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Thursday 27 March 2014
s.172
s.172:- Duty to give information as to identity of driver etc in certain circumstances. There surely must be changes in the format of this requirement? Heaven knows how many such notices are disputed in magistrates` courts owing to alleged non receipt and subsequent convictions appealed at Crown Court. We are familiar with the arguments against having the notices sent out as “to be signed for” post. The likelihood of massive changes in our postal system initiated by the sale of Royal Mail do not augur well for any reduction in the numbers who claim they did not receive the notice or the statutory reminder. If e-mail and/or mobile phone number were required information for V5 registration document and DVLA were prohibited from supplying such information to third parties perhaps we would have fewer cases before us. Of course there are many caveats to proposals which further invade our privacy but I don`t believe the current system can continue for much longer.
All the above was brought to mind at a recent sitting. We had listed six trials on failing to comply with s.172 and all the defendants bar one based their not guilty pleas on the non receipt of both the notice to inform of driver and the reminder. We found only one not guilty. Two of those, in addition to six penalty points which made one of them a “totter”, ended up with fine and costs totalling around £1,000. Needless to say their faces dropped in astonishment. It was revealing also that two of the guilty when asked to provide some evidence that they had left the address to which the notices had been sent (from the DVLA data on the address of the keeper of a vehicle) said that they had such evidence eg council tax or utility bill but had not thought to bring it with them. Another of the guilty had written on his own headed paper in response to the notice that the driver was one of two of his immediate family both now domiciled abroad and that both denied being culpable. We did not consider that he had supplied sufficient diligence in his efforts to identify the driver.
One would have thought that with the disgrace of lying former cabinet minister Chris Huhne who was brought down by a s.172 offence the message might be getting through that the risks of being caught out are real and very costly. No doubt there are many apologists who reject the imprisonment of such offenders. There must be an unequivocal last resort of custody as the punishment for those who through their own contempt for the law whether by subverting s.172 or wilful refusal to pay council tax or court imposed fines undermine the very foundations of society.
Tuesday 25 March 2014
THE ZEALOT OF PETTY FRANCE
Let me begin today`s offering with two statements: one is
fact and the other is opinion; my opinion.
The fact is that the M.O.J. press office is rarely underemployed. The scribes in that edifice in Petty France
London SW1 roll out their releases with unfailing regularity and today`s is no exception. It is my very humble opinion that contrary to
an initial impression anybody with knowledge of the underlying situation and
recent history of such ministerial statements will see that behind the bland
brownie points being offered to magistrates the way is being prepared for
their activities to be ushered out of the courtroom and into an office of one
kind or another.
A probation service which is being transformed on the basis
of payment by results and is akin to a driverless train heading for the buffers
is being ordered to offer its services to those on short (12 months maximum)
sentences and my colleagues and I are being tasked in some so far indeterminate
manner to assist in their “rehabilitation”. J.P.s are not social workers. Our position is to do justice to all and that function takes place in the public forum known as a courtroom. . When, as is certain, the Magistrates` Association and other so called representative bodies of J.P.s endorse these recommendations they are effectively consigning to history the role of Justice of the Peace.
As per my post of 21st March 27,719 offenders received immediate custodial
sentences (6 months maximum) at magistrates` courts in 2013. The numbers of qualified probation officers
are certain to be reduced under the proposed new contracts.
So we will have fewer such people dealing with all these new “clients”. Such is the path of a Secretary of State
whose actions are akin to those of a zealot and we know where such actions lead:- destruction. Perhaps he should have
been appointed Secretary of State for Transport and at least the trains might
have been made to run on time.
Monday 24 March 2014
FOOT IN MOUTH DISEASE
As a presiding magistrate I am only too aware that I have to
think carefully in making any off the cuff remarks in court and there are many opportunities
and occasions when such remarks are necessary.
Each occasion offers the possibility of going off piste to such a degree
that it is not unlikely that somebody or other will find cause to
complain. Indeed within the confines of
the court building a three second speech delay as in the Radio 1 presenters` handbook
for beginners is a required tool for a J.P. in this most politically correct arena. All this leads me to the remarks made by HH Judge
David Hale at Mold Crown Court. The
usual brief court report is no basis for undue criticism but if His Honour`s
remarks had been about eg a Pakistani immigrant and not a Polish one or another ethnic or national group member I venture to suggest that there would have
been a possibility of these remarks reaching a wider audience.
I am not unconcerned that we as Justices of the Peace seem
to be held to higher standards of
behaviour than our senior professional colleagues by those who oversee our conduct. Perhaps my antennae are over sensitive or
perhaps as lay magistrates we are more inclined to retain some facets of that
ordinary fellow on the Clapham omnibus from which personality pool we are
appointed.
Friday 21 March 2014
SUSPENDED SENTENCES AND PUBLIC PROTECTION
When sitting with colleagues recently appointed I
occasionally remind them that we have a duty of public protection ensconced
within the formulaic information overload that they are doing their best to absorb. It is a function that is rarely if ever
mentioned in any training course and one with which most new colleagues can immediately feel
comfortable as they are faced for the first or second occasion when the custody
threshold has been breached. For many
the realisation that their decision means that a fellow citizen`s liberty is being taken from them can be a
sobering moment. Such decisions and the structured approach
employed to achieve them are perhaps most significant when it comes to deciding
if a custodial sentence can or should be
suspended. The pressures on so doing are
enormous. At all levels from Secretaries
of State to L/As via PSRs and trainers, the lower courts in particular are being “asked” to employ some form of rehabilitative requirement
and to eschew immediate custody. The increased
use of suspended sentences can be gauged from the table below.
For the year ended March 2013 figures for Adults(21 and
over) sentenced at Magistrates` Courts are
alongside similar figures for year ended March 2003 in ( ) and 2006 which was
the first year in which new legislation enlarged the availability of suspending
custodial sentences:-
|
Number
sentenced
|
166,088
|
(178,450)
|
158,644
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Number
given immediate custody
|
27,719
|
(29,691)
|
25,596
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Number
given fines
|
44,279
|
(58,597)
|
43,583
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Number
given community sentences
|
39,916
|
(47,284)
|
45,602
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Number
given suspended sentences
|
10,843
|
(473)
|
4,621
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||
In day to day practice the decision on whether or not to
suspend is down to individual judgement of the members of the sentencing bench.
An interesting example which perhaps encapsulates the process would have taken
place this week at Hereford Magistrates` Court where an offender convicted of assault [in an apparent domestic violence context] last month and sentenced to five months
custody suspended was convicted this week of drink driving; the fourth time he had been convicted of a drink drive related offence since 1996. His suspended sentence was not activated because,
according to his lawyer, “the drink
driving offence coming so soon after the community order had been issued, work
with the probation service “had not had time to bite”.
Colleagues and others and
this blogger might have their own opinions but of course without actually being
in court the full circumstances remain unknown.
My question is quite simple; was public protection considered as part of
the structured approach to the decision?
Thursday 20 March 2014
DISCLOSURE AND BANNING SERVICE IN A FINE MESS
From time to time I have been asked by a newly convicted
offender of previous good character whether or not his/her (minor) offence eg travelling on public
transport without a valid ticket, would
have to be declared to interested parties, i.e. on job applications,
professional or educational bodies etc etc.
It used to be simple enough to reply with some prompting if necessary
from the L/A : not any more. TheDisclosure and Barring Service operates under different rules from its parent; the Criminal Records Bureau. It appears that as with many arms length
quangos its operating efficiency leaves something to be desired. The Information Commissioner’s Office has
today published news that further adds
to my increasing cynicism of the quality of the management of such
organisations as the DBS.
I ask myself whether the inefficiencies at the DBS and the
many other problems at similar myriad agencies in the news over the last few
years are on the increase or is it the case that increased investigation of
these agencies, often by journalists, is bringing them to our attention. Given the still to be determined results of
the Leveson Inquiry I would rather have the tabloids and others with their sometimes
lurid content on my breakfast table if I
so chose than “Hacked Off”`s proposed edited
versions.
Wednesday 19 March 2014
A STEP TOO FAR
There is an old story that the ultra conservative
Presbyterian ladies of Edinburgh’s
Morningside district used to describe sex as that in which the coalman
delivered coal. Those were the days when
the British middle classes kept sex in the closet. High divorce and teenage pregnancy rates are
a clear indication that there is nothing about sex that cannot be discussed in
almost any level of communication.
However when discussion at the trial of Max Clifford in the Old Bailey centred
on the miniscule dimensions of his male member many
members of the jury could not control
their laughter and so they were all sent out to recover their composure. I
haven`t yet seen any cartoons on this topic which seems made to measure for
some sort of satirical observation.
Perhaps that would still be a
step too far........
Tuesday 18 March 2014
FRUSTRATION
In the retiring room at 9.30a.m. to prepare for an all day
trial. At 9.45a.m. informed that the
matter had been dismissed earlier that morning.
Secondary matter listed procedural only and after supping off a few
dregs from an other court`s measly table signed out at 11.15a.m. This is not all that unusual. Frustration with a capital F does not go half
way to describing how my colleagues and I feel.
Monday 17 March 2014
FRANZ KAFKA IN SPIRIT AT THE HIGH COURT
It seems the spirit of Franz Kafka has been sighted at the High Court. A recent decision meant that vulnerable people in the prison system, including inmates with mental health problems and women with babies, would suffer injustice following the removal of the right to criminal legal aid in many prison law cases. That argument was rejected by their Lordships on the basis that the decision was political and the Lord Chancellor`s actions were therefore not unlawful. Phillippa Kauffman Q.C. acting for the charities which had brought the case asserted that, “People are not going to be able to adequately represent themselves. "The cuts will also interfere with the right of access of prisoners to the courts”. James Eadie Q.C. in a response worthy of Kafka said, “If there was unfairness at internal hearings or reviews in the prison justice system, or before parole boards, civil legal aid was available for complainants seeking judicial review”. In reply, Ms Kaufmann said judicial review was no answer because the changes in the system meant that, with prisoners now denied legal assistance, no one would know if they were entitled to bring claims against the prison authorities. These victims of unfair decisions will not know where to go. They don't have any lawyers any more to help them."
A fuller report is available in the Guardian.
ADDENDUM
Latest news from report in Law Society Gazette is that the charities will take their case to the Court of Appeal.
Saturday 15 March 2014
INCOME OR ENVIRONMENTAL IMPROVEMENT?
Like tens of millions of others I was a teenage smoker with
no thought as to the environmental effects of discarding used cigarette ends
whether on the street, in a park or from a car.
And like many converts who take up a new philosophy on daily life I am now
and have been for many years a rabid anti smoker spreading the gospel when
appropriate and enduring the occasional hostility when so doing. So when I read of smoker fined £200 plus
costs of £124 and £20 surcharge by colleagues in Carmarthen I did not have
undue sympathy for him as he could have saved himself £269 or more if he had promptly
paid the fixed penalty notice issued for his misdemeanour. However I wonder
whether or not the local council had observed all the guidance issued by DEFRA
with the purpose of improving our local environment to our common betterment or
in this age of local councils` requirement, so they argue, to maximise income
where they can, is the employment of environmental enforcement officers (litter
wardens) fining litter bugs another method of making up for shortfalls in
council tax receipts?
Friday 14 March 2014
POPULAR OR POPULIST?
It seems that today is the day of mea culpa from those on
whose wisdom we thought we could rely. Perhaps that should be rephrased; politicians can admit their fallibility only
when they leave office. First of all Ed
Balls hopes that by admitting his failings we will overlook Labour`s
catastrophic spending in its latter years in power and hope they do better next
time and then David (I might be blind but I`m as hard as they come) Blunkett
regrets the problems brought about by indeterminate sentences. The Attorney General, still
in office and not to be left out, is forced to face the problems caused by the
withdrawal of legal aid from many defendants.
Perhaps every cabinet should by law have an appointed minister without portfolio drawn by lot from
the common citizenry with the only qualifications being an agreed standard of
education, I.Q. and command of the English language. The increased distance of the common
man/woman from the verbosity and evasiveness of politicians as seen and heard
on the Today programme or Question Time or Newsnight is disturbing
and reinforces the superficial appeal of those with a popular (populist?)
agenda.
Thursday 13 March 2014
KNIFE POSSESSION STATISTICS
For umpteen years governments of all shades have made it a
priority to come down hard on knife crime.
As sure as night follows day the current occupants of Petty France have
published thousands of statistics on knife crime, the perpetrators and the
consequent disposals. Crime involving
the actual use of a knife or bladed instrument is not covered by figures published today:
they refer only to possession. I offer
no opinions but for number crunchers the tables are available here.
Wednesday 12 March 2014
RED IN TOOTH AND CLAW
It might be boring but it`s worth repeating; alcohol and/or
drug dependence is responsible for around 70% of all crime in this
country. It`s also worth repeating that removing
such people from the criminal justice system into a health care programme even
without compulsion is sometimes frustratingly difficult. Having regards to all that every day in every
court in England a bench of magistrates has to decide on the appropriate
disposal for one or more of those dregs of society. Earlier this week it was my turn. Martin was 45 going on 60. He had four pages of previous and many short
jail terms for prolific minor offending.
His current address was a hostel in another town nearby. He was before us for sentencing on assault,
s.5 public order and criminal damage committed around a single incident. His pre sentence report ran to eight pages
and noted inter alia that for whatever reason his alcohol habit had never been
specifically addressed by the courts. We
were told that he was awaiting his first payment from the benefits office,
previous having stopped when he was homeless and or inside. We decided that in addition to supervision
and another order he should undergo an alcohol treatment requirement. It took us half a second to decide that it was a nonsense to impose costs. So far so good but then we checked the law on
so called victim surcharge and noted that we were legally required to impose such
of £60. Now £60 to many readers will buy
a tankful of petrol or two theatre tickets or a ticket to Championship
football match or……….. So this poor
wretch has an amount which will wreck him to pay in 28 days. The current Lord Chancellor and his short
trousered advisors imposed this levy a couple of years ago so that “criminals”
can contribute to society for their activities in a simply understood
manner. Previously it had been reserved
as an addition to fines imposed. Those
sentenced to custody have more to pay.
If anything the M.O.J. has done since 2010 to persuade me that it is inhabited by aliens it is this iniquitous addition in the name of a
just policy. It is nothing but a feeble
disguising of a truth; that there are
those in the Tory Party who are still red in tooth and claw.
Tuesday 11 March 2014
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE PROTECTION ORDERS
I make no apologies today for turning the clock
back but before going into more detail on what I have posted in the past I
would draw my reader`s attention to what has resulted from precisely these
matters.
From 8th March 2014 legislation came into force allowing the implementation of DomesticViolence Protection Orders (DVPOs) across England
and Wales. It is unlikely that many readers would have
been aware that such game changing legislation was now in place. I would refer now to my post of 09/04/2010 and the more detailed offering of
the following week.
This legislation was initiated by the previous government
but it will be highly unlikely that the current occupant of the M.O.J. will
publicise that detail. It will be trumpeted
as further proof that this government is tough on criminals and has the
protection of vulnerable victims as its prime concern. Whilst the latter consideration is of course
most laudable the imposition of such legal hardware on those not found guilty
in court of an offence the basis of which is the foundation of the DVPO is IMHO a
further step to the position where rather than guilt being proved a hitherto
innocent party must demonstrate that innocence.
When I was appointed part of my training was to emphasise
that Justices of the Peace were as umpires to ensure a level playing field
where the adversarial system of justice could be played out. Increasingly it appears that that concept is
being diminished in its importance to be replaced some might argue by placing
the “victim” of crime as the centre piece of procedures. Having the benefit of not being a lawyer my
simple mind wonders where this is all leading.
Is there in the future to be some sort of 21st century
amalgam of the middle ages concept of justice and Sharia where the offer of “blood money” has a long history? Is the sophisticated, elegant and eloquent victim
to have greater input into sentencing than one less able? With the guidance on and definition of domestic abuse being open to
wider interpretation than previously those subject to its reach should be
ensured that that level playing field remains level.
As I have reminded new colleagues from time to time, we as lay magistrates have in addition to other duties a duty of public protection. We are representatives of the people; of our
society; of our neighbours. We might no
longer be operating in a system of local justice so beloved of some and for
which there is no longer any logical argument but unlike the professional state
civil servants as are District Judges we are the nearest to a people’s justice that is possible in a secular world of
ever increasing central control. At a time where the integrity of police is quite
correctly coming under increasing scrutiny the imposition of Domestic Violence Protection Orders on the
say so of an alleged complainant and a senior police officer is just the
removal of another impediment to the
imposition of ever greater centralised control over the rights of free
citizens.
Monday 10 March 2014
FROM P.C. TO SUPERINTENDENT IN 18 MONTHS
It used to be thought that in order to do the top job, experience in the industry concerned would be a useful asset. In government eg occasionally there is a qualified doctor with ministerial rank at the Health Dept. Today that person is Dr Daniel Poulter M.P. Generally previous experience is not a pre requisite for a top government post especially with increasing numbers of M.P.s having no job history outside the limited boundaries of politics and/or journalism the main exception being lawyers and even then the top lawyer`s job of Lord Chancellor is held by a man whose main work experience has been in television production. It would seem absurd if an individual could be spring-boarded into the job of colonel in the army after less than two years of rigorous programming; or perhaps a headmaster being appointed to a 1,000 pupil school with the same amount of preparation. If I were a squaddie or parent of a school age child I would view such proposals with a certain amount of caution, apprehension and trepidation to say the least. But such is some of the nonsense emanating from the so called thinkers deep within the Justice Ministry and Home Office that very shortly the first trainee police superintendents will be amongst us. Assurances have been given that only the highest fliers will be accepted for the eighteen month preparatory course and that failures will be easily got rid of according to Commander Tom Gavin Vice-Chair of the Police Superintendents’ Association and part of the team designing the course who is quoted as saying, “It (the training programme) will be very challenging and it will be very difficult to come onto the programme and easy to come off it.” There is, to say the least, some opposition to this proposal from those within the inner circles of policing. Another voicing his concerns is West Yorkshire Police Federation’s Chairman Nick Smart who said that the “hasty move” would threaten not only the safety of officers, but also the public. He warned that the move would have greater ramifications for internal promotion through the ranks and would adversely impact the credibility of the force. In an interview with PoliceOracle.com Mr Smart said: “You cannot teach experience and you cannot buy credibility and that is what they are trying to do here. It is a danger for our officers. If they do not believe in the commander or trust their decision-making the chances of harm and risk increase. “Operational commanders need to be warranted officers".
I am certainly in favour of improving the
quality of new recruits who wish to be in our police forces and thus improving
the standard of those who aspire to the highest ranks but parachuting in outsiders at
superintendent rank seems to me to be a futile short term stopgap to improve
the quality of “management”. Similar “management” initiatives have been
seen eg within N.H.S. and closer to home
in Her Majesty`s Courts and Tribunal Service.
I will leave my reader to consider whether this is a sensible action on
the part of our current rulers. For my part I doubt such a scheme will operate
for more than two or three years before some excuse is made for its abandonment
but extolling the wealth of benefits that nevertheless accrued whilst it was
operational…….metaphorical rags to riches to rags.
Sunday 9 March 2014
T.V. LICENCE EVASION TO BECOME CIVIL OFFENSE
When my son went to university amongst the advice I
gave him was that on no condition should he open the door to a person who could
possibly have been from T.V. Licensing (aka Capita plc). This was purely precautionary because I
insisted that he and his flatmates bought a T.V. license or they would forego
my generosity in the provision of a free T.V. for their communal use. Such
advice was based on the sometimes aired iniquitous practices of said plc when
license “evaders” were giving evidence in court only to be contradicted by
dubious so called “inspectors” whose evidence to say the least was often unconvincing. So the
likelihood of the end of such procedures at magistrates` courts is warmly
welcomed. To have a criminal record for
non payment of a license fee to watch television was always a disgraceful use
of the state`s power.
About 180,000 such people are currently prosecuted annually. Many of these are the poorest individuals in
the country living hand to mouth and day to day. About
70 of those found guilty are jailed for non payment of the resultant fine
imposed. These T.V. license courts comprise about 10% of all cases coming
before Justices of the Peace. Their
re-location to the civil courts system will lead to a further reduction in the
number of courtrooms in daily operation and a consequent reduction in demand
for new lay magistrates and a further diminishing in sittings for most.
Having been a proponent for many years of this
proposed change…..try typing http://thejusticeofthepeace.blog.co.uk/TVlicense
…… it is for once a most welcome change
coming as it does from the Justice Ministry.
Friday 7 March 2014
HANG UP MY GAVEL
When the Lord Chief Justice delivers a speech entitled “RESHAPING JUSTICE” it would be foolish as well as churlish not to note its content with some seriousness. Much of what he said to “Justice” on March 3rd might have been of interest philosophically to Justices of the Peace as it would have been to many other groups and individuals but that part of his oration concerning the organisation and functioning of the magistrates` courts system deserves the minute attention of any magistrates who still believe that their future as arbiters of fact within our legal system for 93% of criminal cases which begin and end under our jurisdiction will still resemble current processes in a decade are living in the land of clouds and cuckoos.
In his opening he stated that, “The first (purpose) is to make clear that our system of justice
does need reshaping to deal with the fundamental change that is occurring in
the role of the State. It is retrenching.
The budget for justice is being reduced substantially. We must ensure that our system
remains able to maintain the rule of law
by administering justice effectively, speedily and impartially in this new age.”
As a senior civil servant he refers to “retrenchment” and “reform” more than once. Perhaps his position precludes direct
references to the fundamental importance to our democracy of a legal process
which is available to all our citizens regardless of their positions in the hierarchy
of a benign capitalist society. He
avoids any comment on the withdrawal of legal aid from many participants in
both civil and criminal courts but alludes to its consequences of self
representing litigants and defendants as a justification for courts becoming
more inquisitorial. I suppose that
dovetails nicely with the simple prediction that it is inevitable that fewer and fewer lawyers will be available for poorly remunerated court
work. He offers the expedient of trials
without jury but avoids any comment on the constitution or quality standards eg
language ability, of jurors. He
specifically gives a nod to J.P.s sitting as wingers to District Judges in
certain proceedings; an absolute certainty IMHO as I have blogged for years. Efforts by government and magistrates` representatives
to paint magistrates` increased out of
court activities current or proposed as
beneficial to all and sundry are nothing but a sop to our rapidly approaching future
diminished role.
I am fortunate enough to have been appointed to this
position when it had a truly worthwhile and unique place in our judicial
system. I will not be sorry when I hang up my non existent never been used gavel.
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