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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Meanley v R. [2022] EWCA Crim 1065 (28 July 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2022/1065.html Cite as: [2022] 4 WLR 85, [2022] WLR(D) 353, [2022] EWCA Crim 1065 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT SHEFFIELD
His Honour Judge Richardson QC
T20217025
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Mr Justice Spencer
and
Her Honour Judge Taylor, the Honorary Recorder of Westminster
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Taylor Meanley |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Regina |
Respondent |
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Stephen Wood QC and Abigail Langford instructed on behalf of the Respondent
Hearing date: 13 July 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
Whipple LJ:
The complainant under count 4 remains subject to a life-long order protecting his identity pursuant to s 45A Youth Justice and Criminal Evidence Act 1999 and we shall refer to him in this judgment as C1. There are no reporting restrictions in place in relation to the appellant or any of the co-accused named in this judgment.
Background
Co-Accused
Facts
Count 4
Count 3
Counts 1 and 2
Sentence
"They may each be very poorly educated, but I am entirely satisfied they harbour an innate cunning and predisposition to crime and violence. Each has come from a very baleful upbringing."
"The normal considerations when passing sentence upon youths for other types of crime, whilst not unimportant, do not resonate or have the same importance in a case of this kind. I shall make appropriate allowance for the immaturity and disadvantages of each defendant, but substantial minimum terms and sentences must be imposed in a case of this seriousness."
a. The use of a firearm to execute the murder and the manslaughter.
b. The crimes were all part of a gangland rivalry and retribution. These were revenge attacks.
c. The killing was in a public place with many members of the public around and about. Those members of the public were placed at risk and had to watch a youth being gunned down.
d. The firearm was carried to inflict injury on rival gang members and was used for that purpose.
a. The appellant harboured a desire for retribution from the day before the killing. He circulated a photograph of the gun. This was planned violence, to find a PSB member and visit violence upon that person.
b. The appellant possessed an intention to kill: "To fire a gun out of a moving car at a youth at close quarters … does not admit of any other intention".
c. Although drugs formed part of the backdrop, drugs had no direct relevance to these offences. The appellant and the others knew what they were doing.
"The problem I face in this case is that Meanley [the appellant] is subject to a starting point of 12 years and Parkes is subject to a starting point of 30 years. I am required to move from these starting points to a position where any discrepancy or disparity is removed in order to achieve a fair reflection of their ages and culpability."
"You are both separated by only a few years and justice demands that you be treated the same when the situation is justly analysed".
He imposed a concurrent sentence of 18 years for the firearms offence. There was no separate penalty for the other offences.
Grounds of Appeal
a. There was evidence before the judge in the form of a speech and language therapist that the appellant's chronological age was greater than his developmental age in a number of measurable ways.
b. There was strong personal mitigation. The appellant's schooling had been very interrupted. He was removed from the mainstream sector at the age of 11. He had special educational needs throughout his school years. He had been diagnosed with moderate learning difficulty. He has significant difficulty with language skills.
c. The appellant had been the subject of a child protection plan dated 27 July 2020, under the category of neglect. A further referral was made in August 2020 when he was seen dragging his girlfriend off the train by her arm. There was concern that he was being targeted by organised crime groups. On 20 October 2020 there was a child protection conference in light of concerns for his safety and the safety of family members, because of the targeting by gang members and reports of windows being smashed at his home.
d. There was a reported history of the appellant and his father being picked on and targeted by the PSB gang.
e. The judge's sentence was out of line with authority which demonstrated that youth and life circumstances may very substantially reduce culpability. There was no case where a sentence of this length had been imposed on an offender aged 16½ at the date of offending.
f. The judge had been wrong not to order a PSR before sentencing, especially so because the Court had a great deal of evidence from the police about community impact of gangs, but none of it directed at the impact the local gang culture had on the appellant, who was being targeted, and his family who had suffered a number of attacks thought to be by the PSB gang.
Evidence relating to the Appellant's age and development.
At Sentence
"N.B. If any age equivalent guides have been included in this report they are there as a guide for carers and professionals involved in supporting the Young Person, to help them understand the Young Persons level of functioning for their language and communication skills and for consideration when providing support and differentiating language levels. They relate only to their speech, language and communication skill development and not their cognitive, functioning and learning development as a whole. These age equivalent guides are given solely for the purposes of supporting the Young Person and not as an indicator when determining criminal responsibility."
On Appeal
"Since Taylor has been remanded various assessments have been completed with him by a Psychiatrist, a Speech and Language Therapist and with Forensic Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (FCAMHS). It has been identified that Taylor has an extremely low IQ and his mental age was estimated at 11 years and 10 months. Taylor also has significant communication difficulties identified in a report produced by Kate Wood, Speech and Language Therapist at Doncaster Youth Offending Service. This would have exacerbated his vulnerability to exploitation and affected his ability to make rational decisions."
Sentencing Children and Young People.
The Guideline
Authorities
"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 (p.627) is an example of its application: see [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 Sentencing Council has published a Definitive Guideline which sets out Overarching Principles for Sentencing Children and Young People. Because the sentence for murder is fixed by law, the nature of the sentence is not affected by considerations of the welfare of the offender, or of the principal aim of the youth justice system which is to reduce offending by children and young persons. It nonetheless remains important when considering the appropriate minimum term to consider the developmental and emotional age of the offender and to consider, in accordance with paragraph 4.10 of the guideline, whether the young offender has:
'the necessary maturity to appreciate fully the consequences of their conduct, the extent to which the child or young person has been acting on an impulsive basis and whether their conduct has been affected by inexperience, emotional volatility or negative influences.'"
"15. Schedule 21 to the Criminal Justice Act 2003 applies to the determination of the minimum term. For adults (those 18 and over), the starting point for the minimum term is generally 15 years, but with a higher starting point in a range of circumstances. One of those circumstances is when a knife is used and taken to the scene of the murder. If that is established, the starting point for an adult is 25 years. The starting point applied by the judge in the cases of the three co-accused convicted of murder was that enhanced starting point.
16. By contrast, the starting point for offenders under the age of 18 is 12 years. There are no comparable higher starting points specified by the statute for young murderers who, if adults at the time of offending, would have been subject to enhanced minimum terms. The starting point for young offenders covers all those from the age of criminal responsibility to the eve of their eighteenth birthday. Much flexibility in the calculation of the minimum term is needed on that account alone, as well as to reflect the individual circumstances of the offence. Put shortly, were two children together convicted of murder one aged 12 and the other aged 17, it would be wrong to suppose that the age-related reduction was entirely reflected in the statutory provisions."
56. At [21] it held this, in a passage which has obvious relevance to this appeal (with emphasis added):
"In chronological terms and in terms of maturity there is a real difference between a defendant who has just passed his sixteenth birthday and one who is just shy of his nineteenth birthday."
"… What is the appropriate approach where there are two co-defendants who have committed a murder jointly and where one is just over 18 years of age and the other just under? That question raises an acute problem for the sentencer where, as here, the murder falls into the particularly serious category that attracts a starting point for an offender who is over 18 of a 30 year minimum term. Is Mr Griffiths [for the appellant Brown] correct to submit that the court should determine the sentence of each offender independently of the position of the other? We do not consider that he is. Schedule 21 provides different starting points where the facts of the offence are common to both offenders only because of the disparity between their ages. In such circumstances the sentencer should move from each starting point to a position where any disparity between the sentences is no more than a fair reflection of the age difference between the offenders. This not only complies with the obvious requirements of justice, it accords with the guidance given by this court in R v Peters [2005] EWCA Crim 605, [2005] 2 Cr App R(S) 101…"
"28. … we do not consider that the small disparity in age between Carty and Brown could properly be reflected by more than one year's difference in the minimum terms imposed upon them".
Discussion
"… where a serious offence has been committed by a young offender, both the court and those representing him must be alert to the possibility that mental health may be a relevant feature of the case. The younger the offender, and the more serious the offence, the more likely it is that the court will need the assistance of expert reports."
Conclusion