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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 >> Adams, R. v [2008] EWCA Crim 914 (09 April 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2008/914.html Cite as: [2008] 4 All ER 574, [2009] WLR 301, [2009] 1 WLR 301, [2008] EWCA Crim 914 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(THE VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE CACD)
MR PENRY-DAVEY
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT
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R E G I N A | ||
v | ||
TERRANCE ADAMS |
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A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
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(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr A Mitchell QC & Ms F Schutzer Wetssman appeared on behalf of the Crown
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Crown Copyright ©
"(a) I will plead guilty to count 10 only excluding drugs on the basis of a full fact opening.
(b) The prosecution will not undermine any suggestion that the criminality which created the funds was 5 to 6 years before 1998 (consequently the defence will mitigate on the basis that although money from crime was laundered in accordance with the time frame in count 10, no other crime has been committed since 5 to 6 years before 1998).
(c) The prosecution are content for the defence to mitigate on the basis that the total value of the criminal activity at the time of offences was £1 million.
(d) Confiscation - figure for realisable assets is £750,000.
(e) Prosecution costs £50,000."
"MR BURKE: I know it is very difficult and judges' practices tend to vary in my experience. The middle range can cover with a 14 year maximum five to eight or five to 10 years but to an individual defendant contemplating his position, fairly realistically nobody is expecting a sentence of nothing less than 5 years. So we can pretty much work out what the bottom limit would be. But if he asked and inevitably he will: what sort of sentence am I facing?
JUDGE PONTIUS: I think I can help to this extent. On everything I know thus far, and with the benefit of looking at the authorities as you rightly surmise a sentence would not be below five, and indeed I say the lower end likely to be seven, top end ten.
MR BURKE: That is without hearing any mitigation from me.
JUDGE PONTIUS: Yes."
It should be said that, at that stage, the question that was being posed by counsel was on the basis of the possibility of a plea not simply to the count to which he ultimately pleaded but also to a second count of money laundering in respect of the proceeds of crime of a relative.
"As I have also made plain however, minimal credit can be given by this court for a plea entered at such a late stage."
"The relevant considerations that apply in cases of this type include the following:
(i) The circumstances of assisting another to retain the benefit of drug trafficking and/or criminal conduct vary so widely that this Court has not to date provided detailed guidelines.
(ii) There is not necessarily a direct relationship between the sentence for the laundering offence and the original antecedent offence. Where, however, the particular antecedent offence can be identified, some regard will be had to the appropriate sentence for that offence, when considering the appropriate sentence for the laundering offence.
(iii) The criminality in laundering is the assistance, support and encouragement it provides to criminal conduct.
(iv) Regard should be had to the extent of the launderer's knowledge of the antecedent offence.
(v) The amount of money laundered is a relevant factor."
It is can be seen that those considerations are on the whole related to the person who assists to dispose of another's criminal conduct. But they assist in relation to the present type of case because they identify the fact that one of the relevant considerations clearly is the extent to which the person is dealing knowingly with as opposed to suspecting, criminal proceeds. Nonetheless, Mr Cox submits that the authorities do not support the starting point that the judge must have adopted in this case which, if he allowed any credit for plea, must have been in excess, even if it was only to a small extent, of the 7 years that he imposed. What he has not reflected at all, it is submitted, in the sentence is the personal mitigation. Returning to the credit for plea, the fact that it was indicated by the judge to be a minimal reduction suggests that he failed to take into account the public policy consideration which is so relevant, as we have already indicated in this case, that of the saving of public monies in a lengthy trial. He accepts that in a sense he is putting forward a figure which may be thought to be a bold figure, but he submits that in all the circumstances the appropriate sentence should have been in the 4 to 5 year bracket.
"A court sentencing or otherwise dealing with a person convicted of an offence mentioned in subsection (3) may also make a financial reporting order in respect of him."