This blogger has advocated for many years that the proceedings at courts should and could be shown on live TV. Today history was made on Sky News when the sentencing remarks in the case of Ben Oliver who killed his grandfather in a frenzied savage attack were broadcast live. Presumably these historic 20 minutes will be available on the Sky News you tube channel.
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 If any comment seems submitted just to advertise a website it will not be published.
Thursday, 28 July 2022
TV HISTORY IS MADE
This blogger has advocated for many years that the proceedings at courts should and could be shown on live TV. Today history was made on Sky News when the sentencing remarks in the case of Ben Oliver who killed his grandfather in a frenzied savage attack were broadcast live. Presumably these historic 20 minutes will be available on the Sky News you tube channel.
Tuesday, 26 July 2022
EMBED APPEALS FROM MAGISTRATES COURTS
Miscarriages of justice is a subject about which the public is generally ignorant or unaware until or unless a prisoner convicted of a serious crime is released from prison with a mention in most news bulletins until the next 24 hour headline takes over. The system of courts is rather like the system of locks on a canal. Enter the first and reach its maximum level (or depth) of water and proceed onwards until desired level is attained to continue a journey. For the courts, be found guilty at crown court level and appeal to court of appeal. Taking a step back conviction and/or sentence at the magistrates court can be appealed at crown court before a bench of a judge and two magistrates with a sentence there being able to be appealed at the court of appeal. Similar steps are in place for the civil courts. Appeals against decisions in magistrates courts are statistically quite rare since the vast majority of cases are summary only and the costs of appeal would scarcely be worth the effort for those convicted. Statistics of appeals of this nature are now apparently unavailable with the MOJ using the excessive cost get out to avoid disclosure. The latest figures I can obtain are below. Please use the magnifying tool for comfort.
Tuesday, 19 July 2022
INFORMATION WITHHELD
There are two departments of state Health and Justice which seem to be proud to inform those who want to know of all the numbers they gather about all their activities. Sometimes these are to enlighten us, a largely non numerical public, and sometimes it appears to overwhelm us with so much numerology that the "meat in the pie" is overwhelmed by pastry and gravy. I would assume that the mathematicians and statisticians are merely following orders although with a certain amount of cynicism in my genes I would not be at all surprised if at any time in any topic discreet instructions were sent out from Whitehall that a certain end result or indication would be well received by those sitting at the biggest desks.
In each of the last five years or for those for which statistics are available how many drivers who have succeeded with applications of "exceptional hardship" in avoiding a totting driving disqualification have gone on to be convicted in the crown court of an imprisonable driving offence especially causing death or serious injury by careless or dangerous driving?
In each of the last five years or for those for which statistics are available how many drivers who have succeeded with applications of SPECIAL REASONS in avoiding a driving disqualification have gone on to be convicted in the crown court of an imprisonable driving offence especially causing death or serious injury by careless or dangerous driving?
Your request has been handled under the FOIA.
I can confirm the MoJ holds all of the information you have requested. However, to provide as the request currently stands would exceed the cost limit set out in the FOIA.
Section 12(1) of the FOIA means a public authority is not obliged to comply with a request for information if it estimates the cost of complying would exceed the appropriate limit. The appropriate limit for central government is set at £600. This represents the estimated cost of one person spending 3.5 working days determining whether the department holds the information, and locating, retrieving and extracting the information.
Information collated centrally by the MoJ does not identify those who were specifically excused a driving disqualification under the mitigating circumstance of ‘exceptional hardship’
We believe that the cost of locating, retrieving and extracting the number of offenders who were excused a driving ban under the mitigating circumstances of exceptional hardship and then matching them to those who had been found guilty of such driving offences in Crown Court would exceed the appropriate limit. Consequently, we are not obliged to comply with your request.
Unfortunately, I am not able to suggest any refinement to your request which will allow it to be responded to within the cost limit. The information you have requested is also exempt from disclosure under section 32 of the FOIA because it is held only by virtue of being contained in a court record. Therefore, even if the scope of your request were reduced to the extent that it would come within the cost limit, section 32 would become engaged and the information would be withheld under that exemption.
Instead of relying upon court hearings of such serious charges and which would necessitate in most cases police witnesses which of course begs the question of all the reduced mobile patrols by police especially on main roads and motorways why does MOJ not devise a method in which the statistics of errant driving have been recorded as escaping disqualification but held as possible future evidence in a possible future case? Currently nobody, police nor MOJ knows if such drivers have a greater than average chance of future careless or dangerous driving. Prevention is better than cure so they say but not, apparently, when much less than perfect driving is unknown at least to the statisticians. An offender`s driving record i.e. from penalty points to death by dangerous driving is always considered when such matters are serious enough to be sentenced in court but it seems for the future as for the present when the aforementioned appeals have succeeded the court will be none the wiser.
Friday, 15 July 2022
OFFENCE AS A CRIME // MY DIARY 4/4/2010
I doubt many of my readers will have noticed my original diaries from 2009 have been digitalised and are now available at https://amagistratesdiaries.blogspot.com/. I have today decided for the very first time to publish here the entry for 4th April 2010. Free from the constraints of HMCTS I can add that the case was heard at my old court and I was the dissenting vote for acquittal. IMHO this case and perhaps others similar was an early example of what is now termed "woke" culture. It was a miserable prediction of what is becoming increasingly prevalent in all our lives; the criminalisation of "offence". Indeed there is current controversy reaching even the final stages of the spectacle of the "election" of a new prime minister as to the candidates` views on a bill currently passing through the House of Commons.
04. Apr. 2010. – 12:57:57
Like millions of others I can
enjoy watching John Cleese in Basil Fawlty persona almost as much as his silly
walking etc at Messers M. Python. Indeed one phrase from the sixth
episode has stood the test of time and is well remembered today thirty years
later, "Don`t mention the war". His goose stepping scene with a
finger across his upper lip will be shown in TV clips a hundred years from now
as an example of the last throw of the intellectual freedom of the late 20th century
because it is extremely doubtful that the inhibited grey suits with their
political correctness, who control many visual media diluting writers` and
performers` talents, would today sanction such a sketch. If it is thought I am,
to coin a phrase, going over the top on this..........going back to that
episode of Fawlty Towers I was watching recently, it reminded me of a case two
or three years ago.
The defendant of previous good
character was a veteran of World War 2. He had been charged with
using threatening abusive or insulting words or behaviour or disorderly
behaviour within the hearing or sight of a person likely to be caused
harassment, alarm or distress contrary to Section V[1] and [6] of the Public
Order Act 1986........a "catch all offence". Those whom he had been
charged with receiving his "words or behaviour" were two Police
Community Support Officers. He had been arguing with a car driver
who, he asserted, had almost hit him on a zebra crossing. The PCSOs had
told the pair of them to desist; the driver drove away and our 80+ year
old defendant had then performed a Basil Fawlty Hitler goosestep around the
PCSOs to demonstrate in his words their bloody interference. One member
of the bench dissented with the verdict of guilty but guilty he was
found. He was sentenced to a Conditional Discharge for six months and to
pay £50 of the £350 costs asked for by the prosecution.
The only conclusion I can draw
from this tale and from others of a similar nature is that whilst police
officers have discretion, and long might it continue, these ill educated poorly
paid apologies for Chinese neighbourhood wardens [spies], now defunct
traffic wardens or park rangers of my childhood are little better at
replacing police officers than repairing a damaged Rolls Royce with filler and
expecting it to be as good as new. It might be cheaper at the time but in
the long run the value of the Rolls can never be recovered. And thus the ship
of state sails on its being only a matter of time before all the holes below
the waterline coalesce and the deluge begins.
Tuesday, 12 July 2022
ANOTHER LEGAL TORY MISFIT
As if a former Lord Chancellor with a record of incompetence standing for Tory leader and prime minister is not enough another honorary QC with a record of ignorant rants and actions has thrown her virtual hat into the same gladiatorial contest where the last person standing wins all..........I am Sparticus, No! I am Sparticus or parhaps the more recent in movie terms Maximus Decimus Meridius aka Russell Crowe.
Monday, 11 July 2022
THE ILLUSION OF LIZ TRUSS AND CHAMPAGNE ECONOMICS
Conservative MPs are being offered inter alia former and unlamented Lord Chancellor Liz Truss as our next prime minister. This is extraordinary considering what could only be described as an eleven month episode 2016/17 Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice which highlighted her shortcomings and unsuitability to hold any job in the cabinet including her current one.
Tuesday, 5 July 2022
PATRIOT OR NATIONALIST?
Outside the legal profession there has been very little discussion on what is arguably [choose adjective(s) to suit your opinion] the most divisive, intrusive, necessary, restrictive, overdue, fascistic, legislation in half a century:- The Police, Crime Sentencing and Courts Act 2022. The very terms in the act`s title are themselves indicative of its widespread nature. In years gone by each segment would have been a once in a decade piece of legislation. However it is changes in our society which have given life to the changes in law which will impinge on the lives of all who live in this country.
Freedom of assembly and expression have supposedly been hard wired into our unwritten constitution. There are arguments for another time perhaps that that is a myth exploited by successive governments so that the majority can control the vociferous revolutionary minority which exists in this country as it does elsewhere. Apart from 1939 - 1945 it has largely succeeded. Many, perhaps most of the general public will find it incredible that until 1968 theatre censorship had existed since the sixteenth century and a 1737 Act appointed the Lord Chamberlain as official licenser of plays and regulated restrictions on drama. Little changed regarding the censorship of plays with the passing of the 1843 Theatres Act, which was still in place over 100 years later. Oh! Calcutta! is an avant-garde, risque theatrical revue created by British drama critic Kenneth Tynan. The show consisting of sketches on sex-related topics and full frontal nudity was a smash hit in the West End where I saw it in 1970. It was a reaction to the artistic freedom offered by the abolition of restrictions and censorship. Similar changes allowing freedom of expression artistically, politically, individually and en masse were a characteristic of the latter half of the 20th century. And then at exactly this time came the IRA and murder wholesale, the Vietnam War, the Yom Kippur War. The fall of the Berlin Wall and the collapse of the Soviet Union followed by a prime minister lying to parliament to allow British troops to be aligned with Americans in the invasion of Iraq further eroded general confidence that what could be termed a British way of life really did exist on a different level from other western nations. Not just different but better: not just better but way better. The tumultuous political events this century have seen so far; a financial crisis followed by austerity, Scottish nationalism rearing its ugly head, lies upon lies persuading so many that it`s better pissing in from outside the EU tent than pissing out from inside, a trio of the most incompetent prime ministers in a century and a pandemic which has changed the lives of millions for ever.
All the above and more have led to the above Act. Prior to its Royal Assent I sat in an hour long stationary queue on the M25 with thousands of others owing to proto fascists calling themselves activists attaching themselves to the tarmac obstructing traffic. Some of those have been jailed after blocking roads, disrupting court proceedings and in one case climbing on top of an aeroplane in an attempt to draw attention to the escalating emergency. Earlier protesters blocked oil refineries. Members of protest group Insulate Britain spent Christmas serving prison sentences for contempt of court for breaching injunctions banning their road block protests. Ben Taylor was jailed for six months after telling judges if they freed him he would “go out and block the highway at the earliest opportunity” and would keep doing it until the government acts. The government has acted but perhaps not in the way Taylor and his ilk had hoped for. Their fanaticism bordering on early tactics of 20th century fascists has led to precisely what they perhaps wanted but this country desperately cried out for; authority to ensure the minority cannot rule the majority by a complete disruption of the lives of that majority for political ends. No doubt so called environmental groups wish to see provocation ensue by the imposition of the Act and sympathisers flocking literally to their banners and barricades. Their desire is anarchy followed by revolution. The history books are complete with examples. This part of the Act; Part 3 Public Order at least is required reading for all who can consider themselves a patriot....a person who loves, supports, and defends his or her country and its interests with devotion but refute the nomenclature nationalist..... a person who strongly identifies with their own nation and vigorously supports its interests, especially to the exclusion or detriment of the interests of other nations. The difference might seem subtle but it might be the difference between this country being fit for our children and grandchildren or fading into the twilight of history as others have throughout time.
Tuesday, 28 June 2022
FROM ROE-V-WADE TO NEW MAGISTRATES AND MUCH IN BETWEEN
Generally the most interesting legal news events are covered by national media. By their very nature such events are of but passing interest to many people. Some are centred in distant places or of topics distant in importance to the average reader. Apart from expressing my own opinions there are always some areas where what goes on in courts can have a real effect on the majority of citizens who have never stepped inside such a building.
Tuesday, 21 June 2022
JUSTICE GONE WITH THE BIG YELLOW TAXI
Without the rule of law a society cannot exist as such. The law might be unjust or weighted to suit particular interests or political factions but it must exist in practice or the only law which will be in place will be the law of the jungle. I suppose as a rough guide a primative legal system emerged in England with the establishment of farming communities about 2000 BC although about 8000 years earlier in the Middle East hunter gatherers began the process of civilisation we know today. A few hundred years before Mosaic law was offered to the children of Israel the Babylonian Hammurabi issued the Code of Hammurabi which he claimed to have received from Shamash the Babylonian god of justice. Unlike earlier Sumerian law codes such as the Code of Ur-Nammu, which had focused on compensating the victim of the crime the Law of Hammurabi was one of the first law codes to place greater emphasis on the physical punishment of the perpetrator. It prescribed specific penalties for each crime and is among the first codes to establish the presumption of innocence. Although its penalties are extremely harsh by modern standards, they were intended to limit what a wronged person was permitted to do in retribution. The Code of Hammurabi and the Law of Moses in the Torah contain numerous similarities. For law in general or laws in particular to be respected by a population they must be simple to accept and understand. Indeed we are all aware of the old adage attributed to Thomas Jefferson; “Ignorance of the law is no excuse in any country. If it were, the laws would lose their effect, because it can always be pretended.” But if simplicity in the eyes of the public is a necessity for "good" law it appears that as society has developed in ways unimaginable just a century ago that simplicity has all but disappeared and those who are charged with administering law and justice from parliament to the court are like sailors of old without a compass and only the stars as a guide. Indeed the changes and complexity of sentencing I personally experienced when active in the magistrates court are but a childhood game of snakes and ladders compared to the current sentencing guidelines at the crown court.
So when we read that Palfi Csaba Hungarian hard man will be deported we can only hope and not assume that the order will be carried out. The problem is that nobody cares about justice and the rule of law. Of course legal bigwigs and government toadies will talk the back legs of donkeys to justify their support for the current legal fashion. Where was all the support for justice locally since 2010? Now MPs are complaining that around half of all constituencies have no local court. There was little opposition when the courts were being closed. Now they wail and bemoan the loss.
Nobody has said (sung) it better than Joni Mitchell when describing loss of essentials to our life experiences in the first two verses of Big Yellow Taxi
With a pink hotel, a boutique, and a swinging hot spot
Don't it always seem to go
That you don't know what you got 'til it's gone
They paved paradise and put up a parking lot
Oh, bop, bop, bop
And they charged the people a dollar and a half to see them
No, no, no
Don't it always seem to go
That you don't know what you got 'til it's gone
They paved paradise, and put up a parking lot
Tuesday, 14 June 2022
BANKS -v- CADWALLADR + BBC LOSES LIBEL CASE
"Essentially, the public interest defence means that, even if the meaning of a statement is potentially inaccurate or defamatory, there is an added protection if those statements – whether they concern high-profile policy decisions or the use of public money – speak to matters of high importance, and are published responsibly with an opportunity to comment." The preceding extract is from Byline Times in which was described the recent legal ordeal of Observer journalist Carole Cadwalladr. As a non lawyer I can only attempt the leaps of imagination of those pinhead angels who can offer a truly authoritative opinion on the legal machinations which must have perplexed many. My bottom line of this business is that at its root an inaccurate published statement can be considered lawful if circumstances so demand. However one views the plaintiff`s moral or political position it is in my humble opinion a verdict which would be highly suitable for appeal so that fellow non lawyers might understand the workings of this very important legal precedent. As a public interest defence is often the means by which whistle blowers stand against the laws promulgated by government against the publication of government secrets cases of this type should matter to all who are interested in freedom of the press a freedom that this government in particular does not appear to enjoy or readily endorse.
Tuesday, 7 June 2022
DIGGING DEEP FOR JUSTICE
Considering that over a million cases annually are adjudicated annually at 150 magistrates courts very few come to public attention via local news media. Statistically that`s hardly surprising when although conviction rate is 82% so many offences are relatively trivial for us as observers but possibly life changing for those involved. Of course the government issues court statistics like a wedding venue supplies confetti and much like confetti it is the shower overload which provides the spectacle not the individual pieces of snowflake sized white paper. It is only by digging deeper into individual cases that a true feeling of how justice for the average individual citizen operates in this country can be ascertained.
Tuesday, 31 May 2022
TRIALS AND TRIBULATIONS
Sometimes this retired magistrate notices a single incident which might be of interest to those who give a few of their valuable minutes to read his opinions. On some occasions a few legal happenings from magistrates courts to the Appeal Court can shine a light on principles underlying the law and/or the legal system. Today is such an occasion.
Tuesday, 24 May 2022
CANARIES AND LAVATORIES
The story goes that the indigenous native Americans, pre communist Chinese and many other societies of the last and previous centuries revered the elderly of their populations who were relatively few in number cf modern times for their wisdom. For many, especially those under 40, in an age of instant mass information and communication such reverence is but a footnote in history. In some respects no amount of empathy by the young with the elderly can ever truly reveal the changes which age bestows upon us.
Public urination is usually included in the by-laws of individual local authorities under Section 235 of the Local Government Act 1972. A Penalty Notice for Disorder - PND (Section 5 of Public Order Act 1986) is the likeliest course of action of a police officer who catches someone urinating in public. PNDs are used by officers to deal with low level, anti-social and nuisance behaviour. A fine of £50 or £80 is issued to be payed within 21 days of receipt of the notice. But of course all magistrates have had before them defendants charged with the more serious Outraging Public Decency (Criminal Justice Act 2003) - prosecution under this act is extremely rare. However a “plainly indecent” act carried out in public in front of two or more people could result in an unlimited fine or prison terms or Indecent Exposure (Sexual Offences Act 2003). Indecent exposure occurs when a person displays part of themselves in a public place that is considered as being offensive or morally unacceptable. Punishment can range from a fine to a maximum 2 years prison sentence.
Society doesn`t break down overnight from the impact of an asteroid. It collapses when a sense of moral order, respect and compassion for all its members is removed, forgotten or overlooked by the forces of power, envy or indifference. It is an insidious process. It is continuing its inexorable traverse across so many of our institutions that we ought to be concerned that council refuse dumps and public lavatories are being denied to those who need them. They are but canaries in the coal mine. Who knows what is coming next.
Tuesday, 17 May 2022
RED CARD FOR JUDGES
There can`t be anybody who`s not heard of or used the phrase, "there`s one law for them and another for us" the terms "them" and "us" being who the listener wants them to be. There is also the commonly accepted concept that the more of an object or a commodity one possesses the less value is perceived of a single item of that object or commodity. An obvious example is money. £10 to a receiver of social security and other benefits is worth almost literally infinitely more than the self same amount to a multi millionaire. And what has this to do with what is a magistrate`s blog or perhaps more accurately the thoughts of a retired magistrate? Confidence in equality before the law and confidence in those who administer the law are fundamental to our democratic well being.
Monday, 9 May 2022
25 SUGGESTIONS FROM THE JUSTICE GAP
I would assume that most readers here have noticed in some media or other a convicted felon having his/her jail sentence increased on appeal by the attorney general. Indeed there are a couple of high profile cases currently going through the process right now. Less media attention is given to those whose legal teams have convinced the court of appeal that the verdicts by which their clients were imprisoned were unsafe. Rape trials and child killers have often made the headlines with the conviction rate of the former being criticised as far too low and sentences of the latter less severe than the common man would deem necessary short of hanging. Whilst no UK government would every admit and perhaps even secretly admire in private whilst deploring in public the Chinese conviction rate of 99% is typical of justice within a dictatorship where opposition of any kind, criminal or otherwise, is seen as political opposition which must be eradicated.
Tuesday, 3 May 2022
CROWN COURT BACKLOG/MAGISTRATE SHORTAGE// GOVERNMENT SELF CREATED PROBLEMS
The issues of anything to do with magistrates are usually not headline making nor worthy of headline making........until recently. No judicial voices were heard in the last decade crying out against the two thirds reduction in the numbers of magistrates from 2010 a reduction that was entirely predictable considering the age profile of those in 2010 and a government policy of non recruitment thereafter. Now there is a headlong drive by the Ministry of Justice to enlist no less than 4,000 new magistrates to join the current cohort of twelve and a half thousand. One doesn`t need to be a Nostradamus to appreciate that within a year or less a quarter of those on the bench will be novices. One unmentioned result of this inexperienced influx will be that legal advisors will hold sway to an unhealthy level of magistrates` decision making. The ability of benches to take an independent view of a situation will be funnelled into the mindset of paid civil servants who should have no business except that of ensuring that benches` processes fall within the law. Their opinions on fact are outwith their raison d`etre. Their opinions on sentencing should be confined to overseeing that a bench follows the lawful structure contained in Sentencing Guidelines. From my own experiences there is certainly a number of advisors in every court who exceed those boundaries. It takes a strong minded presiding justice to impose the will of a bench when a legal advisor has a mind of his/her own to impose an alternative view. With 4,000 newbies it is a certainty that the diminished number of old hands on a bench will face increasing pressure from their novice colleagues not to oppose legal advisors when opposition is exactly what is and will be needed from time to time in the future as it always has been in the past. One overlooked fact is certain: professional district judges are not selected on the basis of being representatives of their area although they preside alone over about a quarter of cases. So there are and have been two forms of magistrates courts; a supposed court of "representatives" and another of a government paid professional judge selected only for his/her abilities to do the job. The propagating of "diversity" in the magistracy is a distraction.
Tuesday, 19 April 2022
THE CHOICE IS BINARY
Tuesday, 12 April 2022
LOCAL COUNCILS ENCOURAGE FLY TIPPING
According to the government whether we like it or not restrictions imposed over the last two years to minimise the transmission of Covid 19 have been lifted. We can all go about our business as we wish taking any precautions we deem helpful (if any at all) and trusting in our own common sense and vaccinations. Sounds simple but there are some areas of our lives where Covid restrictions have been used to make more inroads into the way we live.