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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
[2022] HCJAC 8
HCA/21-383/XC
Lord Doherty
Lord Matthews
OPINION OF THE COURT
delivered by LORD DOHERTY
in
APPEAL AGAINST SENTENCE
by
KEIRAN WEBSTER
Appellant
against
HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE
Respondent
Appellant: Ogg, Solicitor Advocate; Paterson Bell Solicitors (for Keith Tuck Solicitors, Glasgow)
Respondent: Way AD; Crown Agent
1 February 2022
Introduction
[1]
The appellant was born in November 1997. On 9 June 2021 at Dumbarton Sheriff
Court he pled guilty to 3 charges. Charge (1) was a contravention of the Civic Government
(Scotland) Act 1982, section 52(1)(a) by taking or permitting to be taken or making indecent
photographs or pseudo-photographs of children on various occasions between 1 February
2019 and 22 February 2021. Charge (2) was a contravention of the Civic Government
2
(Scotland) Act 1982, section 52A(1) by having in his possession indecent photographs or
pseudo-photographs of children on various occasions between 1 February 2019 and
23 February 2021. Both of those offences were aggravated by having been committed while
on bail. Charge (5) was a charge of breaching a condition of bail by failing to provide
devices capable of browsing the internet to the police when requested to do so on
23 February 2021.
[2]
On 1 October 2021 the sheriff sentenced the appellant to 6 months imprisonment in
respect of charge (5) to commence from 24 February 2021. That sentence had been reduced
from a headline sentence of 8 months to reflect the timing of the appellant's plea of guilty.
In respect of charges (1) and (2) he imposed a cumulo extended sentence of 66 months, being
a custodial term of 30 months and an extension period of 36 months. The sheriff`s starting
point was a headline custodial term of 40 months which was reduced to 30 months because
of the timing of the plea of guilty. The sentence for charges (1) and (2) was consecutive to
the sentence imposed on charge (5). The sheriff also imposed a Sexual Offences Prevention
Order for a period of 5 years in respect of charges (1) and (2).
The circumstances of the offences
[3]
The circumstances of the offences are as follows.
Charges (1) and (2)
[4]
On 3 April 2020 police officers attended at the appellant's address and seized his
laptop and mobile phone. On 29 October 2020 they again attended there and seized another
mobile phone from him. The police recovered from the laptop 113 Category A still images
and 749 Category A moving images. From the first mobile phone they recovered 10
3
Category A moving images and 1 Category A still image. From the second mobile phone
they recovered 987 Category A still images and 1,852 Category A moving images. Many
thousands of Category B and Category C images, both moving and still, were also recovered
from the devices. There were a number of bookmarks to websites containing indecent
images of children. The images on the devices were indecent and were of both male and
female children aged between 1 and 15 years. The search histories of the devices disclosed
searches for indecent material involving children. The second mobile phone was found to
have programs installed which can be used to conceal or remove the internet history of a
user, permanently delete files, and ensure that internet activity is not logged by the internet
provider.
Charge (5)
[5]
When the police attended at the appellant's home on 23 February 2021 he stated that
he did not own any devices. He was reminded that one of his bail conditions required him
to produce all devices capable of accessing the internet. He then produced a mobile phone
which had been hidden in his bed sheets and stated that that was the only device he had.
However, after a search the police also recovered a USB stick and a hard drive from
underneath the bed sheet.
Previous conviction
[6]
The appellant's only previous conviction was on 3 October 2019 for a contravention
of the Firearms Act 1968, section 5(1)(b). The weapons concerned were pepper spray
canisters. On 21 November 2019 he was sentenced to a Community Payback Order with a
supervision requirement for 12 months.
4
The criminal justice social work reports and Professor Macpherson's report
[7]
The material before the sheriff included a criminal justice social work report
("CJSWR") dated 9 July 2021. The author recorded that the appellant had had a difficult
upbringing. He had suffered mental health difficulties in September 2017. He was admitted
to hospital for a month because of suicidal ideation. Since then he had had periods when he
struggled to cope with anxiety, stress and low mood, and he had frequent contact with
emergency services due to self-harm and suicidal ideation. He did not effectively utilise the
services available to him when in crisis, and his attendance at appointments was sporadic.
He had a diagnosis of Emotionally Unstable/Borderline Personality Disorder which
probably stemmed from childhood experiences. The author assessed the appellant as
having a moderate risk of reconviction for a sexual offence. She observed:
"The viewing of indecent images may not indicate a propensity to cause serious
harm by the individual viewing them however the children who were abused in the
creation of these images and videos are likely to have suffered physical and
emotional trauma which is likely to be long lasting and/or impossible to recover
from...."
In the event of the imposition of a custodial sentence she recommended consideration be
given to a period of post-release supervision in order that offence focused interventions
could be undertaken in the community upon release. She requested that the appellant be
assessed by a psychologist to provide a more accurate assessment of his risk and
manageability in the community. A matter of further interest is that she noted that during
the supervision for his Community Payback Order the appellant indicated that he had
thoughts about killing people and of shooting himself and others; and that he would like to
kill someone as he would "find it funny to watch them suffer".
[8]
Professor Gary Macpherson, a consultant forensic clinical psychologist, prepared a
report dated 28 July 2021. In that report Professor Macpherson advised that internet-only
5
offenders such as the appellant have consistently been found to have the lowest rates of
going on to carry out contact sex offences. On the other hand, the appellant had a very high
risk of analogous non-contact re-offending in the absence of any intervention or supervision.
He indicated that after his release the appellant would continue to require monitoring and
supervision in the community, and that his registration on the Sex Offenders Register would
be an additional safeguard to remind him of his obligations.
[9]
In a Supplementary CJSWR dated 29 September 2021 the author confirmed that
Professor Macpherson's assessment of the appellant's risk of re-offending is likely to be a
more accurate assessment than the author's assessment. In the event of a custodial sentence
being imposed she recommended consideration being given to a substantial period of
post-release supervision.
The sheriff's report
[10]
In paragraph 16 of his report the sheriff expressed the view that the imposition of an
extended sentence was necessary to prevent further offending. He saw the appellant's
accessing of indecent images as being harmful - "causing horrendous damage to the
children involved".
The appeal
[11]
The appellant appeals against sentence.
[12]
Following a further remit to him by this court, Professor Macpherson prepared a
supplementary report dated 20 January 2022. In that report he clarified that only a very
small minority of non-contact sexual offenders go on to commit contact offences. Internet
offenders who are lower in self-control are more likely to commit non-contact offences than
6
internet offenders who have greater self-control. In his view the appellant lacks self-control.
Professor Macpherson noted that the appellant had frequented chat rooms where there had
been discussion and sharing of images. He regarded the appellant's reported comments
about wanting to kill someone and see them suffer as being a highly unusual and sadistic set
of beliefs and evidence of an anti-social orientation. The appellant's previous purchase of
pepper spray canisters was further evidence of an anti-social orientation.
Professor Macpherson considers that the appellant requires post-release supervision,
whether via an extended sentence or other means. However, on the basis of the material
available to him he does not believe that the appellant poses a risk of serious harm to the
public.
Submissions for the appellant
[13]
The solicitor advocate for the appellant, Ms Ogg, did not challenge the sentence
imposed for charge (5). She submitted that the sentence imposed on charges (1) and (2), and
the totality of the sentences imposed, were excessive.
[14]
First, the imposition of an extended sentence on charges (1) and (2) had been
incompetent. On the facts the sheriff had not been entitled to find that an extended sentence
was necessary to protect the public from serious harm from the appellant. He had fallen
into the same error as the sheriffs in Wood v H M Advocate 2017 JC 185. Here, as there, the
only material risk was of further non-contact offending by the appellant. That was not
sufficient to be serious harm within the meaning of section 210A(1)(b) of the Criminal
Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995. In any case, even if it had been competent to pass an
extended sentence, the sheriff ought not to have done so because the making of the Sexual
Offences Prevention Order provided adequate protection for the public.
7
[15]
Second, the sheriff's headline custodial term of 40 months was excessive having
regard to the appellant's age at the time of the offences (21 to 23), his history of mental
health problems, and the nature and circumstances of the offences. It was submitted that
reference to the criteria discussed in HM Advocate v Graham 2011 JC 1 and in the Sentencing
Council for England and Wales' Definitive Guideline suggested that 40 months was
excessive. Under the Definitive Guideline the top of the range for a Category A possession
offence was 3 years imprisonment. The headline sentence for charges (1) and (2) ought to
have been less than that given the appellant's youth, immaturity, and mental health issues.
[16]
Third, when the totality of the sentences was considered it was clear that the total of
the headline sentences 48 months - is excessive. A shorter total would have fulfilled all of
the sentencing purposes.
Decision and reasons
Was an extended sentence competent and appropriate?
[17]
Section 210A of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995 provides:
"210A Extended sentences for sex, violent and terrorist offenders.
(1)
Where a person is convicted on indictment of a sexual, violent or
terrorism offence, the court may, if it--
(a)
intends, in relation to--
(i)
a sexual offence, to pass a determinate sentence of
imprisonment...
(b)
considers that the period (if any) for which the offender would, apart
from this section, be subject to a licence would not be adequate for the
purpose of protecting the public from serious harm from the offender...
pass an extended sentence on the offender.
...
(4)
A court shall, before passing an extended sentence, consider a report by a
relevant officer of a local authority about the offender and his circumstances and, if
the court thinks it necessary, hear that officer.
...
(10)
For the purposes of this section--
8
...
`imprisonment' includes--
(i)
detention under section 207 of this Act;
..."
[18]
In Wood v HM Advocate 2017 JC 185 each of the appellants pled guilty to offences
involving the making and possession of indecent images of children, including Category A
images. Each received an extended sentence. The court held that the sheriffs had not been
entitled to impose extended sentences. It observed:
"[27] ... such a sentence is only to be imposed where the court is satisfied that the
period for which the offender would otherwise be subject to a licence would `not be
adequate for the purpose of protecting the public from serious harm'. Although the
sheriffs have attempted to justify the sentences in terms of the section, it is simply not
possible to classify these appellants as posing a risk of `serious harm' to the public
were they to be released during the course of, or at the end of, the period of custody
imposed. In order to reach a contrary conclusion, a somewhat convoluted course of
reasoning would require to be adopted, whereby a connection would be established
between accessing the pornographic images and the risk to those who might appear
in similar images in the future. Such a connection does exist in general terms, but to
classify it as involving a risk of `serious harm' to the public in the sense intended in
the legislation is an error (see, eg Taylor v HM Advocate; Barron v HM Advocate;
Morrison, Sentencing Practice, para N17.0007; see for England and Wales R v Dixon).
It follows that, in each appeal, the extended element of the sentences must be
quashed."
[19]
In the present case the high risk of re-offending which Professor Macpherson pointed
to was a risk of analogous non-contact offending. The harm to children which the sheriff
identified and relied upon appears to us to be of precisely the sort which the Court in Wood
ruled did not amount to serious harm within the meaning of section 210A. It follows that
the sheriff's reasons for imposing an extended sentence do not withstand scrutiny.
However, the question remains whether, looking at the matter de novo, the court ought to
conclude that there are good reasons which make its imposition an available and
appropriate disposal.
9
[20]
In that regard we have given particular attention to the following factors. First, it is
significant that, while most non-contact sex offenders do not go on to commit contact sex
offences, the very small minority who do are likely to exhibit low self-control. The appellant
has low self-control. Second, he frequented chat groups where there was discussion and
sharing of indecent images of children (cf. Doherty v HM Advocate 2019 JC 40,
paragraphs [12]-[14]). Third, his statements about wanting to kill someone and watch them
suffer are evidence of a highly unusual and sadistic set of beliefs, and of an anti-social
orientation. His previous purchase of pepper spray canisters is further evidence of an anti-
social orientation. Fourth, both the author of the criminal justice social work reports and
Professor Macpherson are very clear indeed about the need in this case for post-release
supervision, whether by way of an extended sentence or otherwise.
[21]
So far as the first factor is concerned, even allowing for the fact that the appellant's
low self-control makes him more likely to form part of the very small minority of internet
offenders who go on to commit contact offences, all of the evidence suggests that the risk
appears to be a very small one.
[22]
There is very little information about the content of any discussions which the
appellant may have had in chat rooms about indecent images. By contrast, in Doherty the
appellant participated in extreme discussions about the images with others in which he
commented on his wish to have sex with children and infants, and he demonstrated a
propensity to engage in future indecent conduct with children. Not only did he access the
images, he also distributed them, magnifying the demand for such material. The court
concluded that his engagement in online discussions, not only about the images but about
abusing children generally, might induce others to engage in such behaviour.
10
[23]
The statements which the appellant made about killing someone and wanting to
watch someone suffer are concerning. The appellant denies that they were made in earnest.
Ms Ogg submitted that they perhaps demonstrated his immaturity. That may be so. In the
whole circumstances we have not attached any great weight to these statements. We are
mindful that the appellant has never committed any violent offence, and that we are
considering a sentence which is in respect of non-contact sexual offences.
[24]
Ultimately, we conclude that in the present case the appellant's circumstances are
insufficient to meet the requirements of section 210A(1)(b).
[25]
We draw some comfort from the fact that in his supplementary report
Professor Macpherson concludes that the appellant does not pose a risk of serious harm to
the public. While we recognise that that question is in the end one for the court to decide,
we have reached the same conclusion as Professor Macpherson has, and we are grateful to
him for the considerable assistance which he has given us.
[26]
We regret, given the clear support for it from the author of the criminal justice social
work reports and from Professor Macpherson, that the option of a period of post-licence
supervision is not available to us. It is not competent for us to impose either an extended
sentence or a supervised release order. In Wood the court concluded its opinion by
observing:
"[27] ...[T]he utility of using a deterrent custodial sentence combined with a period
of extended supervision thereafter would, in cases such as those under
consideration, seem clear, even if the current statutory tests for doing so are not met.
This is a matter which the Scottish Government and/or the Scottish Sentencing
Council may wish to consider in due course."
In Doherty, at paragraph [15], the court agreed with those observations. This case further
demonstrates the desirability of consideration being given to reform of the law in this area.
11
Was the custodial term excessive?
[27]
The custodial term was not excessive in the circumstances. We consider that
reference to the part of the Sentencing Council for England and Wales Definitive Guideline
which deals with indecent photographs of children supports the headline sentence of
40 months. We are dealing with a cumulo sentence passed for two offences, possession of
indecent images and the taking or permitting to be taken or making of indecent images.
Each offence was a Category A offence. There are a large number of aggravating factors.
There were a very large number of Category A moving images and Category A still images,
as well as an even greater number of Category B images and Category C images. In some
cases the children depicted were very young and vulnerable indeed. The images involved a
large number of different children. The pain and distress of many of the children will have
been discernible. The offences were committed over a lengthy period. There was active
involvement in chat rooms. There was deliberate and systematic searching for indecent
images portraying very young children. Several devices were used. One of the devices had
programs installed which can be used to conceal or remove the internet history of a user,
permanently delete files, and ensure that internet activity is not logged by the internet
provider. The only significant mitigating circumstances are the appellant's relative youth
and immaturity at the time of the commission of the offences - he was aged 21 to 23 - and his
mental health history. In our view, even without the bail contraventions, a cumulo sentence
at or very near 3 years was appropriate. Account also has to be taken of the bail
contraventions. When that is done it is clear that the headline custodial term of 40 months
cannot be said to be excessive.
12
Was the totality of the sentences imposed excessive?
[28]
Ms Ogg accepted that the headline sentence on charge (5) was not excessive. Nor, as
we have already indicated, was the headline custodial term for charges (1) and (2) excessive.
Ms Ogg also accepted that it was entirely appropriate for the sheriff to make the sentence on
charges (1) and (2) consecutive to the sentence on charge (5), but she submitted that their
combined length is excessive. We disagree. We are not persuaded that the totality of the
two sentences is excessive.
Disposal
[29]
We shall allow the appeal but only to the extent of quashing the sentence which the
sheriff passed for charges (1) and (2) and substituting a sentence of 30 months'
imprisonment. That sentence has been discounted from a headline sentence of 40 months
because of the timing of the plea of guilty. As before, the sentence is consecutive to the
sentence on charge (5).
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