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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 >> Odegbune & Ors v R. [2013] EWCA Crim 711 (15 May 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2013/711.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Crim 711 |
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201202840B5; 2012012958B5; 201202961B5; 201203017B5; 201203029B5; 201203031B5 |
ON APPEAL FROM THE CENTRAL CRIMINAL COURT
His Honour Judge Christopher Moss Q.C.
T20107210; T20207216
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT
and
MR JUSTICE HICKINBOTTOM
____________________
SAMSON ODEGBUNE TYRONE RICHARDS ENOCH CHARLES AMOAH ADONIS JUNIOR AKRA CHRISTOPHER OMOREGI FEMI ODERINWALE OBI NWOKEH SAMUEL JUNIOR ROBERTS |
Appellants Applicants |
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- and - |
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THE QUEEN |
Respondent |
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Garry Green for the Appellant Richards
Charles Sherrard Q.C. for the Appellant Amoah
David Spens Q.C. and Polly Dyer for the Applicant Akra
George Payne for the Applicant Omeregie
Nicholas Corsellis for the Applicant Oderinwale
Jerome Lynch Q.C. for the Applicant Nwokeh
Benn Maguire for the Applicant Roberts
Mark Heywood Q.C. and Julian Evans for the Crown
Mark Heywood Q.C. and Julian Evans for the Crown
Hearing date : 9 May 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Leveson :
The Facts
The Relevant Principles
"If the offender was aged under 18 when he committed the offence, the appropriate starting point, in determining the minimum term, is 12 years."
"It is trite law but occasionally worth reminding ourselves that irrespective of the 'starting point', the end result may be a minimum sentence of 'any length', when appropriate, well below or well above the defined starting point. The court must take account of every aggravating and mitigating feature, with specific reference to those which are expressly identified in paras. 10 and 11 of the schedule. These lists are not exhaustive. In particular, we should emphasise that when the court is dealing with an offender aged under 18 years the provisions of para. 7 do not preclude the sentencer from reflecting on all the express features of the crime of murder identified in para. 4 and 5 of the schedule, and when they are found to be present from treating them as features which aggravate the offence."
"In considering the seriousness of any offence, the court must consider the offender's culpability in committing the offence and any harm which the offence caused, was intended to cause or might foreseeably have caused."
"[N]one of the decisions we have seen ... has proceeded on the basis which we have now addressed, that crimes which result in death should be treated more seriously, not so as to equate the sentencing in unlawful act manslaughter with sentences suggested in Schedule 21 to the 2003 Act, but so as to ensure that the increased focus on the fact that a victim has died in consequence of an unlawful act of violence, even where the conviction is for manslaughter, should, in accordance with the legislative intention, be given greater weight."
"In the present context, we accept that we must approach it in the first instance by looking at the ages of these two appellants at the time of the offence. But it seems to us that we must and should reflect in our considerations the extent to which courts in these cases need to impose sentences which have a significant element of deterrence. There is no other way at the moment that the court can reflect the need to ensure the streets of this country are as safe as possible."
"… anyone who goes into a public place armed with a knife or any other weapon and uses it to kill or to cause injury, and who is brought to justice, must anticipate condign punishment."
"Even when a particular type of manslaughter is isolated from the rest it has to be recognised that it covers a wide field and if justice is to be done sentencers must not be put in straitjackets, but ... it seems to us that where an offender deliberately goes out with a knife, carrying it as a weapon, and uses it to cause death, even if there is provocation, he should expect to receive on conviction in a contested case a sentence in the region of 10-12 years."
The Individual Appeals and Applications
Christopher Omeregi and Obi Nwokeh
Samson Odegbune
Adonis Junior Akra
"This was a group conspiracy and a group action. Although there were differences in the precise role and involvement of different defendants the Judge was entitled to take view that a consistent approach should be adopted with the same sentences being imposed for similar offending. Further, any differences which could be argued for in relation to the applicant would not render his sentence manifestly excessive either in itself or when compared to that of others. The applicant was one of the group of killers, was armed and struck the victim. ...
Further, given the public nature of the offending, a fatal, mass charge and attack with the brandishing and use of knives taking place at Victoria station during rush hour, the Judge would have been justified in including a deterrent element in his sentencing."
Femi Oderinwale
"The applicant played a key role in the conspiracy and helped initiate it. He took a principal part in the communications the previous evening which involved getting "tooled up" and contemplated their adversaries getting "slumped" (killed). He then acted as armourer for the group. He was responsible for the purchase of kitchen knives from Argos, some of which were used to kill the victim. Although there was a responsive element to the conspiracy the Judge found that the group travelled to Victoria expecting and intending trouble and prepared and armed for it. Even if the jury's manslaughter verdict indicates a subsequent intent to cause lesser injury, death was a foreseeable and actual consequence of the conspiracy of which the applicant was convicted. The applicant was part of the mass charge across Terminus Place although he did not join in the attack on the victim. He was pursuing others. He was convicted on the basis that he intentionally purchased or assisted in the purchase of knives, or distributed or assisted in the distribution of those knives, realising that some harm might result."
Samuel Junior Roberts
"No one who has seen the CCTV images of the scene could fail to be horrified by the ferocity of one of the kicks you delivered to the head of the deceased - it was if you were kicking a rugby football. Your action were vicious and victim, defenceless."
Tyrone Richards and Enoch Charles Amoah
Conclusion