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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Smith & Ors, R. v [2020] EWCA Crim 973 (24 July 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2020/973.html Cite as: [2020] EWCA Crim 973 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT NORTHAMPTON
HHJ LUCKING QC
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE HILLIARD
and
MR JUSTICE FORDHAM
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REGINA |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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(1) Adison David SMITH (2) Alfie DRAGE (3) Cameron HIGGS (4) Jordan Benjamin CROWLEY |
Appellants |
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Mr Martin Rutherford QC (instructed by Caveat Solicitors) for the 2nd Appellant
Mr Andrew Campbell-Tiech QC (instructed by Stephen Moore & Co) for the 3rd Appellant
Mr Giles Cockings QC (instructed by AHS Law) for the 4th Appellant
Mr John Hallissey (instructed by the Crown Prosecution Service) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 9th July 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Reserved Judgment Protocol: This judgment will be handed down by the Judge remotely, by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and, if appropriate, by publishing on www.judiciary.uk and/or release to BAILII. The date and time for hand down will be deemed to be 10:00 on 24 July 2020. The Court Order will be provided to Northampton Crown Court for entry onto the record.
Lord Justice Singh :
Introduction
The facts
Conspiracy to rob and murder
Wounding with intent
Conveying articles into prison
Material legislation
"If—
(a) the case does not fall within paragraph 4(1) but the court considers that the seriousness of the offence (or the combination of the offence and one or more offences associated with it) is particularly high, and
(b) the offender was aged 18 or over when he committed the offence, the appropriate starting point, in determining the minimum term, is 30 years."
"(c) a murder done for gain (such as a murder done in the course or furtherance of robbery or burglary, done for payment or done in the expectation of gain as a result of the death)".
"(1) If—
(a) the case does not fall within paragraph 4(1) or 5(1),
(b) the offence falls within sub-paragraph (2), and
(c) the offender was aged 18 or over when the offender committed the offence, the offence is normally to be regarded as sufficiently serious for the appropriate starting point, in determining the minimum term, to be 25 years.
(2) The offence falls within this sub-paragraph if the offender took a knife or other weapon to the scene intending to—
(a) commit any offence, or
(b) have it available to use as a weapon, and used that knife or other weapon in committing the murder."
"8. Having chosen a starting point, the court should take into account any aggravating or mitigating factors, to the extent that it has not allowed for them in its choice of starting point.
9. Detailed consideration of aggravating or mitigating factors may result in a minimum term of any length (whatever the starting point), or in the making of a whole life order."
"Mitigating factors that may be relevant to the offence of murder include—
(a) an intention to cause serious bodily harm rather than to kill,
(b) lack of premeditation,
…
(g) the age of the offender."
Sentencing remarks
"I do not conclude that you are a dangerous offender pursuant to the Criminal Justice Act 2003."
She imposed a sentence, taking account of his guilty plea, of 12 years detention for the offence of conspiracy to rob. She imposed a sentence of custody for life with a minimum term of 28 years less the time spent on remand.
"I am sure that you have a complex set of issues that meant you had significant interruptions to your education, were diagnosed in the past with ADHD, but have, nevertheless, embraced a violent, criminal lifestyle centred around drugs and gangs. You may be a follower rather than a leader but you are an enthusiastic follower, happy to use serious and lethal violence. The videos in which you feature demonstrate this very clearly."
Relevant principles to be derived from the authorities
"Schedule 21 does not seek to identify all the aggravating and mitigating factors, it merely provides relevant examples."
"10. Schedule 21 includes repeated references to the age of the offender. Significant distinctions to the normal starting point are drawn between offenders who are aged 21 or over, 18 or over, or under 18 at the time of the offence. Thus, for example, for an offender aged 18 or over whose case does not fall within paragraph 4(1) or 5(1) or 5(2), the appropriate starting point is 15 years, but if he is aged under 18, the appropriate starting point becomes 12 years. And quite apart from different starting points directly related to age, there is a specific, additional, mitigating feature under paragraph 11(g), 'the age of the offender'.
11. It has long been understood that considerations of age and maturity are usually relevant to the culpability of an offender and the seriousness of the offence. Schedule 21 underlines this principle. Although the passage of an eighteenth or twenty-first birthday represents a significant moment in the life of each individual, it does not necessarily tell us very much about the individual's true level of maturity, insight and understanding. These levels are not postponed until nor suddenly accelerated by an eighteenth or twenty-first birthday. Therefore although the normal starting point is governed by the defendant's age, when assessing his culpability, the sentencing judge should reflect on and make allowances, as appropriate upwards or downwards, for the level of the offender's maturity. …
12. The first stage in the process nevertheless remains the prescribed statutory starting point. This ensures consistency of approach, and appropriate adherence to the relevant legislative provisions. Schedule 21 does not envisage a moveable starting point, upwards or downwards, from the dates fixed by reference to the offender's eighteenth or twenty-first birthdays. Nor does it provide a mathematical scale, starting at 12 years for the eighteen year old offender, moving upwards to 13 years for the nineteen year old, through to 14 years for the twenty year old, culminating in 15 years for the twenty-one year old. The principle is simple. Where the offender's age, as it affects his culpability and the seriousness of the crime justifies it, a substantial, or even a very substantial discount, from the starting point may be appropriate. One way in which the judge may check that the discount is proportionate would be for him to consider it in the context of the overall statutory framework, as if Schedule 21 envisaged a flexible starting point for offenders between eighteen and twenty-one. This would have the advantage of linking the mitigation which would normally arise from the offender's relative youth with the statutory provisions which apply to an offender a year or two older, or younger, and would contribute to a desirable level of sentencing consistency. Due allowance should then be made for the relevant aggravating and mitigating features to produce the final determination of the minimum term, and thereafter the judge should explain the reasons for the determination in open court." (Emphasis in original)
"13. Paragraph 11(a) of Schedule 21 identifies an intention to cause serious bodily harm rather than to kill as a potential mitigating factor. An intention to cause serious bodily harm is a sufficient intention for murder, and violence inflicted with such an intent remains an offence of the utmost seriousness requiring the mandatory life sentence in the same way as murder resulting from an intent to kill. It has however long been recognised that, all other features of the case being equal, the seriousness of a murder committed with intent to kill is normally more grave and serious than one committed with intent to cause grievous bodily harm. Paragraph 11(a) gives effect to that common understanding.
14. That said, no specific distinction based on the offender's intent is made in any of the starting points under paragraphs 4 or 5(1) and (2), 6 and 7, and there is no specific or special starting point for cases where the offender intended really serious harm rather than death. Moreover paragraph 11(a) underlines that such an intention to cause grievous bodily harm, as opposed to an intention to kill, 'may' provide relevant mitigation, but not necessarily, and not always. Thus, murder committed with an intent to kill may attract yet greater mitigation than a killing to which paragraph 11(a) applies. For example, where the killing represents an act of mercy, motivated by love and devotion, as envisaged in paragraph 11(f), the intention is indeed to kill, to provide a merciful release. It is unlikely that the mitigation in such a case will be less than the mitigation allowed to an offender who involves himself in an unlawful violent incident and, intending to do really serious harm, causes death. Similarly, there are cases in which death, even if unintended, is a possible or likely consequence of the offender's premeditated conduct. For example, those who abduct a child intending to blackmail the parents into providing a large ransom may deliberately make the parents aware that the child is being tortured, to encourage a positive response from the parents. In the course of torture the child may die. Just because the very objective of the criminal is a ransom, death may not be intended. If it is a consequence of the abduction or torture, we doubt whether much, if any, allowance would normally be made in mitigation for the fact that the death of the child was an unintended consequence of the deliberate infliction of bodily harm."
"There is a significant difference between a criminal who sets out to use violence, although not intending to kill, to achieve his criminal end and the criminal who uses violence without setting out to do so, when unexpectedly caught in the act of the crime."
Again, we would observe that Lord Phillips was not seeking to set out all the possible permutations and his judgment should not be read as if it were a statute. In the present case, the Appellants may not have intended to kill but they were not simply caught in the act of a burglary. They went equipped with weapons so that they could be used if necessary in the course of a robbery.
"young offenders are more likely to be impulsive, unthinking, and respond to situations with excessive and gratuitous force."
The Court considered that a minimum term of 32 years for a young man who killed when he was aged 19 was "a very severe sentence, and perhaps uniquely so."
"Reaching the age of 18 has many legal consequences, but it does not present a cliff edge for the purposes of sentencing. So much has long been clear. The discussion in R v Peters [2005] EWCA Crim 605, [2005] 2 Cr App R (S) 101 is an example of its application: see paras [10]-[12]. Full maturity and all the attributes of adulthood are not magically conferred on young people on their 18th birthdays. Experience of life reflected in scientific research (e.g. The Age of Adolescence: thelancet.com/child-adolescent; 17 January 2018) is that young people continue to mature, albeit at different rates, for some time beyond their 18th birthdays. The youth and maturity of an offender will be factors that inform any sentencing decision, even if an offender has passed his or her 18th birthday. The ages of these offenders illustrate the point. …"
"It is clear to us that the whole picture of events must be taken into account in assessing whether the seriousness of this case was particularly high. The offence of murder is not to be viewed in isolation but alongside the other offences on the indictment which form part of the overall picture. The facts show a planned aggravated burglary carried out by two men. The originator of the offence was this appellant. He described himself as the 'team captain' during his evidence at trial. The two men forced their way into the victim's flat in the small hours of the morning. They knew the premises were occupied. They were disguised. This appellant had bought the imitation firearm for this very purpose the day before the offence. The accomplice held that weapon. The appellant was brandishing the large chopping knife. The purpose of the break-in was to rob those inside of money and drugs which the robbers believed they would find."
"It is clear to us, firstly, that this offence, being a murder committed in the course or furtherance of a robbery or burglary, is one which in the circumstances comes fully within paragraph 5(1). It is not a necessary pre-condition that the killer should at the outset have intended to murder the victim in order to facilitate the commission of the offence of robbery or burglary. Whilst the killing may not have been premeditated in the sense that there was an intention necessarily to kill or do really serious bodily harm prior to entering into the premises, the nature of the attack shows a degree of persistence, and as this court has previously observed in relation to knife crime, every knife carried represents a danger since the consequences of carrying a weapon of that sort are foreseeably serious and extend to murder. We therefore do not consider that the mitigating factor in relation to premeditation carries particular weight in this case."
"Turning to the absence of an intention to kill, that plainly is a mitigating factor, but, as was observed in R v Peters and others [2005] 2 Cr App R (S) 101, it cannot be assumed that the absence of an intention to kill necessarily provides very much mitigation. Where a weapon is taken and used and is of a sort which is liable to cause death, the mitigation on this ground is reduced. Thus, when consideration is given to the two factors relied on by the appellant in challenging the starting point, we consider that the case was indeed properly assessed as having a 30 year starting point since the aggravating factors we have earlier identified are of considerable gravity and greatly outweigh the mitigating factors relied on. We do not consider that the judge was wrong. In our judgment, this case properly fell into the category of one involving particularly high seriousness when it is looked at in the round."
Analysis
(1) Their relatively young ages.
(2) The lack of an intention to kill.
(3) The lack of premeditation.