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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 >> Turner v R [2015] EWCA Crim 1249 (17 July 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2015/1249.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Crim 1249 |
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Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE BLAKE
and
THE RECORDER OF LONDON
____________________
JENNIFER TURNER |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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REGINA |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Iain Wicks (for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 19 June, 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr Justice Blake:
i) the extent to which the offender needs treatment for the mental disorder from which she suffers;
ii) the extent to which the offending is attributable to the mental disorder;
iii) the extent to which punishment is required;
iv) the protection of the public including the regime for deciding release and the regime after release.
The offences
The information before the sentencing judge
"I needed a drink because drink takes away the agitation. I went to a garage and told them I had a knife (although I didn't) and asked for money. They refused so I walked out with a bottle of wine…I didn't feel like I was in reality ..,it was like I was in a dream".
"I completely regret having a knife on me. If I had been sober there's no way I would have done it"
She added that she drank alcohol because she was agitated.
i. There have been occasions when she has threatened him with a knife when intoxicated.
ii. She sometimes drinks alcohol to help her deal with her emotional problems but it tends only to exacerbate them
iii. During her current period of remand she has become more settled and grown in confidence.
i. The appellant was not suffering from any delusions or hallucinations and therefore was not suffering from a psychotic illness.
ii. The provisions of the Mental Health Act 1983 have no current relevance.
iii. There is a positive history of mental health problems within Ms. Turner's close family indicating a predisposition to develop mental illness.
iv. Dr Lovett has diagnosed her as suffering from social anxiety disorder and harmful use of alcohol in the context of personality problems of an impulsive and emotionally unstable nature which amount to borderline personality disorder.
v. This formulation of her mental disorder was agreed.
vi. At the time of the index offences her maladaptive behaviours were influenced by dis-inhibition caused on one occasion by benzodiazepine medication Diazepam and on the other occasion by alcohol.
vii. There is a significant risk of harm to the public and/or to herself should she continue to misuse alcohol as she has done in the past.
viii. Her mental disorders and substance misuse are treatable. A condition of psychiatric treatment attached to a community based sentence would enhance the opportunity to safely manage her risks in the community.
ix. Should she receive a custodial sentence she would remain a vulnerable inmate but she appears to have adjusted to a degree to the routine of her current location and is responding to the support of the prison mental health services
x. Her risk of suicide would be raised in the immediate context of receiving a custodial sentence that would need to be brought to the attention of the relevant establishment.
"mental illness, psychopathic disorder or mental impairment"
and that either
"the mental disorder from which the offender is suffering is of a nature or degree which makes it appropriate for him to be detained in a hospital for medical treatment"
or
"the court is of the opinion having regard to all the circumstances including the nature of the offence and the character and antecedents of the offender, and to other available methods of dealing with him, that the most suitable means of disposing of the case is by means of an order under this section."
"Treatment in hospital for those with personality disorders under a hospital and restriction order under s.37/41 of the MHA should generally only be considered for those who also have a mental illness or brain damage. There are two major considerations. First if an order is made under s.37/41 of the MHA, then if the disorder is in the result untreatable, there is a risk that the offender will remain in hospital for an indefinite period, as the FTT cannot release him if the risk to the public continues. Psychiatrists are therefore concerned to ensure that they are not "stuck" with such an offender. This is a serious risk which psychiatrists are anxious to avoid. Second a range of treatment of those with personality disorders is available in a range of specialist prisons."
"The offender is suffering from a mental disorder of such a nature and degree as to make it appropriate for (her) to be detained in a hospital for medical treatment and appropriate treatment is available"..
Fresh Evidence
"the mental disorder from which the person is suffering is of a nature or degree which makes it appropriate for him to be detained in hospital for medical treatment".
i) The appellant suffers from a personality disorder that is a mental disorder within the MHA as amended.
ii) The nature of the disorder, her clear history of prolonged self-injurious behaviour, her tendency to act impulsively and current presentation where she continues to self harm indicates that her disorder is of a degree to necessitate inpatient treatment for her own safety as well as the safety of others.
iii) Treatment for emotionally unstable personality disorder is primarily psychological with the greatest evidence supporting dialectical behavioural therapy; interventions are aimed at supporting the individual to develop skills to tolerate and manage distress and urges to self harm. Pharmacological treatments are also used to help alleviate distress; special nursing and occupational therapy are also integral.
iv) Since admission to Ardenleigh she has been making slow but steady progress with significantly fewer acts of self harm. She is abstinent from alcohol within a controlled environment.
v) It is not envisaged that the applicant would be psychologically robust enough to return to prison yet and there are concerns about her ability to maintain her own safety in a custodial setting
Oral evidence of Dr Scally
"She receives a multi disciplinary variety of treatments. She receives several medications, including antidepressant, mood stabilising, anti psychotic and sedative medications. These are aimed to help her with her distressing thoughts and with times that she hears voices. She also receives psychological therapy. This is aimed to help with difficult emotions, learn better problem solving skills and to manage her anxiety in a more helpful way. This is reinforced by intensive specialist nursing intervention of the ward level on a day to day basis. She also benefits from occupational therapy to develop her interests, her sense of self and the sense of her aims and ambitions for the future."
"In my view her substance misuse, both alcohol and cannabis, can be understood within the features of her emotional unstable personality disorder. She struggles with difficult emotions and struggles to manage difficult emotions in a helpful, adaptive way and alcohol and substances appears to be a way she used to manage difficult emotions and often patients do describe quite defective ways of managing emotions in the short term. It also can be seen as another way, another example of self destructive behaviour and acting in ways that longer term are self destructive ..In my view, the substance misuse can be understood for being the context of her personality disorder."
And later in evidence she added
"I think it would be extremely unlikely that the offending would have occurred if there was no mental disorder. Ms Turner has shown no anti social tendencies, no pro criminal tendencies."
"I think it would take a very, very long time for Ms Turner to have the resilience to be able to return to prison. It would be much more foreseeable that she would be have the resilience to return to conditions of lesser security and greater dependence, for example supported community living. As I say the threshold will be much higher for return to prison and that will take many, many months if not years."
"Social anxiety would be counted as a mental illness in of itself probably great enough of an age or degree to have necessitated in-patient treatment…. Social anxiety would have been a mental illness….there would also be the consideration of the emotional unstable personality disorder which would have fallen under the criteria of a psychopathic disorder under the old Act."
She added that the subsequent medical history can now be seen to indicate the severity of the disorders from which she was suffering at the time of sentence:
"I think the underlying diagnosis having remained the same. I think what emerged was how resistant to treatment it was and how challenging she would find the prison environment."
Conclusions
"Any case involving as it does reliance on evidence of mental condition not adduced at the time of the original court appearances must require the most careful scrutiny. That we have sought to give it, though our conclusions can be stated almost summarily. We are satisfied that the appellant met the section 37 criteria at the time of sentencing. Moreover, a sentence can be varied if satisfaction of those criteria only becomes apparent after sentencing: see R v De Silva (1994) 15 Cr App R(S) 296."
The extent to which the offender needs treatment for the mental disorder from which she suffers;
The extent to which the offending is attributable to the mental disorder
The extent to which punishment is required
The protection of the public including the regime for deciding release and the regime after release.