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England and Wales Care Standards Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Care Standards Tribunal >> Peach v Secretary Of State for Education and Skills [2007] EWCST 1056(PC) (08 August 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCST/2008/1056(PC).html Cite as: [2007] EWCST 1056(PC) |
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Peach v Secretary Of State for Education and Skills [2007] EWCST 1056(PC) (08 August 2008)
REPRESENTATION
Ms R-M Hill(Counsel) Instructed by Burnley-Jones Bate and Co for the Appellant.
Ms Z Leventhal (Counsel) instructed by the Treasury Solicitor for the Secretary of State.
THE APPEAL
BACKGROUND
"Q – This one shows 11-15 year old boys Gay Sex Google Search, last visited 5th June 06, at 03.23, would that have been you accessing it at the time?
A – If I wasn't on air then yes probably."
THE EVIDENCE
PS Chapple
DS Welsh
Mr Peach
Professor Green
Ms Valerie Sheehan
THE LAW
(a) it is satisfied that he was guilty of misconduct (whether or not in the course of his duties) which harmed a child or placed a child at risk of harm; and
(b) it is satisfied that he is unsuitable to work with children.
"'harm' means ill-treatment or the impairment of health or development including, for example, impairment suffered from seeing or hearing the ill-treatment of another;
'development' means physical, intellectual, emotional, social or behavioural development;
'health' means physical or mental health;
'ill-treatment' includes sexual abuse and forms of ill-treatment which are not physical."
In CN v Secretary of State, [2004] 398.PC in a case also concerning convictions for making indecent images of children, the Tribunal came to the following finding at paragraph 24:
"The children who appear on these sites are real children, and we are absolutely clear that their appearance on the sites constitutes an abuse of them by those who place them on the internet. Those who access such sites are furthering the abuse. In short, the children are at risk of harm as defined by the Children Act 1989 section 31 which states that harm means "ill-treatment or the impairment of the health or development" of the child. The first limb of the test is satisfied."
a. Unsuitability must be judged by the Tribunal at the date of the hearing.
b. The judgment will involve consideration of the character, disposition, capacity and ability of the individual concerned, including his or her ability to act properly in potentially difficult or frustrating circumstances.
c. The judgment will inevitably be, at least in part, by way of deduction from past performance, including (but not limited to) the nature and extent of the misconduct, admitted or proved in the course of the proceedings, which harmed a child or placed a child at risk of harm.
d. The Tribunal may have regard to: the number of the incidents constituting the misconduct; the gravity of that misconduct; the time that has elapsed since that misconduct; the timing and degree of recognition by the applicant that the conduct constituted misconduct and that it had the potential to harm a child; the steps taken by the applicant to minimise the possibility of there being a recurrence of that or like misconduct; and extenuating circumstances surrounding the misconduct.
"We cannot underestimate the importance we attach to public confidence. When the Tribunal considers the question of unsuitability, it must look at the factual situation in the widest possible context. It may well be, as the Tribunal has said before (eg BR v Secretary of State [2003] 205.PC) that it is unfortunate that the 1999 Act does not enable the Secretary of State or a Tribunal to prohibit a person from being employed by a child care organisation in some positions while allowing him or her to be employed in others, in the way that the Education Act 2002 does. It is our view that it is the clear intention of Parliament that the language of the Act requires us to take a broad view having regard to the degree of risk posed by the Appellant, but also to acknowledge that the public at large and those who entrust their children into the hands of professionals have a right to expect, indeed to demand, that such people who are placed in such important positions of trust working with children "in a child care position" are beyond reproach." (emphasis added.)
"The purpose of the listing scheme is to protect children from those who are employed to work with them and to maintain public confidence in the care provided to children. Listing under the scheme involves a difficult balancing exercise between the safety of children and the rights of individuals to have their livelihoods and reputations safeguarded (see Lady Justice Hale in R v The Secretary of State for Health ex parte C (2000) EWCA 49)."
FINDINGS OF FACT
"I'd worked out no one could see me…I thought I could delete them and no one would know because it's a lot of older people at the radio and the computers were quite a new system there I thought no one would know how to use them that well to look into it,,,,,I sat under the desk….. and you know…..I made it look like I was trying to work on my demo tape and I sort of sat under the desk slightly more to look down to compare myself…. I touched myself again to get the erection to compare."
GENERAL FINDINGS
DECISION POCA
DECISION POVA
This is the unanimous decision of the Tribunal.
Mr I Robertson (nominated Chair)
Mr D Cook
Ms J Wade
Date: 8th August 2008