I retired from the magistracy in 2015 after 17 years mainly as a presiding justice

United Kingdom
My current blog can be accessed at https://thejusticeofthepeaceblog.blogspot.com/

UNAUTHORISED FILMING IN COURT

 15. Aug. 2010. – 12:31:34 

There is a grouping of individuals who call themselves Freemen of England whose prime entertainment is their anarchic behaviour when confronted by the legislation that most of the time allows most of us to live peaceful lives within a clearly defined set of rules. Their refusal to recognise the courts system has been well documented. Colleagues on my own bench have been faced with their attempted disruption. I was in court when an individual failed to appear on a charge of contempt related to the above mentioned disruption. I presume his subsequent probable arrest would have jolted his sense of separateness. 

One such event was filmed and is available on YouTube. 

I have always been under the impression that recording of proceedings in court was illegal and any person caught so doing is liable to be dealt with under the Contempt of Court Act 1981 maximum sentence one month custody or s41 Criminal Justice Act 1925 carrying a maximum of £1,000 fine. What I was unaware of until reading a newspaper report recently was that in the Crown Court a judge hearing an appeal from a magistrates` court had the authority to allow such recording. When permission was requested in writing from the appellant “ The judge sent a message back, saying he could apply for permission to record the proceedings – but such an application had to be made in person.”

With the over the counter availability of button sized TV cameras and transmitters it is only a matter of time before the surreptitious recording and broadcasting of a major case and/or jury room discussion is a reality. There is an argument that court proceedings should be available to all who wish to observe. Some would say that this development not dissimilar to broadcasting Parliament is overdue. Has this matter been given any consideration by Her Majesty`s Court Service?

MAGISTRATES AND THE OFFICE FOR JUDICIAL COMPLAINTS

 

14. Aug. 2010. – 16:33:08

Those appointed as Justice of the Peace are very clearly made aware that their public position makes them liable to very severe strictures on the conduct of their private life insofar as it might tarnish the image of the magistracy. Thus a fortnight ago a member of the Waltham Forest Bench who was also a local councillor was removed. The Office for Judicial Complaints issued the following statement;

“Mr Graham Sinclair, a magistrate appointed to the Waltham Forest Bench, failed to notify the Department for Work and Pensions of a material change in circumstances that would have affected his entitlement to benefit. A judicial investigation found his actions fell below the standards expected of a magistrate. As a result, the Lord Chief Justice and the Lord Chancellor have
agreed that Mr Sinclair should be removed from the magistracy.”

However the only press reports concerning this gentleman which could conceivably be pertinent inform that in January 2009 he [and his wife] were unanimously found not guilty of fraud. Without further knowledge more comment is impossible but the message is very clear that a J.P. must not only be whiter than white in his conduct but be seen to be such.

On June 24th Ms June Thomson was removed from her post because she had failed to declare fixed penalty speeding endorsements and penalties. Since the beginning of the year seven magistrates have been removed from the magistracy for failing to show commitment and/or failing to maintain contact with their bench. That usually indicates that the individual has not been able to maintain the minimum number of sittings required.

The OJC removed twenty five J.P.s in the year ended 31/03/2010. So far this year beginning 01/04/2010 twelve J.P.s have been removed. These numbers indicate that the removal rate has increased considerably. With increasing financial pressures on almost everyone it seems likely that many colleagues will seek to reduce their availability to sit in order to maximise their income. It is also unfortunately the case that more, especially those on low incomes, might be tempted to maximise their income but in doing so attempt to obtain benefits to which they are not entitled. With fervent declarations by magistrates and their spokesmen that they are representative of the population at large what could be more representative of that population than when up against financial collapse some turn out to be dishonest.

THE VAGARIES OF STATISTICS

 12. Aug. 2010. – 12:12:00 

It is well known that artists and photographers can create dramatic effects by the judicious use of contrast. Indeed using contrast in a literary context can heighten the writer`s intended effect of his words on a reader who might have been lulled into temporary stasis by tiredness or simple boredom.

But when news items throw into stark relief misinterpretation or an incredible demonstration of a retreat from reality on important topics one just wonders.

Many studies have demonstrated that between 5% and 20% of drivers are uninsured at any one time. That there is no confirmed figure is an indication of the uncertainty on the prevalence of this offence. Considering that every taxed vehicle must be insured and the results can be obtained on hand held computers by police it is surely only a short time until agreed proven figures for uninsured drivers will be published. Nevertheless it is surprising that during a recent police check on the A51 out of more than 3000 vehicles stopped in a four hour period only four were seized at the roadside for having no insurance. The conclusions are fairly limited.

A} Not every non insured driver had his vehicle seized
B} Some cases required further investigation
C} National statistics are wholly inaccurate
D} Drivers on that day at that time were not typical of various statistical databases
E} Police computers were faulty

I suppose some senior plod in Cheshire Police decided the exercise was an efficient use of limited resources.

GOODBYE TO LOCAL JUSTICE

 11. Aug. 2010. – 13:02:45 

Almost every local newspaper every week for the last few weeks has been carrying a story about the possible closure of a local Magistrates` Court. These intended closures have been variously described as a slap in the face for local justice, an interference in the rights of local people etc etc. Before parliament rose the questions from M.P.s to the Minister of Justice on the closures were coming thick and fast. 



Sitting on a large bench in a metropolitan area “local” is less significant perhaps to my colleagues and me than it is to those in more rural areas. The subject is exercising contributors to the Magistrates` Association Forum. I would opine that the mantra “local justice for local people” will be as hackneyed in a few years as “bob a job week” is for the Scouting Movement. In most aspects of our lives there has been a determined push by government to centralise all that is recorded about us. The last government more than any in peacetime accelerated this trend. The concept of LJAs…..Local Justice Areas is an outmoded model being eroded in the name of “efficiency” or “excellence” or “standards” or the familiar term of derision known as “post code lottery”. J.P.s now are not only being permitted to sit in any court in their county or cluster but being positively encouraged to do so. This in itself is not a bad idea considering there are still some courts where a “day chairman” selects the colleagues for each sitting; an abhorrent practice which reeks of twin sets and pearls and spare hats in the ladies` locker for those who forgot theirs. Another welcome change from “local justice” is appraisal by colleagues from other courts so the “you scratch my back and I`ll scratch yours” policy ceases to allow incompetent colleagues, especially chairmen past their sell by date, to continue to cause embarrassment to their wingers and court users in general.


Fewer courts will result in longer travelling distances and times plus increased expense for those using the courts especially defendants and witnesses who rely on public transport. This is not an insuperable problem but it is a problem to be considered nevertheless. 


However the whole subject of cost saving by the Ministry of Justice is being applied with little logic or forethought; statistics with no meaning are being bandied about by those with no understanding not excluding those at the very heart of the policy. The Treasury termites are eating away at the foundations of our justice system; it is only a matter of time before this becomes apparent as parts of the superstructure start to crack in public view. 

PHOTOGRAPHY IS NOT A TERRORIST THREAT

 

11. Aug. 2010. – 12:54:37

There was a rare admission recently from the Chief of the Met police that occasionally his officers get things wrong. Unfortunately it wasn`t that he realised that occasionally his constables murder people “in the line of duty” but even so it was on a subject about which I`ve previously blogged; namely interference by police with the right of the ordinary citizen to photograph more or less what s/he wants under the pretext that the Anti Terrorism Act gives police the authority to prevent such photography and/or to order the deletion of any images with the threat of arrest for refusal to obey or give name and address. This is one small step for police but a huge step for policy.

ADDENDUM 13th August 2010


It was not front page comment for the tabloids but last month three activists were cleared at Inner London Crown Court of obstructing police who were filming their activities illegally. One might surmise on the phrase about the boot being on the other foot....

JUDGE NOT LEST YE BE JUDGED

 11 Aug. 2010. – 11:37:02 

We are all familiar with the toddler hiding behind a sofa but whose feet are sticking out in public view and who wonders how the adults knew she was there; she has no conception at that age of other peoples` viewpoints and she concludes if she can`t see somebody then somebody can`t see her. I think there is a similarity in perception when one has been away on holiday……logically the world continues to spin and events happen but because we have been far away in mind and/or in body we are still with the thought processes of that toddler and can be surprised that things happen without our being on the spot. 

And so it has been for the last week. The Ministry of Justice is consulting on plans to raise the upper age limit for jury service, currently 70, or abolish it altogether. I have blogged previously on the jury system and observed what are in my opinion inadequacies in allowing virtually anybody but prisoners, lords and lunatics to serve. A classic example was reported two weeks ago that at Birmingham Crown Court a juror was doing puzzles instead of concentrating on the fraud case before her. At Worcester Crown Court she was fined £1,200. But returning to the possibility of 70+ jurors surprise surprise; the judges don`t relish the idea. In fact they are positively opposed. Since they generally retire at 70 they are hopping up and down that ordinary people might still be compos mentis when their honours are doing their gardens. In all their eloquent response they fail to consider that they are and were getting paid to judge but jurors over seventy will generally be retired and performing their task as a civic duty. I think the judiciary should initiate a debate upon the universal eligibility of jurors; after all they are on that topic, if no other, better informed than most.

SHE COULDN`T CARE LESS

 04. Aug. 2010. – 23:06:41 

Although he appears to be now backtracking just a trifle from his remarks a month ago on the futility of short sentences Kenneth Clarke`s theme was seized upon by all who consider that community sentences are an answer to many of society`s ills. 

First time offenders with absolutely no record of involvement in the criminal justice system; not even a reprimand or caution, rarely are sentenced to imprisonment but it does happen now and again and one such occasion was in early April. The facts were that Ms X a lady in her fifties with very poor English language [an interpreter was required] had arrived here from one of the East European states newly integrated into the European Union. She was charged with assault by beating. She had found work as a care assistant in an old age home. Earlier this year whilst bending down to lift with a colleague a partially paralysed eighty nine years old dementia sufferer from her wheelchair to the lavatory saliva from the old lady`s gaping mouth dropped on her face. She accused her of spitting at her and immediately threw her back on to her chair, wiped her own face and then gave her first a backhanded slap across her face and an open handed slap on the return to the other side of her face, the large ring on her finger [which apparently was against the rules] cutting her lip. This not being enough to assuage her anger she punched her twice on the chest before her colleague forced her to stop. Subsequently she tried to persuade that colleague to lie about the incident and threatened her if she talked to police. She was found guilty after trial.

My two colleagues, one more senior than I and the other a newbie, initially considered that although the offence had crossed the custody threshold personal mitigation could be argued to suspend imprisonment, a disposal which I believe a previous Lord Chief Justice had regretted having been given to Magistrates` Courts by the 2003 Criminal Justice Act as it had been utilised more than anticipated with correspondingly unpredicted numbers who had broken the terms of their suspension being imprisoned thus increasing the prison population..but that`s for another time. When my newbie colleague, who was also a newbie father, told us that in his own mind he had unprompted mentally substituted a vulnerable child in place of a vulnerable adult in this scenario his position had changed and he persuaded our third member likewise. 

The sentence was thirteen weeks immediate custody. It was unknown whether or not this individual had a record in her own country although that situation I believe can change with the implementation of section 144 and Schedule 17 of the Coroners and Justice Act 2009. In any case in an environment such as an old age home where many residents have major or minor difficulties communicating, is it not ridiculous that a worker whose English cannot cope with a trial can nevertheless obtain employment? At least Ms X`s days as a carer in the U.K. are over.

This episode in my opinion is typical of much that has changed for the worse in this country. The jobs that apparently do not pay enough for UK citizens to get off their arses to do are gladly taken by hard working and usually honest people from anywhere from Romania to Rwanda. Many years ago when I was a student I spent one summer working in a hospital/care home for permanently disabled ex-servicemen; not only for the experience of caring for those who were almost destroyed for their country but also to make enough to live on for the next term. Most of my friends did similar tasks the more unpleasant the work generally the higher the pay and no gap year gallivants in those days. But then every generation bemoans the current state of affairs." it wasn`t like this in my day."

I feel better now that rant is over. The nice nurse in her short white skirt and uniform says I need to calm down and have a break so I`m off now on a short holiday. Come back here in a week or so if you want more like the above.

FINES ARE NOT ALWAYS FINE

 04. Aug. 2010. – 12:58:24 

Sitting in an area which has a high proportion of residents born outside the U.K. we are used to dealing with all sorts, but foreign visitors to this country rarely appear in the dock because we`re hardly a tourist mecca and our residents tend to return to their countries of origin to visit family, but last week was the exception.

A Russian man was visiting his family here. Unfortunately he brought with him the Russian habit of drinking Vodka to excess and trying to drive on, for him, the wrong side of the road at the same time. Along with others I have done my fair share of criticising police practices but certainly they don`t turn a blind eye to drink driving when a Russian hints at a few Roubles if they go away. He was before us having pleaded guilty to drink driving at over three times the legal limit. In addition to a long driving disqualification a U.K. resident would have been subject to at least a community sentence and probably a requirement to do unpaid work. For a foreign visitor that was not possible. We were left with the single option of a fine in addition to driving disqualification in this country. The next step was that we had to convert in our minds an assumed community sentence into Pounds Sterling. My initial thoughts, based on the average relevant weekly income of £350 we are instructed to apply, were that a fine of around £1,000 + costs etc would be appropriate. My colleagues and I eventually settled on a number in total just under four figures. Our legal adviser however told us that since the defendant had stated from the dock that in Russia his income was equivalent to about one third of the £350RWI we were bound to take that into consideration. Having expressed my opinion that this logic could lead to ridiculously low fines for those from the world`s poorest states who chose to conjure numbers out of thin air to escape their just rewards for law breaking in the U.K. we had to proceed as advised. The only daylight in this nonsense is that in such cases immediate custody is applied on a strict £/day formula until the fine is paid. We fined him £500 + costs etc. He had a friend in the public gallery who seemed to give him the thumbs up when he was told he would be in the cells until 4.00pm and then to prison overnight if the total sum were not paid that day and he would stay there according to the formula if necessary.

When about one in eight prisoners is a foreigner and our borders are still as porous as volcanic rock the Home Office still has much work to do and on reducing budgets that seems an uphill task. But if it were as simple to collect long overdue unpaid fines from U.K. residents by threatening immediate custody without the convolutions that have to be performed currently perhaps the £1.3 billion owed might be quickly reduced. That would mean of course more prison places and more [short] sentences. Ever seen a dog chasing its tale……….????

DOMESTIC VIOLENCE: AN ASSAULT TOO FAR?

 03. Aug. 2010. – 08:52:18 

For the last three or four years there has been a concerted effort by police and CPS to bring to court cases of “domestic violence”. Those which are tried at Magistrates` Courts are charged under Common Assault the domestic context being an aggravating factor. There has been an undoubted political impetus to demonstrate that this form of assault, often but not invariably between partners in an intimate relationship, will no longer be tolerated as it once was by police in general and the law in particular. This in itself is no bad development but in a manner similar eg to a reformed alcoholic or smoker or those who have found religion proselytising zeal by CPS is apparent for all to see who care to look.

The CPS has its guidelines and thresholds to which it must adhere and apply to cases brought to it for prosecution. The recent furore over the death of Mr Tomlinson at the G20 demo last April has brought these factors well and truly into the public domain for those outwith the legal professions. 

I have recently become aware that I have been on benches over the last few months where the rate of acquittal in DV cases seems perhaps higher than it ought to be. The reason is simple enough; the prosecution was not able to convince us beyond reasonable doubt that in each case the defendant had indeed committed the crime[s] for which s/he was charged. And that was because the evidence was flimsy and insubstantial the cause sometimes being the inconsistency of the complainant. There is another possible reason and that is the readiness of police and CPS to accept with little probing the veracity of the allegations. 

An example was reported last week at Wirral Magistrates` Court where an offender overreacted to being thought the guilty party in a domestic violence incident when he was in fact the complainant.

I have blogged previously that assault in a domestic context be considered as a unique offence. I am well aware my observations are not necessarily typical. Nevertheless with CPS areas dumbing down the level of those who oversee and fine tune prosecutions and the reduction in legal aid available for defendants both in quantity and quality I fear that the current standard of summary justice will inevitably diminish notwithstanding the excellent duties most of my colleagues perform. 

VICTIMS ARE VICTIMS ARE VICTIMS

 

02. Aug. 2010. – 11:56:35

In recent years the rights of “victims” so called have achieved a position in legal proceedings whereby statements can be read out in court prior to sentencing and a high powered Commissioner for Victims and Witnesses [The Justice of the Peace 29th July] has been appointed to champion their cause. Two victims have risen to public prominence and influence as a direct result of the unspeakable horrors suffered by their daughter and husband respectively; Sara Payne whose direct efforts have brought about the expansion of the Child Sex Offender Disclosure Scheme and Helen Newlove who was created Baroness Newlove of Warrington and who has been a forceful campaigner against anti-social behaviour since her husband's murder in August 2007.

It is certainly the case that victims or the victims` relatives of crimes such as were committed against these two women`s family members should if they wish be allowed greater involvement within the legal proceedings up to a point but where their involvement on a national scale is using the emotion generated by their individual experiences perhaps there is a time to say we should step back and consider whether in fact this is “institutional vigilantism” by the back door.

Three recent events come to mind which illustrate this trend. The case of Jon Venables and his admitted child pornography offences who was jailed for two years recently has led to further public comment by Denise Fergus the mother of the child Venables callously murdered, on the inadequacy of the current law. The near fatal attack in prison on Ian Huntley, the killer of the two young girls in Soham, has resulted in his suing the Home Office citing the prison service`s lack of care in protecting him from such events. And as a general statement that we are all potential victims the outcry over the recent decision by the Appeal Court on two anonymous terrorist suspects that the control orders under which they have existed for over three years must not only be revoked but quashed with retrospective effect. As a result they are seeking compensation.

In my opinion concern for “victims” is apparently a laudable consideration when the victim is the innocent untarnished child or a father vainly trying to protect his family. But similarly to the individual who espouses freedom of speech; it must apply to freedom of speech for those whose opinions he finds abhorrent. The same is true when discussing the “rights” of victims: they cannot apply only to those for whom we harbour great sympathy. If they cannot apply to all they should apply to none.

ALL OPTIONS CRY WOLF

 @ 31. Jul. 2010. – 12:08:23 

When a defendant is sentenced at a Magistrates` Court to custody or to a community sentence it is generally subsequent to a pre sentence report having been ordered by a bench or District Judge when a defendant has been convicted after trial or pleaded guilty. It is prepared by the probation service and read by the sentencing bench or District Judge. In the cases involving J.P.s [majority] the composition of benches especially in large conurbations is rarely the same twice unless a member[s] of the original trial bench elects to sit on the sentencing bench. For that reason the report request must indicate the seriousness of the offence, the degree of the offender`s culpability, the possible range of sentence and the bench`s opinion of what range of sentencing it thinks appropriate for the sentencing bench to consider.

It is long standing practice that one bench cannot tie the hands of another. It is also expected practice to give a defendant an indication of the type of sentence within wide parameters s/he is likely to expect. Thus recently when ordering a P.S.R. for a man of previous good character who had collided with a cyclist and failed to stop we indicated that the P.S.R. would exclude the possibility of a jail sentence. However after court, as we anticipated our legal adviser asked why we had not indicated an all options report. This annotation allows the sentencing bench to impose custody or send to the Crown Court for sentence. We had knowingly excluded that option for the sentencing bench and had effectively tied its hands. 

Until recently that action would have passed with little comment but in an example of how even the great and the good do not anticipate all the possible consequences of their pronouncements our L/A began to explain the opinion of one of the great and good of our legal superiors about the consequences of such actions. We stopped him in mid sentence...how the English language produces puns at short notice..and told him we were well acquainted with that advice and also its unintended consequences. If every report indicates that all sentences including sending to Crown Court are in the mind of the writers how can an overworked probation officer tailor a report to the two or three avenues s/he considers appropriate. In effect the court is crying wolf at every offender when perhaps only one in fifty is deserving of custody.

This controversy came to a head in June 2009 in the appeal 
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE STANLEY BURNTON
MR JUSTICE WILKIE
Between:
NICHOLAS Claimant
v
CHESTER MAGISTRATES' COURT Defendant

The position that my colleagues and I took was based on experience and full knowledge. As my colleague Bystander in his blog has recently remarked with words to the effect that all benches are equal but some are more equal than others there are some colleagues who perhaps are just not up to the job of a modern J.P. One can only despair that a report of a Crown Court Judge earlier this week having had his hands tied by a magistrates` bench is another small nail in the coffin that some would like prepared for the magistracy in its current format.

WHEN LEGAL ADVISERS BARE THEIR TEETH

 28. Jul. 2010. – 11:19:43 

J.P.s are appointed on the basis of their possessing many of the qualities thought to be necessary to do the job. Whether the job template needs altering is another matter for another time. Although there are lawyers on the bench there are also many other highly qualified people and some not so qualified in academic terms. The legal adviser is there to ensure that decisions made by justices are lawful although that does not preclude a very small minority of decisions going to appeal. I myself have been on a bench whose decision on a property matter some years ago went to appeal at the Queens Bench Division; it failed. Over the fog of time I recollect that our legal adviser when told of our original decision was surprised but when she heard of our structured approach to reach that decision admitted it could not be faulted. And that is as it should be. In my opinion she performed her duty to the letter…..that her conclusion might have differed from ours had she been on the bench instead of in front of it is not relevant. 

These thoughts passed briefly through the space between my ears a couple of months ago when we were considering a case of possession of a bladed article. Unless a person has a specific good reason for having the item in his possession he is guilty. In addition that reason must also apply to the moment of possession. So a carpenter eg who uses a particular knife for his job but is found in possession on a Saturday night out is guilty but if he were in possession one morning driving his van between jobs the defence could apply. 

Our defendant, an illiterate Kurdish man in his sixties, had been found with a small fruit knife at the bottom of a shopping bag when stopped at a department store on suspicion of committing theft. His defence was that since he had severe untreated dental problems the knife was needed to cut fruit the mainstay of his diet. We were told that he made some money doing odd jobs here and there and he confirmed that he ate a lot of fruit at home and when he was out working because it was relatively cheap and nutritious but that he needed the knife as his teeth were so bad biting was almost impossible. At this point he demonstrated to all that his few remaining canine and incisors were very loose. The prosecutor herself was on shaky ground and this wizened old man held fast to his version of events. The total sum of the CPS evidence was the finding of the knife which was of course admitted. 

Some legal advisers take a more pro active approach to their role than others. It is my practice to tell the adviser that either we will ring for him/her when required or to allow a certain time before joining our discussions. I will certainly, unless the situation is very unusual, not invite the adviser to join us at the beginning of our deliberations; any legal advice being given in open court. 

In the above case we decided that there was a valid reason for possession and asked our L/A to join us as we began to write our reasons. He asked us to confirm that we had followed a structured approach to our decision and that we truly were aware of the legal interpretation of possession at that moment. We explained that we considered the “moment” was an ongoing event owing to the defendant`s continuing inability to eat fruit in the normal way and cutting small pieces was reasonable activity with the small kitchen knife. However instead of accepting our decision he continued in an attempt to change our minds. He did not succeed. Our decision making was based on a correct application of the judicial structure in which we all receive very high quality training and reviews. 

The L/A referred to above in the case that went to the Divisional Court accepted our decision when assured it had been correctly derived although she admitted her conclusion might have differed. She is now a Crown Court judge. There is a moral there somewhere. 

THE CPS & COCK UPS;HOW MUCH MORE?

 

23. Jul. 2010. – 15:34:43

Yesterday I sat in the video remands court. This is a fairly successful innovation using video technology to allow prisoners or defendants on remand to make common applications without having to be transported to court. Its undoubted success in saving cash and improving security….no chance of escape en route……..has led others high up the Ministry ladder to make the failed intellectual jump that video courts per se are the way of the future; they are not!

However even without the prisoner or defendant in front of us, yesterday`s sitting demonstrated the appalling state of the Crown Prosecution Service and its partner in crime; the Police Service. A prisoner was due to be committed to Crown Court. The due date was actually last week but CPS had applied successfully for an adjournment. Their problem was that there was a gap in continuity in the evidence trail. The charges were associated with possession of Class A with intent to supply and cash proceeds of crime. The difficulty as the Crown said last week was a gap between the drugs and cash and the defendant. The forensic evidence to tie them to the defendant had not been produced. On that basis defence counsel not surprisingly asked that the case be withdrawn. The prosecutor in fact reluctantly discharged the defendant meaning charges could be laid at some future time. However this character did not walk free; he was being held by immigration authorities pending deportation. This in my experience is not an isolated example of the proverbial cock up. The system is truly drowning in its own inefficiencies aggravated by low morale and reducing resources. In addition the atrocious decision yesterday not to proceed with the prosecution of the police officer seen striking Ian Tomlinson at the G20 demo last April is just the public tip of an iceberg of chaos. It is badly led, mal administered and dying a death of a thousand cuts. In every court in its jurisdiction every J.P. and judge has his/her own story to tell. Only when the next unfortunate case of its crass failures hits the headlines will note be taken......until then.........?

POLICE MISCONDUCT

 22. Jul. 2010. – 11:43:31 

Psychologists, psychiatrists, neurologists, biologists, physiologists singly, in any combination or permutation will confirm that we have at least two types of memory; short term and long term which explains why centenarians can remember their school days but forget to put in their hearing aid although I have to admit that the fellow beak who didn`t remember who was the defendant and who was his lawyer has sat with me on more than one occasion. 

Be that as it may it was whilst reading on BBC online that later today a decision * will be made on whether or not to prosecute a police officer with regard to the death of a newspaper seller at the G20 demo last year that possible unlawful actions by police in the execution of their duty and their outcomes reminded me of what I thought was a long forgotten trial I sat on three years ago; one case amongst many and one I had apparently completely assigned to my long term memory where it had lain dormant like the dinosaurs in Jurassic Park waiting to be resurrected with the correct stimulus. 

Two young Asian men had been stopped by a police patrol car in the wee small hours whilst cycling in a residential road in a high crime area. The outcome was that one of them was charged with assault of one of the officers in the execution of his duty. In their evidence the police officers gave conflicting reasons why they stopped the pair. The officer against whom the assault was alleged stated that the defendant was looking at the houses in a suspicious manner as they were cycling and he [and his companion] were stopped for that reason. The other officer actually denied that and stated that the reason was the high rate of crime in that area. So they were stopped and searched. The companion had in his possession a mobile phone which the officers told him was listed as having been stolen two years previously in a robbery. He was arrested, handcuffed and placed in the police car awaiting a van to take him to the station. The defendant was clean. He was told to leave the scene. He replied he wanted to stay around until his friend was placed in the van because he thought he had been treated with more force than seemed necessary…neither had offered any resistance. He was warned to go away. A second mobile phone in his friend`s pocket began ringing and the friend knowing it was his mother worried why he was not home asked him to take it from his pocket and answer it. As he approached the same officer to ask that he might do that the officer alleged that the defendant confronted him toe to toe and punched him. He was overpowered, handcuffed and taken to the police station with his friend in the newly arrived van. He was charged with assault on a police officer in the execution of his duty. 

At trial a third officer who was driving the car and who made the stop decision did not give evidence or have a statement agreed given in evidence. For the defence both young men gave evidence. Both were of good character and did not appear on the Police National Computer. In order for the charge to be made there had first of all to be a lawful stop and search under PACE. We were not convinced by the conflicting evidence of the officers in this regard. That rendered the arrest of the friend unlawful. We were told by the Crown that they accepted that he had indeed bought the mobile phone in good faith from a recognised dealer and he was released without charge later that day. Again owing to conflicting evidence from the police officers we found that the defendant had acted in self defence from an aggressive police officer who had stopped him the previous week for apparently no valid reason and been told he`d get him next time. This officer in his statement and in examination told us that he was punched in the chest; under cross examination he withdrew that allegation and said there was a failed attempt to punch him which was later denied by the defendant. In addition no evidence was produced that either party had been cautioned before arrest except an assertion by the second officer that the missing police driver had done that.

Not surprisingly this defendant was acquitted. Such cases leave a nasty taste in the mouth. When they occur, knowledge must filter back to a senior officer. I am unaware of what procedures there are if any to consider these results. Perhaps any police officers reading this might enlighten me. Cases of possible police perjury in minor cases or inappropriate conduct allowed to pass without comment could conceivably lead to more serious matters. Public confidence in policing can be achieved only when there is no doubt that at all levels possible misconduct is investigated. 

ADDENDUM 18.00 JULY 22nd
* The CPS have announced that no charges will be brought against the police officer who struck the blow filmed for the whole world to see against an innocent bystander at the G20 demo last April. Even at this distance chronologically and as the crow flies the Rodney King case in Los Angeles reverberates. I have a thought at the back of my mind that if the previous incumbent at the head of the CPS were still in office today`s decision would have been different. Over the next few days many lawyers are going to offer their opinions. I am dismayed that this decision has all the appearance of a conspiracy not to see justice done the important word being appearance. There is an old phrase, justice should not only be done; it should be seen to be done.

Today in the eyes of the public justice will be seen as not having been done. That is the failure of this cop out. 

FROM HAROLD SHIPMAN TO FRANZ KAFKA WITH MUCH IN BETWEEN.

 21. Jul. 2010. – 08:48:20 

Harold Shipman was a mass murdering monster. The system that was meant to oversee him was not fit for purpose. It did not have methods nor a philosophy to deal with such depravity. And as a result after innumerable investigations and edicts from high above Whitehall the practice of many professionals in many professions has been changed beyond recognition.

The resultant “tick box” culture is not a sharp journalist’s catchy phrase; it is alive and very well, kicking and screaming like a newborn baby. The Magistrates` Courts system is besotted with it for those employed by Her Majesty`s Court Service. Thankfully my colleagues and I are independent members of the judiciary and owe no such duties to the faceless number crunchers who believe justice can be analysed by a pie chart. However every so often a response sheet comes along for filling in. One such was an analysis of the post court review in the manner of a tick box series of questions. The actual review per se is an important feature to enable brief but frank discussion between and among bench members and their legal adviser to note any points arising in court which could usefully be dissected. For new colleagues especially this is an important learning event. But a year or so ago I was amongst the first chairmen on my bench in a pilot run at our court to be asked to fill in such a form after a sitting. I questioned the need for this with the chairman of the committee responsible for its introduction. I was told that, “We don`t approve of such formality and time wasting but unless we produce a negative impact result it will be foisted upon us”. This time wasting exercise quietly disappeared. Would that those who spend their expensive tax payers money producing such treats for those who are actually contributing to the efforts to make this country function efficiently disappear inside a big black hole.

There are more jokes about lawyers and the legal profession than most others. My favourite is the one about the client who asks his solicitor for advice on a very tricky subject. He gives his opinion but then says that to be 100% sure he must check the statute. He goes to the overloaded and crowded bookshelf, pulls down the appropriate volume and then reads chapter and verse to himself before assuring his client that his advice was rock solid. After accepting the offered thanks and handshake the lawyer asks him to pick up a pre prepared account from his secretary on the way out. Two minutes later the client returns exclaiming, “You`ve charged me £500 + VAT and all you did was take two minutes to look at a book.” “Agreed”, replied the lawyer, “but I knew in which line in which chapter in which book to look up.” Time spent on a job does not in itself guarantee the job done correctly….it`s the quality of utilisation that`s important. 

But back to Shipman whose legacy is a blessing for all those whose demise into the big black hole I would heartily endorse. 

Contacts within the optical profession have told me that in Scotland this form filling mentality has reached them where the rain rains and the wind whistles. Optometry Scotland the organisation responsible for running the optical department of the NHS there has reminded practitioners that they could claim payment only for a maximum of twenty eye examinations per seven and a half hour working day. This ordinance pays no regard to any variables including practitioner experience or equipment or any patient variables which number to n-1. Inspectors will check on individual practices to enforce compliance

I read yesterday that lawyers in Switzerland oversaw the opening of four safe deposit boxes thought to hold the most precious items in a collection of documents belonging to the great Czech writer Franz Kafka. Six other similar boxes were also opened in Tel Aviv by order of a court there. 

This most wonderful of writers of the last century was a Nostradamus for our times. In less than a century since it was written the characters in “The Trial” are alive and well in the U.K. 

FINE DEFAULTERS & DEBTORS` PRISON

 19. Jul. 2010. – 14:33:33 

There are some days with some people discussing some subjects when for days after one has an unusual mental itch that doesn`t seem to respond to any scratching. The only cure I have found for such a situation is to source as much material as one can on the subject that`s causing that much irritation.

And so it`s been for the last few weeks until I finally got round to trying to alleviate that intellectual itch. The catalyst was the announcement earlier this month that there was £1.3 billion give or take the odd few million outstanding in unpaid fines, costs, compensation etc. I was discussing with a colleague and old friend how we treat fare dodgers on our local suburban railway lines and she who sits in London was comparing fines imposed on London bus users who are caught fare dodging. Some of what she said was truly staggering. Two or three times a week a half day court was taken up with lists numbering up to eighty alleged offenders. The vast majority didn`t bother to send in a means form or indeed anything at all in response to the summons. Very few ever actually turned up; perhaps three or four at most. A first offence attracted fines and costs of £200+ for an offender who hadn`t enclosed any response. But what actually caused the metaphorical stagger was the admittedly small number of offenders who appeared never to pay a bus fare and treated the matter of subsequent fines as some slight annoyance. She recounted that at her last sitting in such a court out of about seventy offenders listed four had a history of previous similar offences in the last four years of a number in excess of twenty seven failures to pay. Now that was truly staggering. What was atrocious however was that most of the fines were unpaid. Some were indicated as having been passed to bailiffs but no further details were available to her or her colleagues. I asked her how much such offenders were fined in her court to which she replied a figure of £500+. She showed her frustration by ordering another double espresso. 

The body charged with collecting fines from London courts is the London Enforcement Directorate. Funny how these organisations have gone from “agencies” to “directorate” in a decade……….one could be forgiven for thinking KGB but at least the KGB got results. A recent page from its newsletter is copied at the end of this post.

The glaring omission in the information published is of course the totals of unpaid fines and their history. After all in a newsletter one doesn’t tell the troops of the failures; only the successes. 

There are two obvious results of this unbelievable inefficiency on the part of government agencies and their overlords. £1.3 Billion should be in the Chancellor`s treasure chest but of equal import is that these hundreds or thousands of non payers plus all the rest spread the word to others that there`s no need to pay a fine for fare dodging or other similar offences; it will disappear. And so help me….they`re correct. It`s difficult enough to put such defaulters in prison at the best of times but in the current climate this is the worst of times. Many US states jail fine defaulters at the rate of a $/day or similar without too much ceremony. It might sound harsh to those who consider that non violent offenders should be “sentenced in the community”. There used to be establishments known as debtors` prisons. For those described here they should be resuscitated!

Ministry of Justice Draft Structural Reform Plan

 18. Jul. 2010. – 12:45:28 

The Ministry of Justice recently published its Draft Structural Reform Plan. It would seem that lots of little elves in Whitehall have been working their little arses off since the election in May to produce this document. Depending on one`s point of view political or otherwise there is much to consider. The usual "camel is a horse designed by a committee" signs are still apparent:- e.g. sect. 5.2 says "Develop a mechanism to prevent unnecessary criminal offences".



However it will be in relation to this document that future changes will be judged. 


COURTS CLOSURES, LEGAL ADVISERS, OPINIONS & DUTY

 17. Jul. 2010. – 13:34:17 

For the country`s 28,000 magistrates the last few weeks have been little less than traumatic insofar as the proposed, probable or possible changes which have been mooted, hinted at or flagged up depending upon which adjectives and verbs suit your opinion on the utterings emanating from such sources as The Ministry of Justice, both houses of Parliament, Civitas, Inspector of Prisons, Chief of Probation, ACPO, The Law Society and Uncle Tom Cobley and all.

The Ministry is of course the major player and magistrates mere pawns. On one hand the Minister Jonathan Djanogly states his intention of improving efficiency of Magistrates` Courts by increasing their utilisation from 64% to 80%.... He apparently thinks that ”just like that” efficiency will be improved. Sounds more like the late great Tommy Cooper than a serious statement. The Minister either ignores or is ignorant of the myriad reasons why courts do not function at his targeted rate. Kenneth Clarke tells us “his opinion” is that short prison sentences do not reduce crime rates. My opinion is that such matters should not be decided by opinions but by analyses of statistics and reasoned debate with social scientists who can provide reasoned conclusions. Probation chiefs and prison governors and their respective unions are each struggling to rubbish the other as to “what works”. Duty solicitors and criminal lawyers are striving to offer competent and quality services to their clients whilst receiving ever reducing fees. 

Last week having a brief discussion with our legal adviser whilst our court was in the midst of its 36% down time as complained of by Minister Djanogly owing to CPS files having gone missing it was clear that this disruption caused by impending court closures is having a ruinous effect on him and his colleagues.. There are certain to be redundancies but in what form and under what conditions is unclear. It is also likely that increasingly District Judges will be used in place of J.P.s and that they will inevitably be served in future not with qualified legal advisers [barristers or solicitors as at present] but with legal executives or other lower qualified personnel. A career switch for legal advisers to criminal law practice will be virtually impossible for the foreseeable future. For these highly capable professionals dealing daily with a varying cast of magistrates to whom in court they must refer to as “sir” or “madam” the future must be truly depressing and terrifying.

The first duty of any government is the protection of its citizens from those abroad or within who would wreak terror in all its manifest forms from bombing to burglary. That duty requires priority over any “guarantees” to health services, education services, social services or any other “services”. That duty is manifestly being abrogated.

YORKSHIRE RIPPER WILL STAY INSIDE FOR LIFE

 16. Jul. 2010. – 17:01:11 

The Judgement by THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE MITTING has just been issued that the Yorkshire Ripper will serve whole of life behind bars. Unless this is changed on a future appeal I for one will not be sorry. A friend of mine who used to provide para medical professional services at said institution where he is incarcerated; Broadmoor, and to the killer himself told me that although there were always two "nurses" who were more weight lifters than angels of mercy with him when he attended Sutcliffe and Sutcliffe himself was always apparently docile he was advised but never ever to turn his back on him......

THE COURTS` FUNNY SIDE

 16. Jul. 2010. – 16:45:58 

Some court stories are so amusing they are almost unbelievable. This is believable because I was told of it by a reliable source who has previously supplied accurate information. Last December at a Magistrates` Court in the West of England an addict called Jason who had managed to survive until the age of 36 on the usual druggie`s fare of hot pot of heroin and cocaine casserole decided on a change of diet and stole a frozen turkey from a supermarket attempting to evade payment by putting said late chilled bird down his trousers. Needless to say it`s a chill wind which blows nobody any good. Fined £50 + surcharge + costs he was deemed time served from his time on remand……one could say he went cold turkey….

And then there was the case of the Albanian who claimed that English food had changed the shape of his ears. Perhaps he will live long and prosper and then again perhaps he won`t. This might sound ridiculous but it`s true.

Now another case you just couldn`t make up……One of our fellow citizens whose lawyer mitigated by telling a southern Bench that although his client was an opiate dependant mechanic he usually managed to keep his habit under control especially when he was doing his work as a car mechanic…..seems he was the only one who`d come off the rails by failing in a sticky attempt to steal £40 worth of sweets from a local supermarket. Perhaps whilst he is on unconditional bail awaiting sentence he should endeavour to check if he should be insulin dependant……..

And then yesterday in the video remand court the last case listed was a gentleman charged with TWOC……taking a vehicle without consent in 1989!!!!!!! This was a late addition to our list and apparently after extensive enquiries the relevant authorities discovered that the suspect was serving life for murder somewhere in England. At the close of play the prison had confirmed his residency but it was too late to see justice done. Next week the CPS will inform him that “with his consent” the case will be dismissed…….I doubt he`ll offer any objections……..better late than never. 

LORD JUDGE IS MISTAKEN

 15. Jul. 2010. – 11:59:17 

The history, practice and efficiency of the jury system has been examined in ever closer detail by myriad academics and legal eagles and can easily be accessed by those interested. My comment today is a result of a statement yesterday 14/07/2010 by the Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales Lord Judge that juries should be directed by a trial judge not to research a case or anything pertaining to it on the internet. I wonder in all humility if His Lordship knows what a curate`s egg he has opened.


Jury composition from its earliest medieval beginnings until the 21st century has moved from exclusivity to inclusivity; virtually any sane person who is neither lord nor convict is eligible to sit. There is no requirement to have a basic knowledge of English language, mathematics, carpentry or indeed any intellectual or practical ability. The juryman reflects society warts and all. And this is what I find disturbing in Lord Judge`s approach. If we accept that the internet is merely a vast library where those with or without knowledge of a subject can research it to the n th degree it follows that on any case before a jury some jurors might have relevant knowledge that another does not and wishes to find for him/herself. This is what Lord Judge appears to want forbidden. Therefore the ignorant jury member must remain in ignorance and be subject to the inevitable explanations that the knowledgeable fellow member will expound. 


This is nonsense. To have juries of the lowest common knowledge can only be a forerunner to one of two futures; to return to a stricter method of jury selection where individuals` capacity to comprehend proceedings can be tested or to create a new form of “either way” trial where one or both parties can elect for judge or tribunal [three judges] trial or jury trial. However in the tradition of muddled English legal development it is unlikely to be spelt out so blatantly. 


This coalition government born not of goodwill but of necessity has shown some promising trends in its stated wish to eliminate some of the authoritarian actions of its predecessor. If there is, as I now believe, an underlying intention to change radically our trials system there should be more than merely “consultation”, the weasel word of political cowards; there should be encouraged open debate where effective discussion can take place with no pre-determined objective already pencilled in on what was supposedly a blank piece of paper.


LICENSING ACT 2003,s.146 ALCOHOL SALES TO CHILDREN

 14. Jul. 2010. – 12:27:13 

Alcohol has been part of man`s cultural tradition before he realised what “culture” meant. The discovery of late Stone Age beer jugs has established the fact that intentionally fermented beverages existed at least as early as the Neolithic period (cir. 10,000 B.C.) Beer was the major beverage among the Babylonians, and as early as 2,700 B.C. they worshiped a wine goddess and other wine deities . Wine making along with the distillation of olive oil was amongst ancient civilisations` earliest industries. The classical pioneers of surgery used various forms of alcohol as anaesthetics and medicaments. A Chinese imperial edict of about 1,116 B.C. makes it clear that the use of alcohol in moderation was believed to be prescribed by heaven. Beer was brewed by monks in the 17th century. The name of the celebrated cartoonist Hogarth became synonymous with his cartoons of Gin Lane and Beer Street in 1750/1. 

The benefits and problems associated with drinking alcohol are imbedded in us. However sales of alcohol have been subject to various forms of control for two hundred years and laterally sales from on and off license premises to children have come under increasing scrutiny. The health traumas and social disturbance associated with alcohol and developing brains has long been a cause for concern. 

With increasing affluence reaching down to the back pockets and purses of even the pre teen group, legislation against sales to under 18s enshrined in the Licensing Act of 2003 s.146[forbidding sale of alcohol to children] was intended to deter potential offenders. In my opinion if it is perhaps too soon to say it has failed, it is not too soon to say that it is not being used to its potential and there are few things worse in socio/legal terms than the appropriate office having powers to use legislation and not using those powers. Apart from anything else it brings the law [and the lawmaker] into disrespect. 

Three weeks ago [24/06/10] I blogged inter alia that it had been a year or more since I had sat on a case of breach of s.146. Of course the man upstairs was spinning the wheel and a few days later before me [and my colleagues] was a case brought, as these cases usually are, by the local trading standards officer of the borough. A 60+ part time employee had been working in the off license for over ten years. She was of good character. In addition some six months previously [as we were later informed] she had successfully refused an alcohol sale to a minor working under cover for the council`s trading standards office in a mystery shopper test. This time however she had pleaded guilty to selling beer, in another trading standards office under age shopping test, to a 12 year old whose picture in evidence left us in no doubt of the child`s appearance being very much under age. The means form and her lawyer explained to us she had been sacked, had little income and was living with and supported by her son. In questioning the prosecutor regarding his asked for costs account of over £1,200 some disturbing facts emerged. When it was pointed out that those council employees whose time was priced in his account were paid to do the job he quoted case law to support his claim………so far so good. When we enquired about the history of sales at the premises we were told of the successful test mentioned earlier but also that other employees….at least on two occasions in the previous two years….had been convicted under s.146. On further questioning he told us that the licensee had never ever been summonsed. He was asked why not. His reply was that policy was to summons licensees of large outlets eg supermarkets but not small retailers. Since this offence also carries the possibility of a Penalty Notice of £80 we asked why this had not been applied to the defendant in these particular circumstances. He told us that he would have required a police officer to administer such a disposal and that was not policy or practicable. 

We considered a Conditional Discharge in view of mitigation presented but decided against. Our sentence was Fine £55, Victim Surcharge £15 and costs £55; a total of £125. 

The country is bedevilled by juvenile drunkenness and the disorder which follows in its wake. Only when public policy insists why licensees should not lose their license and consequently their income for the actions of their employees will headway be made to control the sales of alcohol to children.

THE WISDOM OF AGE AND BODY OF YOUTH

 13. Jul. 2010. – 08:52:44 

I`ve been a JP for a while. Unlike many of my colleagues who post their opinions on the Magistrates` Forum I`m not looking for a long [or short] service medal or letters indicating association with a defunct empire when I step down or to be more precise when I am here today and gone tomorrow the day after I hit the biblical time span….if I last that long. I don`t seek self aggrandisement by pondering whether I do or don`t use the J.P. suffix in correspondence . I don`t. Anyway I`m much happier in the anonymous position where most of my friends are not even aware of my judicial status. Judging….to coin a phrase……… from comments I hear in the retiring room I certainly don`t want to appear to others a font of all knowledge criminal and a source of advice on matters not my business. 

But with an unprecedented increase in my bench`s intake over the last couple of years more and more of my newer colleagues are expecting words of wisdom when they ask for advice or information. And truth be told I`m finding that increasingly most of that advice or information is actually accurate. That certainly is a continuing function of the process of intellectual osmosis which we all hope will see us through before we need somebody to change our nappy. 

Last week a colleague posited a question I should put on her [and our] behalf to a trial witness. After a couple of seconds I decided it was not appropriate and told her so with reasons. She accepted my decision. At the post court review I brought this question up with our very senior legal adviser for his opinion as to whether I had acted correctly or perhaps had been over cautious. Without any hesitation he replied and gave succinct reasons why the question might have upset the level playing field over which we had presided. My colleague chipped in with, “A Brownie point for you Mr Chairman”, and I haven`t even been a boy scout. 

Oh that we had the wisdom of age and body of youth……..now who said that? 

CRIMINAL JUSTICE AND LICENSING BILL SCOTLAND

 12. Jul. 2010. – 11:39:12 

I have previously blogged here that legal processes in Scotland are often more soundly based and applicable to this century than some of those in England & Wales. However since the formation of the current Scottish government disturbing trends have been noted under the auspices of the Cabinet Secretary Kenny MacAskill whose responsibilities include criminal law and procedure, youth justice, criminal justice social work, police, prisons and sentencing policy, legal aid, legal profession, courts and law reform, anti-social behaviour, sectarianism, human rights, fire and rescue services, community safety, civil contingencies, drugs policy and related matters, liquor licensing, vulnerable witnesses, victim support and civil law, charity law, religious and faith organisations.

The Al Megrahi affair showed the world that arguably Scotland`s justice system was not above having its ear bent for political and/or financial/business purposes. It even caused unfavourable comment from US Secretary of State Hilary Clinton; an uncommon utterance. 

Last week this same Scottish politician steered through Holyrood a Criminal Justice and Licensing Bill which amongst other things will virtually abolish custodial sentences of less than three months and rejected attempts to impose mandatory six month sentences for carrying a knife. Proposals to criminalise all aspects of prostitution and tougher licensing laws for lap-dancing clubs were also defeated, as were plans to give victims of crime the opportunity to speak at parole hearings. However in a halt to the apparently onward march of retaining DNA samples forensic data will be collected from children in relation to serious offences only. 

Whilst there is no doubt that independent of one`s viewpoint the Bill could be described as a mixed bag it does demonstrate an attempt to include in the basket many disparate measures that go towards a joined up legislative basis underlying law and order north of the border. It certainly should be compulsive reading at the Home Office and Ministry of Justice.

SHOULD UK POLICE BE ROUTINELY ARMED?

 11. Jul. 2010. – 13:41:13 

There was a semi interesting accompaniment to my coffee and toast this morning on BBC 1 TV where during a discussion on whether police should be routinely armed the presenter informed her guests [and us] that 40% of members of the Police Federation approved of such a change. This is virtually double the minority from 2006. The reason for the debate was of course the two recent week long manhunts in two of the most rural constabularies in England where police in both cases were chasing their tails for most of the time.

Various avenues of discussion opened up some deserving of serious thought and some not worth their proponent’s intake of breath. One such nonsense was the assertion that it would ruin the citizens` inclination to approach a police officer and ask for directions. Another was the oft heard description that we have a "citizens` police". I`m not quite sure what that means except perhaps police as citizens have been empowered to enforce the law. Possibly I live on another planet but in all reality what other type of police could we have unless there is a state of martial law. 

In the last century pre World War2 police were routinely armed; in some cases it was voluntary. The growth in British travel abroad has familiarised us with armed police virtually everywhere except New Zealand and Bermuda although I`m sure there are other small countries where the police officer still goes about his business without a sidearm. An attitude pointer could be defined as the answer to the question, "At a UK airport do you feel more safe or less safe with officers on patrol with machine pistols?"

Those occasions where police shoot innocent people are, thankfully, so rare that they are instantly remembered. But we are also very aware of regular reports of police using lower levels of force quite out of proportion to any perceived threat. And that leads to the fear that if such officers had access to lethal force they would be just as indiscriminate with a Glock 17 as with their baton.

As in many other ways this country is governed, the back door approach is often the favourite way to implement policy. Country wide there are patrolling police vehicles with an armoury in the boot. There is no doubt that for a minority of criminals from the teen gangs of London, Birmingham. Manchester and other cities to the hundred crime bosses said to be at the summit of most of the [drug, prostitution, people smuggling, counterfeiting] crime in this country force must be met with overwhelming force. Properly informed debate both within and without parliament is long overdue on this topic.