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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> De Weever, R v [2009] EWCA Crim 803 (2 April 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2009/803.html Cite as: [2009] EWCA Crim 803, [2010] 1 Cr App R (S) 3, [2010] 1 Cr App Rep (S) 3 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE IRWIN
MR JUSTICE SWEENEY
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R E G I N A | ||
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RAWLE DE WEEVER |
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(i) The victim was not vulnerable in the terms of the guidelines, she was simply an easy target because she was carrying a shoulder back.(ii) This case fell within the bottom category of the guideline relating to theft from the person and thus required, as a starting point, a medium community order with an overall range from a fine to 18 weeks custody.
(iii) As to the other aggravating features relied upon by the learned Recorder, any resultant inconvenience was limited, it not being a case involving the theft of household or car keys, a mobile telephone, diaries and so forth, and too much weight was put on the appellant's previous convictions, not least given that his last conviction for theft was in 1988, and his last offence of dishonesty was in 1992.
"1. Typically, a guideline will apply to an offence that can be committed in a variety of circumstances with different levels of seriousness. It will apply to a first time offender who has been convicted after a trial ...
2. As an aid to consistency of approach, the guidelines describe a number of types of activity which would fall within the broad definition of the offence. These are set out in a column headed 'type/nature of activity'.
3. The expected approach is for a court to identify the description that most nearly matches the particular facts of the offence for which the sentence is being imposed. This will identify a starting point from which the sentencer can depart to reflect aggravating or mitigating factors affecting the seriousness of the offence (beyond those contained within the column describing the type or nature of offence activity) to reach a provisional sentence.
4. The sentencing range is the bracket into which the provisional sentence will normally fall after having regard to factors which aggravate or mitigate the seriousness of the offence. The particular circumstances may, however, make it appropriate that the provisional sentence falls outside the range.
5. Where the offender has previous convictions which aggravate the seriousness of the current offence, that may take the provisional sentence beyond the range given particularly where there are significant other aggravating factors present.
6. Once the provisional sentence has been identified by reference to those factors affecting the seriousness of the offence, the court will take into account any relevant factors of personal mitigation, which may take a sentence beyond the range given.
7. Where there has been a guilty plea, any reduction attributable to that plea will be applied to the sentence at this stage. Again, this reduction may take the sentence below the range provided.
8. The court must give its reasons for imposing a sentence of a different kind or outside the range provided in the guidelines."
Page 9 of the guidelines sets out the decision-making process in a way which is intended to require the structured exercise of discretion.
12. The section specifically concerned with theft from a person is at pages 14 to 15 of the guideline. Paragraph 1 at page 14 makes clear the starting points in sentencing ranges in the table at page 15 relate to first-time adult offender convicted after a trial. Paragraph 2 at page 14 indicates that theft from the person encompasses conduct such as pick-pocketing. Paragraph 7 at page 15 further indicates in relation to pickpocketing that the need for deterrent element in such cases, previously identified in this court in cases such as R v Spencer and Carby (1995) 16 Cr App R(S) 482 is already taken into account in the guidelines. Paragraph 3 at page 14 defines a 'vulnerable victim' as:
"...a person targeted by the offender because it is anticipated that he or she is unlikely or unable to resist the theft. Young or elderly persons or those with disabilities may fall into this category. The exploitation of a vulnerable victim indicates a high level of culpability and will influence the category of seriousness into which the offence falls."
By paragraph 6 at page 14, when assessing the seriousness of an offence, the court must always have regard to the guideline entitled "Overarching Principles: Seriousness" reproduced in annex A, along with additional aggravating features such as.
(i) evidence of planning (paragraph 2 at page 14)(ii) the use of force short of robbery (paragraph 6 (ii) at page 14)
(iii) a high level of inconvenience caused to the victim by theft of items such as credit cards (paragraph 6(iv) at page 14).
(i) the offence was clearly planned and, as the photographs from the CCTV footage show, carried out in a highly professional manner.(ii) it involved the use of force (the push) short of robbery.
(iii) it involved a high level of inconvenience to the victim, who lost, amongst other things, a credit card and a debit card.
(iv) the appellant had a number of previous convictions for theft and attempted theft from the person, albeit their aggravation is tempered by the fact that they were committed many years ago.
(v) More importantly, the appellant has, in the terms of Annex A plainly failed to respond to his most recent sentences. Be it 15 years for attempted murder in 1993 the conditional discharge imposed on him in 2005, 12 months' imprisonment imposed on him in 2006, or the 5 months' imprisonment imposed on him earlier in 2008.