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Friday 19 May 2017

BOSS:WORKER WAGE RATIO



During this relaxing if somewhat chilly  weekend I had no intentions of putting any opinions on line until I re read news of retiring managers and bosses with eye watering pension pots of £millions plus often large amounts in shares and stock options. Now in the case of  obviously successful businessmen and entrepreneurs in the mould of Richard Branson or Alan Sugar I would wish such people well to consider the disposal of the results of a lifetime`s risk in creating success. But many such pay offs are to managers, perhaps of exceptional ability, who have increased the wealth of shareholders. Do they and others similar require such astronomical payments to fulfil their duties? Taking an extremely introverted view would Justices of the Peace perform their duties to a higher standard if they were paid a going rate of eg £300 daily? I think not. There surely must be a maximum multiplier in any organisation between the pay of the lowest and highest earner related to median salary which produces the incentives for all to achieve their personal best performances? And the corollary is that there also must be a point of departure from an optimum inter salary relationship which initiates envy and consequent inefficiencies from sections of a workforce or population. “Let them eat cake”, has resonated for over 200 years. The sentiments are as alive today as they were then. Indeed they form part of the Labour manifesto. It is to be hoped that we have learned to avoid the consequences.

Wednesday 17 May 2017

PUNISHMENT//WHO YOU ARE OR WHAT YOU DID?

It is not very often that I have urged readers to link to another blogger but the matter under consideration requires an understanding of the legal issues before the philosophical aspect of the case can be considered.  The Secret Barrister has an outstanding reputation. The case of the knife wielding medical student.......there is no knowledge of whether she has qualified with a medical degree........poses fundamental questions.  

A few years ago Sentencing Guidelines were modified so that increased fines above the normal maxima could be imposed in place of community orders where appropriate. In simple terms those offenders who could afford it could buy their way to a sentence of lesser magnitude.  It seems to me that a similar principle has been applied in the case of the above mentioned student: substitute academic and social potential for ability to pay and the judge`s reasoning is clear.  My point is that it might be clear to him but were the argument applied wholesale the justice system would be in turmoil. The 18 year old addict from a broken home subjected to abuse since childhood is the opposite side of the sentencing coin. Some would say that s/he should be offered reduced punishment in recompense for his/her  background.  Before Sentencing Guidelines judges and magistrates used their own common sense to decide sentencing for such offenders; both  those offering benefits (current or future) to society and the addicted thug at the bottom of the social heap.  The Guidelines are more or less a tick box exercise. Should rich offenders be able to buy a financial penalty which others could not afford? Should a certain standing in society protect an offender from prison? Should deprivation of all kinds and/or addiction be considered mitigation and an argument for more considerate treatment? In cases of violence drunkenness is on the contrary considered an aggravating factor.  There is also the matter of public protection which IMHO is often overlooked by those who seek to remove custody from many offences and offenders.  In the actual case discussed here the assumption by the judge is that this is a one time offence and public protection is not a consideration.  When news of another stabbing of a girlfriend/boyfriend by a partner or ex partner is concluded by immediate custody for a first time offender no doubt there will be a comparison.  

This is a murky area of the law.  It has even darker undertones when who you are takes precedence of what you did.


Tuesday 16 May 2017

IS POLICE PROBITY JUST A HISTORICAL REFERENCE?

The scandals involving senior police officers over the last decade have been discussed here and in many other media.  There is no doubt that there is something seriously rotten in the state of Denmark. This creeping bacterium has invaded the posts of Police and Crime Commissioner; an elected office, and deputies.........an appointed position.  The latest incumbent to be caught with his trousers around his ankles albeit in his past life is Andy Coles, Cambridgeshire's deputy crime commissioner.  This man would have been interviewed by senior officials around the PCC, his CV would have or should have been thoroughly investigated and his referees` opinions checked out.  It was, however, only be chance that his sordid actions as a former police officer came to light.  Is probity in all aspects of our legal, justice and police systems just a historical reference?

Monday 15 May 2017

MAGISTRATE TWEETER SHOULD RESIGN

Justices of the Peace hold public positions. That being so it is a fact  that not only must they have been upright in their pre J.P. lives but are held to account for their actions not necessarily just inside the confines of the courtroom.  Deviation from the straight and narrow can have devastating effects.  That being the case when this blogger signed up to  Twitter a few months ago it was with some circumspection that my keyboard did not run amok from a self imposed ten second delay for second thoughts.  Thus it is with a certain dismay I have to mention that a prominent magistrate well known for his IT skills has allowed his prejudices to become public in the aforementioned public debating forum.  Nick Harrington tweeted two days ago, 
As some readers might be aware I am the antithesis of being politically correct and a convinced Brexiteer but the above reference to gypsies is totally unacceptable. If anybody is in doubt just substitute "Muslims" or "Jews" or "homosexuals" in his Tweet.  This man should do the honourable thing and resign from the magistracy before he is subjected to the inevitable investigation.

Friday 12 May 2017

LIB DEMS OFFER LEGAL CANNABIS

The Monster Raving Loony Party regularly offered voters many improbable benefits if the electorate suddenly became part of that Mad Hatter`s Tea Party.  The Lib Dems from election to election propagate a somewhat similar line. But today they offer a change so frighteningly simple that no previous political party has had the cohones to dare even suggest such an innovation; the legalisation and regulation of cannabis. Of course it will not happen this time but as an unexplored way of raising billions of pounds some chancellor sometime will persuade a prime minister and his/her colleagues that this would be a no brainer.

Thursday 11 May 2017

POLICE ARE POLITICALLY CORRECT: NOT PROGRESSIVE

There are some things that, after being away on a holiday however satisfying, one appreciates that little bit extra upon return: sleeping in one`s own bed, noticing how two weeks milder weather has encouraged grass and plants to grow, deciding how to catch up on all the programmes recorded on Sky are just a few. But reading of the political correctness of police in this country seems to be more than just unchanging; it is  progressing at an unstoppable rate.

The latest constabulary striving to be progressive is Northamptonshire.  It has decided that the old Victorian helmets are now well past their sell by date.  There can be few arguments against that.  In their day they reflected the most suitable protective headgear in line with then current trends. By 1953 all male police officers in Scotland had abandoned the helmet in favour of the flat cap.  Recently Scottish female police officers have been able to wear the hijab.  These were sensible initiatives.  In Northampton, however, the helmet is to be replaced by the baseball cap; a form of headgear forever associated with the land where the game is ubiquitous.  The flat cap which offers some protection to the skull and sometimes with its chequered pattern around its rim as in Chicago and Australia, another Scottish initiative, has been adopted in many overseas jurisdictions  It serves as a distinguishing feature in police uniforms when so many quasi uniforms now adorn such operatives as traffic wardens and other council employees.  In an age when aforesaid baseball cap is such a common form of headgear in Britain it behoves police officers to stand out from the crowd without trying to imitate their American counterparts.  

Just as the magistrates` courts` system is losing all pretence to be "local" it cannot be a long time in coming when there will be forced amalgamation of constabularies into a national force perhaps with the equivalent of a local force as in France.  The argument from Northampton that costs will be reduced is fatuous and we all know that. There are simply too many chiefs afraid of being sent to the reservation.   

Wednesday 26 April 2017

HOLIDAY TIME

A certain D. Trump persuaded me that rather than taking a trip on a Mississippi river boat my holiday spending power would be more welcome at points in an easterly direction.  The desert awaits so all being well this page will be updated in a couple of weeks.

REHAB OR PRISON?

Many times here I have castigated the refusal of our overlords to consider compulsory rehab for addicts so that the court system is finally avoided for those 70% who are repeatedly offending in order to finance their habit be it narcotics or alcohol or both.However I doubt we`ll see that initiative for many a long decade. A perfect example was in front of Kirklees Magistrates this week. Whilst he is deserving of pity the public must be protected.  I cannot believe that the costs of re hab would exceed the costs of prison including a reduction in future offending and all that that would save.  Indeed with new prisons on the horizon existing establishments could be converted to such hostels and these being mainly in cities family ties would have a real possibility of being restored between addict and parents/partners/children.

Tuesday 25 April 2017

ARE IDENTITY CARDS DEAD AND BURIED?




Almost seven years ago after Labour was thrown out of government the decision to impose identity cards for all was rescinded by Mrs T. May the new Home Secretary. Libertarians and perhaps many others not so single minded about retaining their privacy in an increasingly big brother state were extremely pleased at that announcement. Identity Cards for all, a policy so fervently espoused by successive Labour Home Secretaries, are now history or so we hope but the problem of privacy for the citizen didn`t begin in this century.




In late December 2008 I was sitting on a case where a driver had refused to give his details when required by a police officer. For a reason now forgotten during this hearing we had some "downtime" and were in the retiring room where on impulse I looked at the bound annual copies of "The Justice of the Peace" on the bookshelf. I chose to look at the edition of 1908 and found the page for the same December date of that year. And there it was in black and white Edwardian prose; the case law where a driver on the request of a police constable was required to give his name and address. Licenses to drive were for the future. A gentleman had been motoring through Hyde Park and for whatever reason refused to give his details to the constable when asked. The case duly reached a higher level where it was decided that a constable had the right to demand a driver`s name and address.




In the seven years since Labour`s loss of power our security situation has changed.  It would be foolish to think that there will be no repeat of the Westminster terrorist murders in future.  In some quarters there are whispers of resurrecting the issue of identity cards for all.   Of course we won`t hear anything of this in the next seven weeks but later..........?


Monday 24 April 2017

BE A J.P. IN WIGAN

There is a shortage of magistrates in Wigan.  The local paper has published the following statement from Liz Truss to encourage applicants.  I wonder how much is still applicable to today`s situation. 



The Lord Chancellor Liz Truss said: “The involvement of lay people - recruited from a cross-section of our society - is a central principle in the administration of justice. It helps safeguard our citizens, with crucial decisions affecting an individual’s liberty being decided not by officials of the state - but by an independent bench of trained magistrates drawn from the local community. Our judiciary is amongst the most respected and independent in the world - part of a justice system that is widely admired at home and abroad.”


The Lord Chancellor Liz Truss said: “The involvement of lay people - recruited from a cross-section of our society - is a central principle in the administration of justice. It helps safeguard our citizens, with crucial decisions affecting an individual’s liberty being decided not by officials of the state - but by an independent bench of trained magistrates drawn from the local community. Our judiciary is amongst the most respected and independent in the world - part of a justice system that is widely admired at home and abroad.”

Read more at: http://www.wigantoday.net/news/crime/appeal-for-magistrates-due-to-volunteers-shortage-1-8505905
The Lord Chancellor Liz Truss said: “The involvement of lay people - recruited from a cross-section of our society - is a central principle in the administration of justice. It helps safeguard our citizens, with crucial decisions affecting an individual’s liberty being decided not by officials of the state - but by an independent bench of trained magistrates drawn from the local community. Our judiciary is amongst the most respected and independent in the world - part of a justice system that is widely admired at home and abroad.”

Read more at: http://www.wigantoday.net/news/crime/appeal-for-magistrates-due-to-volunteers-shortage-1-8505905

Friday 21 April 2017

BEFORE OUR VERY EYES

Yesterday I posted on the apparent lack of local knowledge shown by the Appeal Court in a case of dangerous driving. Today in the Telegraph the opposite appears to be the case with a crown court judge who has placed a spurious exaggerated defence of a twice convicted drunk driver ahead of the public interest.  Such cases happen daily but only a few can be reported to a wider audience.  Of course the results of all criminal cases are available in a statistical form.  This allows the general nature of our courts system to be commented upon but it bears no reality for those involved either practically or intellectually. 

In magistrates` courts arguments, as in today`s case, are often based upon exceptional circumstances in an attempt for totters to retain their driving licenses with 12 penalty points or more  having accrued.  Generally the arguments are similar to those in this much more serious example.  Perhaps there are judges who really are detached from the public perception of their decisions.  Perhaps judges should not allow public perceptions to influence their decision making.  Somewhere along that slippery gradient and notwithstanding Sentencing Guidelines there is a gap. Perhaps if there were the requisite financing of our courts the CPS could be mandated to challenge any such sentencing decision as a matter of course filtered through specified considerations. All I would say now is that decisions within and surrounding our courts are costing us the justice we deserve,  as the magician says,  before your very eyes.

Thursday 20 April 2017

EX CHAIRMAN OF BRADFORD BENCH CASTIGATES APPEAL COURT

Lesson one for new magistrates:- do not talk to the media.  It`s that simple. Of course there are so called rules which define the limits of expressing opinions to same but those who`ve been around for a while understand that unless you were in Kingston or Barry or similar situations and your court was being closed and you vented a portion of your spleen to the local journal the chances were that you would be brought before the headmaster and duly chastised.  So often it is the retired J.P. who makes known his/her opinion on a legal topic in the press, TV or social media. Thus it is that the former Chairman of the Bench in Bradford has castigated the Appeal Court for second guessing an original sentence passed by  HHJ Roger Thomas QC the Honorary Recorder of Bradford.The offender`s sentence was reduced from 6 months to 4 months custody.

Ms Carroll is a wise and experienced individual.  There are many more of her ilk active and retired.  More of them should speak up when the situation demands.  Justices of the Peace are told that they are full members of the judiciary (junior branch). But they are a race apart.  They are volunteers with incomes derived outwith the MOJ.  They are often experienced professionals or tradespeople in their own right. Yet they are treated as little better than school children by the authorities in their ivory tower in Petty France controlled by an increasingly reactionary Ministry of Justice which appears at times more interested in its press releases than common sense in trying to remember when the British justice system was held in such high regard world wide.  Would that were the case now notwithstanding the opportunities afforded by Brexit.

Wednesday 19 April 2017

A LORD CHANCELLOR AND A JUSTICE SECRETARY

One sure result of the election will surely be the appointment of a new Secretary of State for Justice.  Perhaps in view of recent controversy a separate position of Lord Chancellor will be re - established.

Tuesday 18 April 2017

ACCEPTABLE COMMENTS IN 1957

This report of a case at a magistrates` court in 1957 quotes the words of the presiding magistrate or "stipe"...we don`t know which.  I wonder whether such comments would pass today without reprimand from those in authority. 

Monday 17 April 2017

CBOs TAKE THE BISCUIT

For the most part, criminal behaviour orders are just another way of avoiding the reality that some offenders who are not being put away should be put away.  When every trick and turn considered to be acceptable to a sceptical public has been exhausted the bright young things at the MOJ offer ever more suggestions on how to run a service to protect that public and simultaneously reduce its reliance on incarceration whilst upping custodial limits in  Sentencing Guidelines.  Seems to me that having a custodial cake whilst eating it  hasn`t succeeded in the past and won`t succeed now.  To expand the metaphor this example takes the biscuit.

Friday 14 April 2017

ONE RULE FOR THEM AND ANOTHER FOR US





Prior to the final decision on which magistrates` courts were to be closed many Bench chairmen made themselves available to the media to argue their case for their court to be excused execution. Whether or not their efforts were against the spirit of the rules on media guidance is not for me to say but lest there be any doubt, up to date guidance is that  magistrates who are considering writing to a newspaper might "wish to let a colleague read your draft before submitting for publication”. And then again you might not……… 

In general J.P.s are treated by the authorities as a headmaster might treat his pupils. Recently a J.P. was found guilty of serious misconduct owing to a house guest having been arrested on suspicion of harassment and being sent to prison. The J.P. failed to report these circumstances.  Around the same time last month after a J.P. entered the magistrates assembly room at Bedlington Magistrates’ Court when he was not sitting as a magistrate he had the judicial rule book thrown at him. What a disreputable way to behave!  "The Lord Chancellor and Mrs Justice Cheema-Grubb, on behalf of the Lord Chief Justice, considered that his behaviour fell below the standards expected of a magistrate and have issued him with formal advice.”

There does indeed seem one rule for the higher judiciary and another for us:- the unpaid volunteers who deal with 95% of all criminal cases from beginning to end.

Thursday 13 April 2017

EQUALITY FOR WOMEN

A Scottish case but principle is universal........at least pre Brexit. Would the same logic have been provided if offender were male. And after Brexit and assuming Scotland in U.K. it would be British courts that would have the final jurisdiction; a situation with which I wholeheartedly agree. 

Wednesday 12 April 2017

DRIVING THE POLICE JOB MARKET

Another wonderful expression in our modern English language from Police Professional.  Note the use of apostrophe.  Oh to be so politically correct and literally incorrect simultaneously. 
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FAKE NEWS, RULES AND REALITY

There are times when individuals in authority or institutions behave in such a cack handed manner in an all seeing world of smart phones that one can only marvel at their stupidity. The P.R. debacle at United Airlines is a prime example.  But such examples are all around us every day.  A housing association has its rules and as such it expects compliance. Whoever contacted the media in this case it seems only the association has a reputation that can be tarnished.  The justice system encompassing everything from police, prisons, probation, courts and a whole lot more  is perhaps the single area where impressions are as important as the reality; at least as far as the numbers employed in projecting and manipulating those impressions.  Those responsible in Scotland for the probation service have only themselves to blame for stories like this

The disaster that was Chris Grayling`s time as Justice Secretary was predicted by those, who unlike him, realised what the reality of his changes would mean.  But the weasels in Petty France and their thousands of column inches of utter garbage smothered discontent until a lobby fodder of M.P.s forced changes.  The ventriloquist`s dummy at the MOJ had this tweeted reply to a recent parliamentary question on the Criminal Courts Charge imposed by Grayling who of course achieved promotion for his efforts. 

When the manipulators are out of their depth and their reliance on so called fake news itself becomes discredited only those actively seeking the truth will be able to discriminate between what "they" tell us and the reality. That will be a sad time for us all.