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Saturday 21 February 2015

PLAIN ENGLISH




Journalese, gobbledegook, jargon, rhubarb, pigeon, estuary, legalese  and other terms are used variously to describe  unique forms of the English language.  To those must be added the simple unadulterated word “police”. Police English is unique to those fellows who described an aggressive stance as an individual whose eyes were bulging, shoulders hunched and fists clenched or the drunk who smelt of intoxicating liquor and walked with an unsteady gait. During the week just gone a  witness was quoted in the officer`s notebook as describing an assailant who “showed  signs of impending aggressive behaviour”.  In another case an officer quoted a witness to a traffic incident who was supposed to have said ,”the junction was controlled by traffic signals”.

Now it is not beyond reason that the officers recorded exactly what was said in these examples but as they say in the land of the thistle and the heather, “I hae ma doots”.          

Thursday 19 February 2015

BAN DITTODITTODITTO




Over the last decade many new driving offences have become law eg causing death by careless driving and just last week causing serious injury by driving while disqualified.  But whilst most serious driving error scenarios seem to be covered by some law or another the problem of the recalcitrant disqualified driver remains.  I cannot recall ever reading about a case which even approaches the level of disregard for court orders shown by this offender.  One wonders whether it is psychiatric treatment he requires in addition to a lifetime driving ban which of course is not an available disposal.  What is available is a CRASBO.  I am not an ardent supporter of this form of sentence or its predecessor but in a case such as this one there appears an argument in favour.  A deprivation order would have been apposite if the driver had been using his own vehicle.    All in all I would suggest that it is not unlikely that colleagues in Blackburn will be seeing this person once more before too long.

Tuesday 17 February 2015

NON ACTIVATION OF A SUSPENDED SENTENCE ORDER IN NORTHERN IRELAND



A suspended sentence is supposed to act as a deterrent against future offending within the period of suspension.  The protocol is that upon conviction of a further offence the sentence should be activated in whole or part failing which the court must state its reasons for not so doing. I commented on this topic in some detail exactly one year ago.  What has interested me was a report  from Northern Ireland where a District Judge presumably operating on devolved legislation decided not to activate a very recently imposed suspended sentence order because the current offence was of a different kind from the previous.  This reasoning has never previously crossed my horizon.  Perhaps somebody can explain the law behind the DJ`s decision?  After all walking the plank was not much of a deterrent without the ocean below.

Monday 16 February 2015

THE SINKING OF THE GOOD SHIP JUSTICE



It is truly hard to believe what unthinking nonsense has emanated from Grayling`s fiefdom in the last four years and true to form with only three months to go the press office of the Ministry of Justice has been working overtime expounding the latest thoughts of chairman Chris.  Amongst those wonderful new initiatives from the great leader is the Social Action, Responsibility andHeroism (SARAH) Act.  It seems that the reason for this completely unnecessary piece of legislation is the political correctness, a scourge of our generation, which has banished the concept of common sense.  Everything now has to be pre or perhaps proscribed. Not content with that the  Criminal Justice and Courts Act will inter alia prevent long serving  prisoners being offered early release until the Parole Board is satisfied that they no longer pose a threat to society.  This is all very well if the conditions for possible parole were met in a timely fashion. Unfortunately in the real world it ain`t necessarily so.   New increased sentences for on line trolls are a total waste of time.  Contrary to newspaper headlines there are relatively few such convictions under current laws.  It is questionable that the situation requires new legislation.  The arguments and comments here are worth a glance.  Jury misconduct is also being categorised including    researching details of a case (including online research).  I have never sat as a juror.  There is no research on what happens within the confines of the jury room.  But bringing together twelve strangers each with his/her own knowledge base is it  now to be a crime for one of the cohort to impart his/her own knowledge based on some experience to the others when it is directly relevant to the evidence presented?

Not content with a so called “victim” surcharge on all offenders we have now reached the point where financial penalties are likely to be increased for offenders “to pay for the courts”.  What perverted thinking has infected what passes for the brain of this Lord Chancellor and those zombies who must obey his every whim?  Along with the defence of the realm justice must be disposed by the crown and accordingly whether it`s Alfred the Great`s justice or Queen Elizabeth 2nd`s  it behoves the state to finance this mainstay and pillar of our country and not outsource it.  It has been asked previously but now the rhetorical question “what price justice” can be answered: look deep into the accounts in the bowels of Petty France.

The most calamitous post war Lord Chancellor is determined that the good ship Justice will go down with all hands including his red ones.

Friday 13 February 2015

FANNING THE FLAMES



It is becoming increasingly the case that very senior public servants who have occupied well cushioned seats in the judiciary, police or armed services and retaining influence in many quarters reveal their underlying philosophies in retirement whether from the red benches of the House of Lords or the ivory towers of Oxbridge.  This week Lord Woolf, former Lord Chief Justice, in a lecture at the Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies championed the cause of protecting Muslims from being offended. He was of course referring to recent tragic events in Paris.


* His comments were described by the Archbishop of Canterbury as being, “not very helpful.” [see below full piece from The Times (behind its paywall)].



Muslims have generally lived as the majority population of nations or states but  more than 300 million Muslims, or one-fifth of the world’s Muslim population, live in countries where Islam is not the majority religion.  That now includes England.  Often where there is a minority Muslim population eg in India, Russia,  China and Burma  there has been inter-communal strife.  In this country giving offence has been the flip side of our concept of free speech just as outrageously enormous wages  paid to four hundred footballers is the flip side of capitalism and the concept of demand and supply economics. 



S.5 of the Public Order Act 1986, after much lobbying, has finally been amended to remove sections 5(1) and 6(4) by section 57 of the Crime and Courts Act 2013. This amendment removed the word 'insulting' from the two sections with effect from 1 February 2014.  Police have been advised on changes in operation.




Unless Muslims in England, immigrants and native born, are ready to accept the mores of this country and learn a degree of tolerance that the other monotheistic religions with their various branches from high church to low, from orthodox to reform,  encompass I fear increasing levels of confrontation.  Lord Woolf`s remarks serve only to encourage the extreme right wing who seize on such comments to ferment their own brand of confrontation.  Such lordly myopia serves his fellow citizens of all faiths and none little benefit; indeed he has to a degree fanned the flames of a combustible situation. 

*