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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 >> Kallakis, R v [2017] EWCA Crim 2461 (01 November 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2017/2461.html Cite as: [2017] EWCA Crim 2461 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
The Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE LEWIS
and
THE RECORDER OF PRESTON
(His Honour Judge Brown)
(Sitting as a Judge of the Court of Appeal Criminal Division)
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R E G I N A | ||
- v - | ||
ACHILLEAS MICHALIS KALLAKIS |
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Wordwave International Ltd trading as DTI
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Telephone No: 020 7404 1400; Fax No 020 7404 1424
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Ms A Darlow QC appeared on behalf of the Crown
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE SIMON:
"I am required by statute to follow those guidelines unless there is good reason not to do so in the interests of justice, and I must be prepared to justify any departure from them with sound and clear reasons."
He identified the starting point for a banking or insurance fraud that was fraudulent from the outset (which this was), in which a sum of £750,000 was obtained by means of a professionally planned fraud carried out over a significant period of time, as five years' custody, with a range of four to seven years. There was, he said, a need to leave headroom for sentencing in respect of the most serious offence outside the range and up to the statutory maximum of ten years.
(1) A judge who presides over a trial (in this case two trials) was in the best position to assess culpability and harm.
(2) The judge had not erred in sentencing on count 1 on the basis of the statutory maximum sentence for fraud and then considering whether the sentence on count 21 should be consecutive or concurrent;
(3) The judge was right to pass a concurrent sentence on count 21; the victim was different, but the deception was in many senses similar ([24] of the Court of Appeal's judgment).
(4) There was no particular need for a deterrent sentence, since the banking collapse was caused by the banks placing profit over prudence; there was no targeting of a vulnerable victim; and the sentencing judge had accepted that the applicant and his co-defendant believed that the property price would continue to rise, preventing loss and concealing their offending: ([25]).
(5) There was a likelihood that AIB would not, in fact, suffer a loss on the facts of the case and this was material to sentence: ([26]).
"20. It ought clearly to be understood that it by no means follows that the court will in fact entertain such an appeal. Any application for leave to appeal sentence requires leave and, in this case and no doubt any others like it, an extension of time. The right to appeal given by section 9 of the 1968 Act is subject to section 18, which requires an application to be lodged within the time stipulated – which is, by section 18(2), 28 days. An extension of time is by no means a formality. It will be granted only where there is good reason to give it, and, ordinarily, where the defendant will otherwise suffer significant injustice. In the very small number of instances in which there has been an earlier reference by the Attorney General, it will be a highly significant factor that it was then open to the defendant to mount any argument that he wished to the effect that his sentence was too long or otherwise wrong in principle. Leave is likely to be refused in any case in which what he now seeks to argue could and should have been argued then. Wholly unmeritorious applications which are no more than an attempt to ventilate second thoughts or to re-litigate decided issues are likely to be met by an order for loss of time under section 29 of the 1968 Act. In all but the wholly exceptional case the decision of this court upon a reference by the Attorney General is, as this court held in Rowan, as much an end of the sentencing process as is its decision upon an application by the defendant under section 9."
"The two questions are whether I should go outside the guideline and whether I should impose consecutive sentences. As to the latter, I think it would be wrong to do so."
The judge then gave his reasons.
"77. We turn, secondly, to the question whether a consecutive sentence should have been imposed for the count 21 fraud. We do not accept that that a consecutive sentence would have indicated a view that the maximum sentence for conspiracy to defraud was inadequate. On the contrary, the effect of the concurrent sentence is, in our view, to give the impression that the offenders have entirely escaped the consequences of a serious fraud in which substantial loss has resulted. It is true that the nature of the fraud was similar and that it overlapped in time with the count 1 conspiracy but Bank of Scotland was a separate victim, separately targeted, and, unlike the count 1 offence, a substantial loss was realised. We have no doubt that a consecutive sentence for the offence was required, subject to the principle of totality. Had the offenders been sentenced for the count 21 offence standing alone it is our view that the appropriate starting point after a trial would have been six years' imprisonment."
In our view the reasoning is clear and gives rise to no arguable grounds. It was on that basis that the court reduced the sentence from six to four years' imprisonment to take into account the principle of totality. It was described as the "just and proportionate sentence for this offending as a whole": see [78].