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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Keeling, R. v [2022] EWCA Crim 178 (02 February 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2022/178.html Cite as: [2022] EWCA Crim 178 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE CHOUDHURY
HER HONOUR JUDGE DHIR QC
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REGINA |
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DAVID JAMIE KEELING |
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MS. F. ROBERTSON appeared on behalf of HM Solicitor General.
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE EDIS:
The History of the Proceedings
"Okay. The defendant is 26 years old, one previous for a theft, I think, theft of a cycle in 2017."
"Okay, Ms Hodgson. If he pleads now, suspended sentence, 24 months suspended for 18 months, 120 hours of unpaid work, potentially curfew, but I am not sure, curfew potentially to fit in with his work and to pay £1,200 compensation to Mr Allison. Do you understand?"
"So, if you want to plead guilty to this now, the charge gets put back to you and you plead guilty to it. The charge is robbery of the man in the van on 28 July. At the moment you have pleaded not guilty and that is in for a trial on 27 September, but if you decide …….you could obviously get an immediate sentence of imprisonment if it went to a jury and they found you guilty. I am offering you what some might say is a deal today."
"Which is if you pleaded guilty today, you get what is called a suspended sentence, so that is 24 months' imprisonment hanging over your head for the next 18 months with you doing 120 hours' community work, what is called unpaid work, a curfew, that means wearing a tag around your ankle."
"Now, I am giving you time to speak with Ms Hodgson if you want to. Some people say 'I don't need to speak to the lawyer. I am happy with that and I will go ahead', but if you want time just let me know and you can have a word with Ms Hodgson."
"Yes, thanks very much. I have indicated the sentence. If you want to headline any mitigation, Ms Hodgson."
"Now, what happened on that day is a gentlemen called Mark Allison, who had encountered difficulties during lockdown and I read into he was no longer living in a house or other dwelling. He was forced to start living in a camper van in an area where he had been actually living for four months at the time of this incident and he was also on occasion doing some night fishing at that location."
"In this case these are guidelines, not tramlines, but I do, nevertheless, take a starting point of 42 months' imprisonment. There is then though I think significant mitigation available to the court and that is your very limited previous convictions, the fact that this was an offence which was totally out of character, that you are a working man and contributing to society. You have expressed remorse for what you did that night. There has also been an element of delay in this case. Now, on account of those matters, the notional sentence before giving you credit for plea goes down to 28 months' imprisonment. I then give you 15 per cent credit for your plea because your trial was in a couple of weeks' time, 15 per cent off 28 months is four months. I then look on the guideline on the imposition of community and custodial penalties ... "
and decided that the sentence could properly be suspended.
"The term dwelling shall apply to any such vehicle or vessel at times when the person having a habitation in it is not there, as well as at times when he is."