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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> English and Welsh Courts - Miscellaneous >> Birmingham City Council v Robinson [2016] EW Misc B24 (CC) (26 September 2016)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/Misc/2016/B24.html
Cite as: [2016] EW Misc B24 (CC)

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Claim No. C00BM271

IN THE COUNTY COURT AT BIRMINGHAM

Priory Courts
33 Bull Street
Birmingham
B4 6DS
26th September 2016

B e f o r e :

HIS HONOUR JUDGE WORSTER
____________________

Between:
BIRMINGHAM CITY COUNCIL Claimant
-v-
K ROBINSON Defendant

____________________

Transcribed from the Official Tape Recording by
Apple Transcription Limited
Suite 204, Kingfisher Business Centre, Burnley Road, Rawtenstall, Lancashire BB4 8ES
DX: 26258 Rawtenstall – Telephone: 0845 604 5642 – Fax: 01706 870838

____________________

Counsel for the Claimant: MR CALZAVARA
Solicitor for the Defendant: MS ROBINSON

____________________

HTML VERSION OF JUDGMENT
____________________

Crown Copyright ©

    JUDGMENT

    HIS HONOUR JUDGE WORSTER:

  1. Mr Robinson, would you stand up? When you were here on 17th June, I explained to you the seriousness of these sorts of orders and that I was giving you a chance on that occasion because of the explanation you gave me about the circumstances in which you met Jacob Brown, but that if you breached the lenient sentence that I passed on you on that occasion then you would have to serve it.
  2. There were two breaches on this occasion. I do give you considerable credit for owning up to them today. You could have owned up to them last time but you have owned up to them today. I am not blind to the fact that you have done so, as your solicitor says, in the full knowledge of what that means. These injunctions are very important. I appreciate you deny the basis of it, but a court order has to be enforced because there is a danger to you and to others of you being in these areas. I take the point that you were not committing any offences as such. That is not an aggravating feature.
  3. It is the breach of the order that I have to sentence you for. You are 23. I take account of the fact that you have not been in prison before and I will reduce the sentence to recognise that fact, but I have to pass an immediate sentence upon you today. It is as short as I can possibly make it because it is the fact of a sentence rather than the length that I think will have its effect, if it has any effect at all.
  4. The sentence for the two breaches would have been three months but for your plea. I am reducing that to two months to take account of your plea. That is the fullest possible credit I can give you for it. I am adding to that the 14 days that I passed on you in June but I am deducting two days, which gives you credit for the nights you spent in custody following your arrest. So, that is a total of 68 days, of which you will serve half, so that will be just over a month inside which seems to me in the circumstances to be the shortest possible sentence I can pass upon you for these breaches. You can sit down.
  5. There will be a transcript at public expense of my sentencing remarks. I activate the suspended sentence as I have indicated, so that comes to an end and the usual order for costs.
  6. THE JUDGE: You are legally aided, Ms Robinson?

    MS ROBINSON: Pardon me?

    THE JUDGE: You are legally aided?

    MS ROBINSON: I am.

    THE JUDGE: So, the usual order for costs for Legal Aid. Mr Robinson, if you will wait, please, because a number of documents have been completed which go with you to the prison and then the bailiffs will take you there. There is a document that I have to sign, so, as I say, if you will wait with the bailiffs, please.

    [Judgment ends]


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