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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 >> Attorney General Reference Nos 1 & 6 of 2008 [2008] EWCA Crim 677 (04 March 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2008/677.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Crim 677, [2008] 2 Cr App R (S) 99, [2008] 2 Cr App Rep (S) 99, [2008] Crim LR 577 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
PRESIDENT OF THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MR JUSTICE FORBES
MR JUSTICE MACKAY
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REFERENCE BY THE ATTORNEY GENERAL UNDER | ||
S.36 OF THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE ACT 1988 | ||
ATTORNEY-GENERAL'S REFERENCE NO NOS 1 & 6 OF 2008 | ||
(SIMBARASHE DZIRUNI) | ||
(JEAN CLAUD JUSTIN LABY) |
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"... it does not seem to me in the public interest that anybody should be detained for any length of time, when there are so few places in prison for those serving other sentences, so my personal approach to this, ... that, for the vast majority of these cases, we should be looking at substantially lower sentences, to facilitate their removal from the country."
Counsel for the offender did not wish to add anything in the light of that observation, and so Judge Mort moved to sentence. He recorded the facts and he then said this:
"You will understand that at the moment in the United Kingdom there are difficulties in controlling the movements into and out of the country of those who come from abroad. If therefore somebody is found with false identity documents, then the courts always impose prison sentences to try to stop other people doing the same.
I am told that you are in dual detention; in other words that the Home Office intends shortly to deport, you. Normally, for an offence of this type, particularly involving documents (three separate sets of false documents) you might expect to receive a sentence of nine to 12 months' imprisonment.
However, it seems to me that, where you are in dual detention and the Home Office is anxious that you should be returned to the Democratic Republic of Congo at the earliest opportunity, it is in the public interest that the sentence should be much lower than that and, in these circumstances, the sentence which I impose, concurrent for each offence, is one of four months' imprisonment."
There was then some further explanation of the sentence. Counsel for the Crown asked the judge whether he was making a recommendation for deportation. The judge said that he did not think that was appropriate where the defendant was in dual detention and, in any event, he was not persuaded that the presence of the offender in this country was necessary to be regarded as to the public detriment.
"Employers find difficulty in recruiting employees from among the indigenous population to do the sort of work that [the offender] and several of his countrymen that I have dealt with of late undertake."
The judge then analysed the work, and he came to the conclusion that underlining the problem for this man and others like him was:
"...the knowledge that they cannot go home and they are not being made to go home and, as such I feel that they are in an entirely different situation from people from other parts of the world who come to this country often as financial migrants, people who want to earn more money in this country but who could go home at any time. This is a different category."
He then suggested that the offender in this case, and others like him, using false identity documents in the circumstances which obtained here or in similar circumstances "would be classed as entirely decent hard working and law-abiding people."
"...by choosing to buy the forged passport and the altered document they are choosing a criminal way, and for that in this country, they must be punished. My dilemma has been the nature of the punishment that must be imposed on these people who I say are otherwise are decent people and who are people who could well find themselves in our midst for several years and, indeed, it is not beyond the bounds of possibility that, in due course, they might well become citizens of the United Kingdom."
"The issue that I have is not with the principle, that is the principle that the public interest deserves protecting, but as to the appropriate sentence necessary to protect the public interest when the facts were...a person who can stay in this country who cannot work, nor claim any substantial state benefits above barely subsistence level maintenance."
He then decided that this case fell into what he described as "a very limited class of case, very restricted" of people permitted to live here, and endure living here because they could not be sent back home to their own country.
In our judgment, it is not a sufficient deterrence if the penalty is a very short period of incarceration followed by a quick return journey home. Accordingly, we have concluded that the sentence on Laby was unduly lenient. The penal element of the sentence on him was over reduced and significantly diminished beyond the appropriate level.
It is not a sufficient ground for departing from the guidance offered by Kolawole, and the pattern of sentencing decisions of the court on this topic, that the offender will soon be on his way out of the this country.