On the bench when I`ve been in a situation where
the term “contempt of court” has entered my mind it has been associated with
the words and/or actions of an individual usually in the dock at that
moment. Like all my colleagues
have experienced at some time defendants have presented wearing all manner of apparel. Females have appeared dressed as if for a
night on the town or as a female colleague remarked earlier this year on
another sitting, “she`s wearing £2,000 worth of gear,” on the appearance of a
middle aged woman on shoplifting charges. The male defendant can be dressed for
the street or in his best(only) dark suit, white shirt and tie or during the
recent hot spell in shirt and shorts.
But I have never had cause or desire to consider manner of dress a
consideration for contempt. Colleagues
in Tamworth, however, took a different view when they were confronted in the
dock by a man with a casual attitude to T shirts and their suitability for
court. I have to say that I disagree with them.
It is very dangerous ground when appearance leads to such considerations
as contempt of court. This apparent imposition of standards is more likely than
not IMHO to have the opposite effect intended; ie contempt for the middle class
mores of an out of touch bench and that in turn does not improve the concept of judgement by one`s peers who are representative of the community as a whole such being the concept of local justice expounded by the huffing and puffing great and good. If 18 year olds can be recruited to the magistracy, and I consider that a ridiculous attempt to enlarge the "diversity" idea, then surely we must be open to dress standards more attuned to those acceptable to 18 year olds?
Comments are usually moderated. However, I do not accept any legal responsibility for the content of any comment. If any comment seems submitted just to advertise a website it will not be published.
Tuesday, 12 August 2014
Monday, 11 August 2014
BREATH OF FRESH AIR
Part of the stimulus doing this job
when time wasting and inefficiencies can rob the soul of any meaning is hearing
from colleagues or reading of a procedure which has not previously been
encountered. It is of course of greater
note when interesting legal argument is presented on an issue. One example was during a recent sitting when
counsel for the defendant applied for permission to refer to a newly arrived
document in true Perry Mason style which he told us would go a long way to
exonerate his client. After hearing more details and comments from our legal
advisor we indicated that he could begin to cross examine the complainant
basing such upon some information in the document. It soon was apparent that the details being
explored from the document which had been presented in the civil court on an
entirely different matter were a step too far.
We cleared the public gallery and extensive argument was held on how the
case should proceed. With the agreement of all parties we decided to go part
heard until the judge sitting on the civil matter could make a decision on
whether the document could be used as a basis for cross examination in the magistrates` court thus revealing
hitherto private information to a public gallery entitled to view proceedings.
When sentencing guidelines often
suffocate original thought processes an opportunity to participate in and
listen to detailed argument is like a breath of fresh legal air.
Saturday, 9 August 2014
6 MONTHS CUSTODY AND £80 PAYABLE NOW!
The Ministry of Justice is at it again; more interested in headlines
than the pursuit of a rational ethos in the application of all that pertains to
an indispensible branch of government.
Not content with hammering errant motorists (the majority of payers)
with a so called victims surcharge it has now levied such charges on those
receiving immediate custodial sentences at the magistrates` court. Such offenders are more than likely to have
had an alcohol and/or drug problem as the basis of their offending and to be
economically living from day to day at society`s lowest levels and as such be
least able to pay a financial forfeit in addition to a loss of liberty. The new rule will come in from 1
September, and will see those sentenced to 6 months or less ordered to pay £80
and £100 for those given between 6 and 12 months imprisonment by magistrates.
It is expected it will apply to 43,000 cases per year. The government proclaims
that “This change is the final reform
pledged by the coalition in its bid to make offenders pay more to help their
victims”. I don`t sit in the youth
court where existing financial penalties are often paid by parents who have
lost control of their offspring. Those
who have been assaulted by their little darlings have been in the paradoxical
position of having had to pay their little darlings` fines and surcharges. Now those who have been victims of their
children`s serious assaults warranting up to two years custody will have to pay
the additional surcharge. Kafkaesque is
perhaps too simplistic a description of this “innovation”.
There is I believe some obfuscation
where all this additional money goes. It
is somewhat similar to when the National Lottery was founded. At the time we were assured that the cash
raised would not be used for projects that required government funding but
would be used for additional projects in the community. Such was our collective gullibility at the
time that we actually believed that. There is no such charity as Victim Support
registered with the Charity Commission but various organisations have been set
up as per this site. Perhaps the
surcharge has been subject to audit by a non governmental organisation and perhaps
not. However with anything between half
a billion and a billion pounds or more in fines, costs, compensation and this
surcharge already uncollected getting this money
in would surely be a better use of any resources available at Petty France?
Tuesday, 5 August 2014
DOMESTIC ABUSE AND THE GIRL WHO CRIED WOLF
Professor Richard
Dawkins, archbishop of atheism, set the cat well and truly among the
pigeons last week with his opinion that there are varying levels of
rape and that considering some such offending as lower levels of
sexual assault might paradoxically lead to an increased conviction
rate. A similar mode of thinking has been applied to the subject of
“domestic abuse/violence” by Greater Manchester Police's
Assistant Chief Constable Garry Shewan. An interesting article on
just this subject has been published in “Police Oracle”. I have
copied it below in full. Personally I have some sympathy with the
logic of the good professor and the Assistant Chief Constable. I
recall Aesop and his fable, “The boy who cried wolf” and
recognise some similarities. But reader, judge for yourself and make
your own decision.
A police and
crime commissioner (PCC) has launched an attack on a chief officer
for his distinction between cases of domestic violence and low-level
domestic abuse.
Vera Baird accused Greater Manchester Police's Assistant Chief
Constable Garry Shewan of "trivialising" domestic abuse and
suggested there was no difference between aggressive shouting and
extreme acts of violence.ACC Shewan, the national policing lead on restorative justice, had said that in some rare cases it might be appropriate to deal with domestic abuse out of court via community resolutions.
He used the hypothetical example of a jilted boyfriend who had never been violent before but who, upset and angry, snaps off his ex-girlfriend's car wing mirror after being dumped.
Speaking on BBC Radio 4's Today programme, he said: "That is domestic abuse."
But he added that in a case like this the victim might merely want her ex-partner to pay for the damage, not for the case to end up in court.
ACC Shewan stressed that only a small number of cases were being dealt with in this way. In a statement, Ms Baird, the PCC for Northumbria, condemned his remarks.
She said: "Those who suffer from domestic abuse are not always victims of violence every time.
"Sometimes they are coerced and oppressed by relatively minor conduct. Officers in Northumbria understand that they can be in the context of continuing abuse and do not trivialise it as this officer (ACC Shewan) seems to do.
"Victims need to have confidence in the system and know that they have the full weight of the law behind them."
Ms Baird was not available to comment further as this article went live.
'Indistinguishable'
Asked to clarify whether Ms Baird differentiated between domestic violence and domestic abuse, her press spokeswoman Ruth Durham said: "Abuse is violence. They are both unsuitable for community resolutions and restorative justice."Asked whether Ms Baird believed that shouting at someone was as bad as punching a person in the face, she added: "Her position is that domestic abuse is the same as domestic violence."
Shadow Home Secretary Yvette Cooper has said that police are too often dealing with cases of domestic violence by way of community resolutions, which could amount to little more than a "slap on the wrist".
However, by refusing to acknowledge any difference in degree between cases, Ms Baird, a former Labour MP, has gone further than others in her party.
PoliceOracle.com recently highlighted the case of a 16-year-old boy given a caution for criminal damage and domestic violence after dropping a jar of pickles in his home.
Chris Bath from the National Appropriate Adult Network said this demonstrated how trivial incidents could sometimes be termed as violence by police when in fact this was not an accurate description of the incident.
Frances Crook, Chief Executive of the Howard League for Penal Reform, has defended ACC Shewan's stance, saying the police had "got it about right by using their discretion".
She told PoliceOracle.com: "If it is a minor altercation, using some kind of community resolution is best for everybody."
Ms Crook said there was a need to distinguish between domestic violence and domestic abuse.
The latter could be relatively minor, she said, for example Facebook harassment.
Victims' voices
Ms Baird's fellow PCCs have also stopped short of conflating domestic violence and domestic abuse.Tony Lloyd, a Labour politician and the PCC for Greater Manchester, has called for domestic violence to be made a specific offence to acknowledge its seriousness and make it distinct from other offences.
Several PCCs are researching how police treat victims of domestic violence and domestic abuse in an effort to provide better support for them.
Suffolk's PCC Tim Passmore is working with academics from University Campus Suffolk to understand victims' experiences through the criminal justice process.
The Labour Party has pledged to introduce a Violence Against Women and Girls Bill "to place
Monday, 4 August 2014
ALCOHOL TAGS
It
has been variously estimated that alcohol and/or drugs are the basis
of around 70% criminal activity. It would not be unreasonable to
assume that half that total of offending occurs when excess alcohol
has been consumed. Some offences eg drunk and disorderly and drink
driving are specifically related to the demon drink. Various
measures have been and are being tried to reduce this scourge which
has plagued society for millennia eg drinking banning orders or ASBOs
which just shift the geography of offending. Last week saw the
inauguration of a localised effort to deter some of those offenders
where alcohol was considered to be a prime component of their
criminal activity. It is being trialled in four South London
magistrates` courts; Croydon, Lambeth Southwark and
Sutton. This seems to be a very pro active and interesting
initiative from the Justice Ministry which is not a description I
have used very often. My one concern is that presumably the wearers
of the alcohol tags and the tags themselves will require
interrogation by the Probation Service or what remains of it in South
London after what appears to be a disasterous re-organisation. Perhaps a member associated with that service might be able
to offer further information.
Friday, 1 August 2014
A VICTIM CENTRED JUSTICE SYSTEM MAKES EVERYTHING OK....DOESN`T IT?
Enough
has been written on the scandal involving Capita plc`s contract with
HMCTS to supply interpreter services for the courts to provide
future legal historians and others with evidence of how the world`s
first and possibly finest and fairest legal system was brought to its
knees by this and many other so called austerity requirements which
have reduced the Justice budget by 25%. It would not be a big
surprise if financial impropriety in Capita`s acquisition of Applied
Language Solutions surfaces in a few years. Be that as it may
another snippet of interpreter problems has made it to the pages of
the Law Society Gazette. Notwithstanding Capita`s inefficiencies the
anticipated economies have just not materialised. Add to that the
enormous additional costs every time CPS is represented in court by
an agent to overcome the deficiencies caused by 10% of its employees
being cast out into the employment wilderness and one has a funding
crisis just around the corner. The problem is that unlike similar
situations in the NHS privatising all or parts of the courts service
is not an answer. So this government insists that the courts have to
pay their way and in addition to minor details eg having no ushers,
over promoted and inefficient court administration staff, double or
treble trial listings to keep everybody occupied and to hell with
defendants` costs and inconvenience, that means that unless one is
on the lowest income levels or facing the most serious criminal
charges no funding is available for professional representation. In
the civil courts it`s survival of the fittest and only relatively
well to do litigants have the wherewithal to use a system which
although it never offered a level playing field did to some extent
allow for an equality of arms. But..........not to
worry........with a victim centred justice system everything will be
OK........won`t it?
Thursday, 31 July 2014
IMPORTING FOREIGN CRIMINALS
On
reading today`s government publication of prison statistics a
colleague in London has pointed out to me that there is little
mention of foreign prisoners in the system notwithstanding those
awaiting deportation. It is hardly a state secret that the powers to
deport E.U. citizens guilty of even serious crime are rarely
implemented. My London colleague says it is unusual not to have at
least one Eastern European on some charge or another when she sits
in the remand court. Indeed she added the proportion is often at
least 20% of those in the dock. Whilst her observations are of
interest they are no substitute for hard facts. Perhaps in the mass
of statistics there might be some comment. After all, a country
which has seen an influx of (East European and South Asian)
immigrants in two decades such a rate never having before been
experienced in its entire history is not unlikely to have a fair
share of criminals or those of criminal intent amongst their number.
The
recent elections for the European Parliament have shown the rise of
constitutional right wing parties although some of those espouse
rhetoric bordering on that of the late unlamented BNP. They have
achieved this position, UKIP included, because the major parties have
steadfastly refused to address the question of immigration and
multiculturalism. Those so doing have faced accusations of
xenophobia and worse. Political animals and the tabloids will rush to fill any void in
the political spectrum just as air will rush into a damaged vacuum
tank in a laboratory. It is a dead certainty that the numbers of
foreigners in British prisons will be a political debating point long before
next May.
Wednesday, 30 July 2014
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE PROSECUTIONS
It
would be interesting to know the statistics on the numbers of trials
designated under the umbrella title of “domestic violence” which
are categorised as cracked or ineffective. The reason for my
curiosity is that IMHO some? many? DV charges are brought to our
courts on thinner evidence than would be the case with other matters;
eg assault, criminal damage, handling, etc etc. From statements
by those in authority from Home Secretaries, Chief Constables to
senior prosecutors and highly publicised pressure groups there is no
doubt political motives are behind this prosecution policy and it is
not difficult to understand why. Domestic violence is an ugly
activity. Currently this descriptive term covers offences from
common assault to murder although David Cameron has hinted that it
might become a stand alone aggravating feature defined within
legislation. Be that as it may as magistrates in the lower courts
system we are sitting on the vast majority of such trials. My last
such sitting had two cases; the non appearance or availability of the
complainant and our refusal to adjourn caused one matter to be
dismissed and the other concluded with a conviction although that
could have been described as fortunate for the CPS because of certain
technical defects. Looking back over my experience of the last year
or so I would find it hard to conclude that more than 50%-60% of such
trials actually went ahead. Is this a price worth paying or do
others; lawyers or J.P.s have different opinions and experiences?
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