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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 >> Kitchener v R [2017] EWCA Crim 937 (07 July 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2017/937.html Cite as: [2017] EWCA Crim 937, [2017] WLR(D) 460, [2017] 4 WLR 159 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT CARDIFF
THE RECORDER OF CARDIFF
T20027853
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE BLAKE
and
MR JUSTICE WILLIAM DAVIS
____________________
MATTHEW DAVID LEWIS KITCHENER (now known as JUDE MICHAEL ARMEL) |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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REGINA |
Respondent |
____________________
Dominic Connolly (instructed by Crown Prosecution Service) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 26 May 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Flaux:
Introduction
"Neither the Criminal Appeal Act nor the Rules limit the discretion of the court on the issue whether an extension of time should be granted. In this court's experience the principled approach to extensions of time is that the court will grant an extension if it is in the interests of justice to do so. There are, however, several components that contribute to the interests of justice. The court will have in mind the public interest in the proceedings of the Court generally, in particular in the finality of Crown Court judgments, the interests of other litigants, the efficient use of resources and good administration. However, the public interest embraces also, and in our view critically, the justice of the case and the liberty of the individual…Where there is no good reason why an applicant should not have complied with well known time limits this court will be unlikely to grant an extension of time unless injustice would be caused in consequence. Accordingly, the court will examine the merits of the underlying grounds before the decision is made whether to grant an extension of time. The judgment is judicial and not merely administrative."
The offence
The psychiatric evidence before the judge and the sentencing remarks
Fresh evidence
"Disorders of adult personality and behaviour are persistent. They emerge early in the course of a person's development manifesting in late childhood or adolescence, as a result of both constitutional factors and social experience, and continue into adulthood. Specific personality disorders, as diagnosed for Mr Armel are deeply ingrained and enduring behaviour patterns, manifesting as inflexible responses to a broad range of personal and social circumstances. Such behaviour patterns tend to be stable and encompass multiple domains of behaviour and psychological functioning. The evidence of pervasive poor psychological functioning and disturbed behaviours is apparent in Mr Armel's late childhood and early adolescence as outlined in his background history in the main body of this report leading to disruption to his life at home, at his school and his various workplaces. These behavioural patterns would have governed how he perceived, felt, thought and, particularly related to others around him, and it remains a strong possibility that his personality disorders were a factor in the violence he perpetrated during these years of his life."
"had the courts known what we now know, following Mr Armel receiving a significant period of treatment and care in specialist forensic settings geared in providing specialist treatments for personality disorders and that Mr Armel is showing response to this treatment and has been very willing and cooperative in accepting the treatment on offer, they may well have considered the appropriateness of use of a disposal through a Hospital Order… [the applicant] is suffering from a chronic and enduring mental disorder, which remains of a nature that requires treatment in hospital which cannot be provided unless detained under the Mental Health Act".
i) a personality disorder is difficult to detect at age 20, and psychiatrists would be reluctant to reach a conclusion of psychopathic disorder at such a young age;
ii) there is considerably more material now available in terms of the previous history and the response to treatment than would have been available for Dr Thomas to consider when writing his report;
iii) in addition, the applicant had endeavoured to mislead Dr Thomas by attributing his offending to excessive alcohol consumption that was contradicted by the toxicology reports and a reference to hearing voices that has not been supported by subsequent psychiatric investigation. Neither feature is maintained in his present reporting to Dr Joseph, although there was some consumption of alcohol;
iv) there were clear manifestations of the applicant's disorders exhibited before the index offence;
v) his behaviour during the offence was both impulsive and without any apparent motive, itself indicating that it was the product of the disorder as opposed to criminal motive;
vi) given the circumstances of the offence, very considerable attention had been devoted by Rampton and others as to whether there was a possible sexual motive for the offending, but the experts were satisfied that this was not the case.
"The other factor about Dr Thomas is, as has been pointed out, Mr Armel was 20 years old at the time of the offence. Psychiatrists are cautious about making a diagnosis of a personality disorder at around that age. Certainly late teenage or 20s is a young age to be confidently making a diagnosis. I think that is reflected in the legislation with the section 45A order which, as the court is aware, does not apply in somebody under the age of 21. That was an order that was initially only for psychopathic disorder. I think that reflects that psychiatric thinking about being very cautious of making a diagnosis of the legal definition of psychopathic disorder. In psychiatric terms, that refers to any form of personality disorder. I think that is another factor that may well have influenced Dr Thomas into not making the diagnosis.
I think also it strikes me that there was no real in depth analysis of Mr Armel's personality structure until he was being seen by the psychologist Rachel Cooper in around 2006. She saw him for, I think, 18 sessions and did some personality questionnaires, the psychopathy checklist, for example. It was really her intervention that ensured he was not moved to conditions of lesser security within the prison system, but it was her concerns that there was a largely untapped aspect of his personality that had been looked at in prison which led to his eventual transfer to Rampton."
Conclusions on the evidence
"It is important to emphasise that the judge must carefully consider all the evidence in each case and not, as some of the early cases have suggested, feel circumscribed by the psychiatric opinions. A judge must therefore consider, where the conditions in s.37 (2) (a) are met, what is the appropriate disposal. In considering that wider question the matters to which a judge will invariably have to have regard to include (1) the extent to which the offender needs treatment for the mental disorder from which the offender suffers, (2) the extent to which the offending is attributable to the mental disorder, (3) the extent to which punishment is required and (4) the protection of the public including the regime for deciding release and the regime after release. There must always be sound reasons for departing from the usual course of imposing a penal sentence and the judge must set these out."