Jacob,
whose immigration status was unclear, had arrived here two or three
years ago from a central African country. He was about 5ft 7"
flanked by two security guards and quite dishevelled...not surprising
since we later found out he`d been on remand in custody for four
weeks having twice breached his bail for sect. IV public order
offence for which he was before us for sentencing after pleading
guilty as his trial was about to begin.
The
facts were that in the middle of the afternoon two months previously
he had approached a parked car as two women had just got in and
mouthing misogynist abuse had attempted to prevent the passenger from
closing her door. The two women were truly terrified but further
possibly more serious criminality was prevented by a passing
stranger`s forceful intervention and the prompt arrival of police who
coincidentally were on the street [of Jacob`s family home] to speak
to the defendant about breaching his bail on another matter.
His
"previous" showed that he had within the last six months
been cautioned once and imprisoned once for assaulting his partner.
His sect. IV offence was committed in the street where his bail
conditions for the second assault had prohibited his being. He had
been remanded two days before pleading guilty and being imprisoned
for that assault. His lawyer in mitigation asked us to remember he
was drunk at the time and distraught about not being able to return
to his partner. We reminded him that being drunk is an aggravating
feature not mitigation....many lawyers pull this one as if we don`t
know how to treat that factor common in many offenders. He also
suggested we deal with the matter on the spot by considering how long
Jacob had been on remand ie "time served". Our job of
sentencing was made more difficult by not knowing how many days he
had actually served for the assault before being released early from
prison. Part of his period inside would have included sentence for
assault and remand time on the sect. IV. Fortunately enquiries to the
prison cleared that gap in our knowledge. We retired to consider his
sentence.
"Time
served" allows a defendant who has been held in custody on
remand who would otherwise have been fined or given a custodial
sentence to have the time spent in prison considered as sufficient to
have paid his dues to society and to be released immediately or to be
reduced accordingly. This matter was far too serious for a fine to be
considered. Sentencing Guidelines indicated a minimum of 200 hours
community payback [unpaid work] or a few weeks jail if the offence
were so serious. He was borderline. On the basis of a structured
decision we were considering the exact number of hours when we
re-visited the reality of the sentence; he had already spent more
time on remand than would have been the case if he had been jailed
for the offence. It would be unjust therefore in effect to punish him
twice. We could not allow "time served" on a community
penalty so we sentenced him to ten days custody meaning that he would
be released as soon as the prison had done its paperwork.
This
was a pragmatic approach brought about by the seemingly illogical gap
in "time served" regulations. There are those who would
prefer magistrates to follow very strict sentencing guidelines and
deviate at their peril. We announced in open court our reasons for a
custodial sentence and the consequences. We considered that on that
occasion as on others justice was done and seen to be done.