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Tuesday, 29 August 2023
THE FAILURE OF SUPERVISORY BODIES BODES ILL FOR ALL
Earlier this month Mike Dean a hitherto respected and highly experienced football referee now retired acknowledged that he intentionally overlooked an incident and neglected to use the VAR technology to protect his "mate"during a match between Chelsea and Tottenham Hotspur last season. The new technology was introduced to provide fans and the players with as much information as possible in cases where line of sight decisions proved to be difficult for the on field officials. A decision visible to all spectators live and on TV to overrule the VAR was disgraceful and has brought the whole system into disrepute notwithstanding the financial implications for the clubs involved. The referees` supervisory body will be unlikely to take cognisance of his opinions ever again and fans will have further cause for disgruntlement when a debateable decision goes against their team.
Football is a game and big business but murder is murder and one of the most distressing facts to emerge from the Letby case is the failure of several supervisory bodies and individuals to take action when eminent qualified personnel presented prima facia evidence of malpractice by Letby. But this failure was not an isolated misfortune within the NHS. Between 2005 and 2008 at Stafford Hospital the regulator condemned "appalling" standards of care and reported there had been at least 400 more deaths than expected between 2005 and 2008. It listed a catalogue of failings, including receptionists assessing patients arriving at A&E, a shortage of nurses and senior doctors, and pressure on staff to meet targets. The Alder Hey organs scandal involved the unauthorised removal, retention, and disposal of human tissue, including children’s organs, during the period 1986 to 1996. During this period organs were retained in more than 2,000 pots containing body parts from around 850 infants. These were later uncovered at Alder Hey Children's Hospital, Liverpool, during a public inquiry into the organ retention scandal. In the 1990s at the Bristol Royal Infirmary, babies died at high rates after cardiac surgery. An inquiry found "staff shortages, a lack of leadership, a unit 'simply not up to the task ... an old boy's culture' among doctors, a lax approach to safety, secrecy about doctors' performance and a lack of monitoring by management". The scandal resulted in cardiac surgeons leading efforts to publish more data on the performance of doctors and hospitals. One could say that the cover up of scandal is endemic within the NHS.
Between 1970 and the early 1990s, an estimated 26,800 people in the UK were given contaminated blood transfusions and blood products infected with hepatitis C or HIV. People with haemophilia, a condition that affects the blood's ability to clot, were particularly affected. The then government and those following knew of contaminated plasma long before it admitted it. A minister privately expressed concerns that Aids was being transmitted by contaminated blood products while the government publicly insisted there was no “conclusive evidence”, newly uncovered documents from 1983 show. Once again the cover up is equal to or more sinister than the original disaster.
Perhaps the scandal involving the Post Office is the most revealing of all. Over many years the Post Office, aided by its lawyers, engaged in what looks like a cover-up due to repeatedly failing to disclose what they knew about problems with Horizon across a number of court cases. Hundreds of innocent people lost their livelihoods, their homes and some were imprisoned as a result. Some committed suicide. In April 2021 39 former subpostmasters had their convictions quashed at the Court of Appeal. The court concluded that the Post Office should not have prosecuted them in the first place and found the Post Office’s conduct “an affront to the conscience of the court”. Such comments by the Court of Appeal are damning and rare. The Court of Appeal’s judgment in 2021 built on findings in a High Court case in 2019 where the failings of Horizon were exposed. The judge in that case also found the defence by the Post Office to be aggressive, excessive, misleading, and otherwise unsatisfactory. It included an application to unseat the presiding judge whom the Post Office considered was biased. Even in those High Court proceedings, the Post Office failed to disclose critical information about the problems with Horizon.
In all those matters those charged with the supervision of systems and personnel not only failed in their task but were active in the suppression of evidence which was contradictory to their interpretation of the investigation. And so to the magistracy with its internal supervisory system no different in its structure from those in medicine or football. Secrecy surrounds most complaints both from without the system and within. Individual complaints by magistrates are met with obstruction and obfuscation whatever the rights or rarely the wrongs of the matter. Advisory committees, if matters progress that far, are generally obstructive. Delay in investigation is the norm. Threats are commonplace. Investigations which reach the Judicial Conduct Investigations Office are just the tip of the iceberg. But what is common in all the above instances is the failure of supervision in one form or another. My point today is that the real failure is of those who appoint the supervisors. It has been estimated by those more knowledgeable than I that there are about 10,000 individuals who are this country`s decision makers. They are colloquially known as "the great and the good". A definition might be "worthy, distinguished or important people especially when gathered together." These are the members of interviewing panels for the likes of the General Medical Council and/or its disciplinary committee. These are the people who appoint government commission members. These are the people who appoint members of investigatory committees. These are the people who are responsible for the repeated instances of supervisory failings in so many areas of our lives.
There is no civic duty more important that being a member of a crown court jury. Life and death, innocence or guilt is in the hands of ordinary people with few caveats. 18 is the minimum age; being a British citizen is not a requirement, lack of fluency in the English language is not a bar and even a person with a serious criminal record can be a jury member. It is my opinion that a cadre of ordinary citizens be assembled from which cohorts should be entrusted with the choosing of professional supervisors in various trade and professional areas. Ordinary citizens with ordinary lives, interests and hopes for the future able to sift the often uniform education, backgrounds and aspirations of wannabe supervisors. Certainly the iniquitous results from current practice are now way beyond mere chance. They are a direct result of current system failure. When the cry in so many areas is more "diversity, diversity, divercity" where is it when actually needed? It`s not for more brown, black, tall short, trans this or trans that people. It is to salvage the confidence of British people in their form of government and its tentacles which reach right down to the nitty gritty of all our lives. The pitifully repeated excuses of who? what? where? when? should no longer be even remotely acceptable. Failure to do so will be a catastrophe: it bodes ill for all of us.
Tuesday, 22 August 2023
CURRENT CRIMINAL EVENTS AND INITIATIVES
f ever the term "scourge" were used as a noun subsequent to its use to describe the Black Death or the Great Plague the calamitous addiction of so many in Scotland to narcotic substances would be a good place to start. It is a sad fact that Scotland has the highest number of per capita drug deaths in Europe. The latest figures show that drug deaths in Scotland fell to 1,051 last year from 1,330 the year before. However, this small reduction in deaths contrasts against fewer than 300 deaths total in 1996. It is fair to conclude that this awful statistic is the Scottish government`s biggest failure by design, incompetence or ignorance since its inception. Having belatedly accepted the situation there might be just the tiniest chink of intellectual light at the end of this abysmal social tunnel.
Decriminalisation is one of those words which brings out the best or the worst in many seasoned observers of drug addiction. For my part I have long been in favour of such a radical change in how society treats a problem which in addition to the misery inflicted on those involved and their families costs the UK £20 billion a year. Latest government information for England and Wales is available here. Drug misuse is estimated to have a total economic and social cost to Scotland alone of £3.5 billion a year. There are the very loud mouthed Cassandras who refuse to think of this catastrophe without looking through the prism of their fixed and stubborn right wing views which colour their thinking on most political endeavours whether drug addiction, immigration or other headline issues. I am anything but a supporter of Scottish independence in general or the SNP in particular but in this instance I wish the Scottish government nothing but goodwill for grasping this nettle.
There can be few in this country who have not reacted with horror at the conclusion of the Letby baby killer trial. That this monster refused to attend court for sentencing is the latest manifestation of arrogance exhibited by some of the most heinous criminals of this century. But for leading politicians to state publicly that Letby should have been dragged if necessary kicking and screaming into the dock to face the sentencing judge is populism at its lowest level. For those not faced with a whole of life sentence there is certainly an argument that such refusal as a contempt of court would invite an increased sentence but I doubt that in the few cases which would be likely to occur, additional time, e.g. an added year, would be no deterrent to those whose arrogance and possible psychopathy put them in the dock in the first place.
Tuesday, 15 August 2023
THE MAGISTRACY//IS THERE A FUTURE?
What is a criminal justice system? The collection of agencies including, but not limited to, the police, the courts, the Ministry of Justice and the Home Office which are involved in the detection and prevention of crime, the prosecution of people accused of committing crimes, the conviction and sentencing of those found guilty. What is the purpose of a CJS? According to various sources it is:-
Tuesday, 8 August 2023
MAGISTRATES: ESTABLISHED 1361// BEST BEFORE 2023
I have remarked in the past about the press and PR department at the Ministry of Justice. Its output volume in my opinion varies inversely with the quality of the progress being attempted in resurrecting what was once upon a time more than the fairy tale justice department it now is; when news, information and outcomes were true, sincere and to to be considered a great benefit of a society in which we were lucky to live. Along with many other attributes and qualities of leadership there really was a spark, a light, which allowed Britain to be considered "great". It wasn`t military or empire; it was we the people and our antecedents over the last century who inherited and nourished to the best of each of our abilities a desire to be our best for our families and for each other. It generally included, with some few exceptions, those we elected to power on all the levels from parish to Downing Street. There was corruption and malevolence of course but it was recognised, faced down and life went on but not anymore. The output from government departments was generally informative and consequently trusted by those to whom it was directed: not anymore. In May 2023 a Freedom of Information request was made to the Ministry of Justice (MoJ):
Tuesday, 1 August 2023
SOCIETAL BREAKDOWN//CONSERVATIVE "BLAH" OR OPPOSITION "RHUBARB"
Below is the main headline from today`s Times newspaper.
We are now at the cusp of another football season. And once again today`s Times provides the subject matter.
There is little doubt in my opinion that the referees will follow the hard line of their paymasters. Unlike those above, referees` emoluments and indeed their fitness to officiate will be judged at almost the speed of light by those who pull the financial strings within professional football. Whether or not football clubs` and police efficiency in identifying and prosecuting those supporters for whom the beautiful game is just an opportunity to cause havoc and mayhem will bring law `n order back to the terraces is another matter. The figures below for those hooligans who have been subjected to recent football banning orders do not offer high hopes that such disgusting behaviour will be any less in the forthcoming season as in the past.
It takes more than statistics for historians to decide when a society has broken down. Public disorder and its treatment or curtailment are one disturbing factor but combined with hidden and not so hidden police corruption the signs are there for all to see as is the failure of supervisory bodies in many professions and organisations. But it is for government to act. Over the next eighteen months we will find out if it is Conservative blah or Opposition rhubarb which wins the day.
Tuesday, 25 July 2023
BIND OVERS// A REMINDER OF TIMES PAST// PART 2
A Bind Over is neither a conviction nor a punishment. It is a preventative measure whereby a person enters into a recognisance before the court (gives a promise) to engage in good behaviour and to keep the peace for a period not exceeding three years. The recognisance is a promise to pay a specified sum of money if the recognisance is breached. On June 13th I told of my own experience prior to appointment of witnessing a bench exercising its power to threaten a plaintiff to being bound over. In my opinion this was in retrospect a bench led by an arrogant chairman exceeding its powers. Ever since, the words "bind over" have held an interest for me. I offer again the CPS guidance on that disposal. For an apparently simple disposal the underlying conditions prior to and subsequent to its activation are considerable but its use is diminishing annually as the statistics below testify.
Tuesday, 18 July 2023
KNIFE CRIME SENTENCING; THEORY & PRACTICE
We are expecting a general election next year. As a matter of curiosity I attempted to see a copy of the Conservative Party manifesto for the election of 2010. A normal search indicated it was not available for public observation.
Tuesday, 11 July 2023
A MOCKERY OF JUSTICE
First there was ASBO and ASBO begat CRASBO and from its loins there came landlord banning orders, drink banning orders, football banning orders et als. However it must not be overlooked that there are also for one`s delectation non-molestation orders, occupation orders and restraining orders for those inclined to a soupçon of domestic violence. These are civil orders the breach of which is a criminal offence triable in the magistrates or crown court where offenders face a custodial sentence. The numbers of such orders are not public knowledge. A Freedom of Information Request has been refused on the grounds of costs of retrieving such information. The standard such response to refuse an application is "I can confirm the MoJ holds all of the information you have requested. However, to provide this 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." However in view of the vast scope under which such orders can be made it is not unreasonable in my opinion to suggest that the number must run into six figures annually. The logical next step in considering the efficiency of banning orders, i.e. their effectivity, is again a matter of conjecture owing to the lack of public information of subsequent breaches of orders and the consequent punishment handed out to offenders.
I cannot help but, drinking from the cup of cynicism, thinking that at the bottom of these law making and sentencing exercises lies but a single objective of reducing costs. Unless and until the Ministry of Justice publishes actual numbers we will never know. What we do know and every magistrate and criminal lawyer will know is that the apparatus of banning orders is so often so ineffective that the law in its inaction makes a mockery of justice per se. Here is just a single example from a single court on a single day last week.
Tuesday, 4 July 2023
JUDICIAL DECISION MAKING
With increased reporting of the Court of Appeal and the Supreme Court owing to various government proposals being considered unlawful by some the debates previously of interest only to legal eagles have become if not front page news no longer limited to a few inside columns of the broadsheets. Indeed major news programmes are not long after social media in joining the reporting. There has been considerable comment on the Court of Appeal`s decision last week that the government`s proposals to send asylum seekers to Rwanda was unlawful. That result had been widely predicted but what was of interest was that the decision was by a majority of two to one the dissenter being the Lord Chief Justice. That, as a secondary point, leads me to question whether the intellectual and legal requirements of members of the Appeal and Supreme Courts are that much different. Are such eminent practitioners given points in the manner within the military when one star generals must be promoted three times to achieve top billing?
Judges are also in a Scottish spotlight. SNP proposals that a single judge should preside over rape trials without a jury have received considerable resistance from within the legal profession and without. Onlookers shouldn`t be surprised. Nationalist governments throughout history have targeted courts to do their bidding. Without juries that target is closer to being achieved. As in England in certain quarters there is disquiet at [according to those quarters] the low conviction rate in such trials. In addition they also claim that many more under investigation for rape are not brought to trial. Considering that the offence is not an offence and is a consensual decision in private for the vast majority of people it is unsurprising that a high hurdle is necessary for conviction. Perhaps there is envy of the Republic of China where the conviction rate is 99%.
Tuesday, 27 June 2023
THE SPIRIT OF THE LAW WHEN COMPUTER SAYS NO
How often have we heard or even used the phrase the world has become (is becoming) a much smaller place? Financially, socially and politically remove any language differences and those variations between many west European countries are vastly diminished from what held true in the 1970s & 80s. Of course the trend to supra national structures particularly the EU has played a major role in that coming together. For this country the apparent political alignment with the United States in so many ways is contradicted by an equally disparate approach to social structures and their applications.
24.For the offence of administering poison with intent to procure a miscarriage, I sentence you to 28 months’ imprisonment. Among the many tragedies in this case is that you did not indicate your guilty plea at the earliest opportunity in the magistrates’ court. Had that been done, the sentence of imprisonment that I am now obliged to pass would in law have been capable of being suspended.
Tuesday, 20 June 2023
DRUGS IN THE WAKE OF CRIME
A Band C fine at court is150% of relevant weekly income. The Sentencing Guideline for possession of Class A drugs is copied below.
In February 2020 Dame Carol Black published phase one of her independent review of drugs commissioned by the Government in 2019. Examining the UK's drug market she labelled it as “big business” and estimated its worth at £9.4bn a year. Governments have refused to consider the decriminalisation of cannabis never mind Class A drugs. They have refused to acknowledge that a system of licensing specified outlets supplying scientifically formulated narcotic substances is a viable and necessary alternative to the current chaotic situation which enriches criminals, encourages violent offending and kills addicts whose ingestion of such substances cut with various toxins was responsible for the deaths of 1,330 people in Scotland in 2021. 4,859 deaths related to drug poisoning were registered in the same year in England and Wales.
The current court situation in England is madness when it comes to punishing drug possession. In this case the arithmetic tells us that the offender had an income of £80: in other words he is a 51 year old living on social security who is likely to have been before the courts previously as few of his age use cocaine as a starter drug. I, along with eminent scientific and medical experts who are far more knowledgeable than I, have long advocated a medical path to rehabilitation. My preference would be a 21st century workhouse. [Insert that word in the search box for previous posts on the topic.]
Governments have buried their collective heads in the sand for myriad reasons:- religious, political, medical, social. Certainly there is a downside insofar as some fatalities will occur as a result but there is a predicted risk of death undertaking almost any human activity from climbing a ladder to crossing the road. Yet individuals accept such risk. Sooner or later a government will need to govern in the name of the vast majority of those who do not use drugs as well of addicts and experimenters. The current uncontrolled situation must end even if only to reduce the inevitable violent criminal activity that drug supply leaves in its wake.
Tuesday, 13 June 2023
BIND OVERS// A REMINDER OF TIMES PAST
A bind over is a power that is available to magistrates but I doubt if more than a handful of JPs have made use of it. The courts and of course the legislators have been smitten with the myriad of banning orders or similar which have multiplied this century like fruit flies in a jam jar. Binding over orders are a civil disposal available in the Criminal Courts and can, in the right circumstances, provide an effective means of dealing with low-level disorder. In summary, they act as a means of postponing a sentence on conditions. Although a bind over isn't a criminal conviction it will show on enhanced DBS checking so for many professionals it would have to be explained to an appropriate authority. The Justices of the Peace Act 1361 permitted a justice of the peace to bind over people who disturbed the peace to provide recognisance to ensure their future good conduct. The CPS guidance on bind over is available here.
My first experience of a bind over was when I did an observation prior to being appointed. A young man had brought a private prosecution against his flatmate for assault. The flatmate countered in court with his own accusation of assault. The justice presiding, in what I considered then a very condescending manner, proceeded to drawl to the plaintiff that unless both parties withdrew their actions they would both be bound over for a year on the recognisance of a charge of £100 to be paid. The plaintiff withdrew the accusation and the matter ended. To this day I am of the opinion that that bench failed to apply the process in accordance with the law. Others might differ. In my personal experience there was but a single occasion when a bind over was the outcome. Despite researches I can find no statistics on how often a bind over was the outcome at magistrates courts for 2022 or any other year.
Today, however, I can report that a bind over was the disposal by magistrates in the Channel Islands. They might be outside the UK but even then in this case I would opine that this was a very loose application of the suitability of such a sentence.
Will such legislation last until its 700th year of application to the laws of England? If pushed I will state that with a government pushing out banning orders like a chicken pushing out eggs it is likely to wither on the vine like so many ancient traditions some admittedly more decoration than functional. Perhaps like the House of Lords its usefulness will be soon a distant reminder of times past.
Tuesday, 6 June 2023
AN ERA OF FEAR
Assuming the Presidency at the depth of the Great Depression, Franklin D. Roosevelt helped the American people regain faith in themselves. He brought hope as he promised prompt, vigorous action and asserted in his Inaugural Address, “the only thing we have to fear is fear itself.”
Tuesday, 30 May 2023
UK AUTHORITARIANISM: AN EARLY WARNING
Speak to politically minded people in the United States of the separation of powers and they will immediately understand the meaning and significance of that phrase. They will quote from the Constitution; the document which to many of them is more important and significant than the Holy Bible on which many were brought up and which is quoted as their moral guiding light. But it is not unlikely that the same phrase offered to the average citizen of these isles will produce no more than a frown and perhaps a questioning reply of "what"? I exclude of course readers on this site from that criticism. The UK lacks a written constitution; a phrase which found much favour during the recent regal festivities. The UK relies on a system of checks and balances to prevent against abuses of power. When the Tudors`, their predecessors` and finally the Stuarts` control of government through the doctrine of the divine right of kings finally ended in 1688 there was gradual constitutional change to representative government where there was at least in theory a separation of powers insofar as a Parliament, an executive and the courts would each have its own perimeters exercising its powers accordingly. When there is or appears to be an imbalance in the powers of these three constituents of that basic democratic system whether in this country or abroad there is a fundamental threat to that democracy. Such imbalances are currently happening in the United States where the Supreme Court populated by a Republican majority appointed by Donald Trump is in opposition to many states legislatures on the subject of abortion. Israel, another country with what was supposed to be a fiercely incorruptible democratic system of government, was recently in constitutional turmoil over its supreme court`s overturning of government policies much to the ire of right wing cabinet members. In all totalitarian states the executive branch has by various means usurped the powers of either or both the other two branches of government. There are those who thought that that sequence of events could never happen here; some are beginning to wonder.
Justice and our courts have been described as a level playing field where an equality of arms allows the guilty to be punished and the innocent to be absolved. The institutions to preserve this noble concept have been separated from the executive and appointed personnel have been tasked with ensuring it functions at arms length from the appointers. There are now questions as to how long this concept will continue to be the basis of our justice bedrock owing to the underlying precepts of the Victims and Prisoners Bill. This is "a Bill to make provision about victims of criminal conduct and others affected by criminal conduct; about the appointment and functions of individuals to act as independent public advocates for victims of major incidents; about the release of prisoners; about the membership and functions of the Parole Board; to prohibit certain prisoners from forming a marriage or civil partnership; and for connected purposes." (my bold).
Under the proposed legislation ministers would have the power to veto the release of dangerous prisoners repeatedly even if approved by the parole board. In actual practice this could affect about 600 prison releases annually. Murderers, rapists and terrorists would have a parole decision to release on license overturned by the executive. It is not unlikely that such new government powers would be welcomed by the hang `em and flog `em brigade of the Right in and out of parliament. Indeed some recent releases where dangerous men have committed further heinous crimes will have reinforced that sentiment. Amongst those voicing their concerns at this worrying increase of ministers` powers are former Tory Secretary of State for Justice David Gaulke and former Tory Prime Minister John Major.
What would be a positive step and yet allay the concerns of those who consider that sentencing for serious criminality is out of step with public opinion would be that the concept of automatic early release is abandoned. Page upon page of the Sentencing Guidelines inform sentencers how to relate all relevant circumstances of the criminal, the crime, the victim and the law into time to be served. Indeed that very process is tailor made to become "the computer says no" or similar scenario in the not too distant future. Let convicts serve their full allotted sentence with early release determined solely by their behaviour in jail and their indications of rehabilitation. But that would require more jails, prison officers and probation staff and so much more money for a system which governments of all shades are parsimonious.
With the current elective dictatorship of the House of Commons this blogger can only hope that there are still some Tory MPs who have a clear sense of what is best for this nation even if their hopes of re-election are slowly fading. No doubt the other place will voice its objections. In August 2019 Boris Johnson provoked a constitutional uproar when he announced plans to shut down parliament for five weeks daring opponents of his Brexit strategy to vote down his government.The government argued that the 2017-19 session was already the longest session of the UK Parliament’s history and that it was entitled to use the Royal Prerogative in this way. It explained that it intended to bring forward a Queen’s Speech to refresh its legislative agenda following the change of Prime Minister in July 2019. The Supreme Court maintained that this long prorogation significantly interfered with the constitutional principles of parliamentary sovereignty and parliamentary accountability. Such an interference required a “reasonable justification”. On the facts the Court concluded the government had not offered any justification for the prorogation’s length, let alone a “reasonable” one and accordingly the decision to prorogue was unlawful. This should provide a salutary lesson that this country is not immune to the surreptitious infiltration of authoritarianism at the highest level of government. The current matter as outlined above is an early warning.
Tuesday, 23 May 2023
ENGLISH JUSTICE HAS LOST ITS SENSE & SENSIBILITY//JUDGES SHOULD HANG THEIR HEADS IN SHAME
I make no apologies for returning to an item the first section of which was posted 7th March with subsequent addendums as the matter progressed. For those unfamiliar with the case of Rex-v-Auriol Grey look here. Last week at the Court of Appeal three judges rejected her argument that the sentence was excessive. The sentencing guideline on manslaughter can be read here. One of the most contentious facts to emerge from the trial was the evidence given by Det Sgt Dollard for the prosecution. Under cross-examination by defence barrister Miranda Moore KC, he said he did not have any evidence to "categorically" show the path was a shared cycleway. The Highways Act 1835 prohibits cycling on a footpath which is by the side of a road and set apart for use by pedestrians only. Shared use pavements are not included in the act so if there's a specific cycle lane on a pavement it's legal to ride on it. I have found no report to confirm the status of the pathway. Ms Moore KC argued that the sentencing judge had made findings of fact against evidence, stating it "came as something of a shock" he found the pavement to be a shared cycleway, despite the local council being unable to confirm that. There is no transcript of the appeal yet published but But Mr Justice Griffiths sitting with Lord Justice William Davis and Judge Neil Flewitt refused to grant permission for Grey to appeal against her sentence concluding it was "not arguably manifestly excessive". According to reports Mr Justice Griffiths said: "A blameless woman had been killed by the unlawful act of [Grey] with devastating impact upon the family she left behind and upon others including the entirely blameless driver of the car." He told the court the sentence passed "had to mark the gravity of the unlawful killing" while taking into account mitigating factors. The sentencing judge Sean Enright had "placed very strong emphasis" on Grey's disabilities, he said. He added: "We do not consider that the recent psychology report calls for a greater reduction than was already given in this respect by the judge."
Nothing I have read since my original post has swayed me from my original opinion that the trial verdict was gross misinterpretation of the evidence, that the trial judge failed in his summing up to give full weight to the defence and that the Appeal Court judges have repeated the the folly of their junior colleague.
But there is a further consideration about what this trial and its outcomes says about English justice. It seems that government policy is to put victims even closer to the supposed centre of justice with the latest announcement The Victims and Prisoners Bill introduced 29 March 2023. Justice is or perhaps in current terms was for decades represented as blind. Pressure from interested parties and failings within the police and prosecution services have led to actions by governments over the last two decades to once again achieve that balance which had certainly been out of kilter insofar as rape and other serious offending had been considered. But like so much legislation in this country it has been slow in formulation and excessive in degree. In the case considered here there was not a single victim; there were two victims. Whilst the guilty verdict is now closed it is surely the case that we have not heard the last of the outrageous sentence imposed at trial and rubber stamped by an Appeal Court which seems to have lost all sense and sensibility. If Auriol Grey has to wait for her sentence to be half completed next year before her release on parole can be contemplated then there should be hangings: English justice and those administering it should hang their heads in shame