairly and squarely within it. […]"
"17. The starting point for an offence under s.9 in respect of Category 1A penetration of a victim's vagina or anus using body or object with high culpability is five years' custody, with a range of 4–10 years. In this case the harm was plainly in Category 1 and there were factors showing culpability of a very high order indeed: there was a significant degree of planning, the offender acting together with others to commit the putative offence. The judge concluded that there was an abuse of trust where the appellant intended to act together with and in the presence of the child's step-mother in order to engage in the sexual activity. Whether that is strictly correct analytically is not relevant because if it were not an abuse for the purposes of culpability, it would be a proper factor to take into account as aggravating the particular offence, and, as the judge held, there was a significant disparity in age."
"9. […] This was category 1 harm, as penetration of the vagina was intended. Culpability was category A because there was a significant degree of planning in the conversing through Facebook and the appellant took alcohol with him, albeit at the request of the other person. There was a significant disparity of age and so the starting point of 5 years with a range of 4 years to 10 years was appropriate here. Whilst it has to be accepted that no sexual act in fact took place and none could have, we agree with the learned judge that the fact that the person the appellant was to meet was not in fact a 15-year-old virgin is not relevant to the culpability for the circumstances of the section 14 offence that this appellant admitted."
"24. In the light of those principles one is driven to conclude that before any question of adjustment arises, as provided for by the Sentencing Guidelines, the offence committed under section 14 was a category 3A offence and not a category 1A offence. Thus, a starting point of 26 weeks is provided for with a range of a high level community order to a sentence of 3 years' imprisonment."
"Sentencers should refer to the guideline for the applicable, substantive offence of arranging or facilitating under sections 9 to 12:
- Sexual activity with a child, Sexual Offences Act 2003, s.9
- Causing or inciting a child to engage in sexual activity, Sexual Offences Act 2003, s.10
- Engaging in sexual activity in the presence of a child, Sexual Offences Act 2003, s.11
- Causing a child to watch a sexual act, Sexual Offences Act 2003, s.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. For offences involving significant commercial exploitation and/or an international element, it may, in the interests of justice, be appropriate to increase a sentence to a point above the category range. In exceptional cases, such as where a vulnerable offender performed a limited role, having been coerced or exploited by others, sentences below the starting point and range may be appropriate."
"Harm
Category 1
- Penetration of vagina or anus (using body or object)
- Penile penetration of mouth
In either case by, or of, the victim
Category 2
- Touching, or exposure, of naked genitalia or naked breasts by, or of, the victim
Category 3
- Other sexual activity
"21. […] As the court has made clear in other cases where the offence is the subject of a Sentencing Council Guideline, and also in relation to Schedule 21, guidelines are guidelines. The citation of decisions of the Court of Appeal Criminal Division in the application and interpretation of guidelines is generally of no assistance. There may be cases where the court is asked to say something about a guideline where, in wholly exceptional circumstances – and we wish to emphasise that these are rare – the guideline may be unclear. In such circumstances the court will make observations which may be cited to the court in the future. However, in those circumstances it is highly likely that the Council will revise the guideline and the authority will cease to be of any application.
22. It is important that practitioners appreciate that our system now proceeds on the basis of guidelines, not case law. It will, therefore, be very rare, where there is an applicable guideline, for any party to cite to this court cases that seek to express how the guideline works, other than in the rare circumstances we have set out. Decisions of this court are of particular importance to the individuals concerned, but they are unlikely to be of any assistance to further appeals where the guidelines are in issue."
"Determining the seriousness of an offence
(1) In considering the seriousness of any offence, the court must consider the offender's culpability in committing the offence and any harm which the offence caused, was intended to cause or might forseeably have caused."
"Attempted murder requires an intention to kill. Accordingly, an offender convicted of this offence will have demonstrated a high level of culpability. Even so, the precise level of culpability will vary in line with the circumstances of the offence and whether the offence was planned or spontaneous. The use of a weapon may influence this assessment.
The level of injury or harm sustained by the victim as well as any harm that the offence was intended to cause or might foreseeably have caused, must be taken into account and reflected in the sentence imposed.
The degree of harm will vary greatly. Where there is low harm and high culpability, culpability is more significant. Even in cases where a low level of injury (or no injury) has been caused, an offence of attempted murder will be extremely serious." (emphasis added)
"Arranging or facilitating commission of a child sex offence
(1) A person commits an offence if–
(a) he intentionally arranges or facilitates something that he intends to do, intends another person to do, or believes that another person will do, in any part of the world, and(b) doing it will involve the commission of an offence under any of sections 9 to 13."
Discussion
"Arranging or facilitating the commission of a child offence (section 14 of the Sexual Offences Act 2003
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. […]"
"29. On this basis, such incitement, which does not involve physical contact or exposure of any sort is more serious than a category 2 offence which involves touching or exposure of naked genitalia or naked breasts by or of the victim. To provide colour to this example, if the analysis is correct, it is more serious to incite a child as this offender did than had he actually persuaded her to undress before a web camera and expose to him her breasts or genitalia. It would equally be more serious than persuading a boy to masturbate in front of a web camera. In our judgment, that simply cannot be right."
And the court added:
31. The answer however is to recognise that this guideline covers very different offending and that the language used within it must be construed by particular reference to the offence then under consideration. Thus, if over a web camera, a female child is incited to insert an object into her vagina and she does so, a category 1 offence is committed; if a child is persuaded to touch or expose his or her naked genitalia and does so, that is a category 2 offence. Similarly, if a child is incited to persuade someone else (whether or not the offender) actually to behave in that manner, the offence is correctly characterised as category 1 or 2 respectively. The harm is the impact on the victim of behaving as he or she has done, whether in the presence of the offender or remotely or on line.
32. To that extent, the offence of causing sexual activity is potentially more serious than inciting such activity because the actual activity is a necessary part of the offence. Incitement can lead to actual activity which can be categorised accordingly. But where the incitement does not lead the child to behave in the manner incited, although the culpability is likely to be identical, the harm is necessarily less: the same is so in relation to attempts.
On this issue the court concluded (as set out above):
"34. In our judgment, what happened here did not fall within category 1 at all. In the circumstances, because the offending did not proceed beyond incitement, it was "other sexual activity" within category 3. […]"
"Every court –
- Must, in sentencing an offender, follow any sentencing guidelines which are relevant to the offender's case, and
- […]
unless the court is satisfied that it would be contrary to the interests of justice to do so."
Postscript