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English and Welsh Courts - Miscellaneous |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> English and Welsh Courts - Miscellaneous >> R v BGI & Anor (Re Media's Application for Excepting Direction) [2024] EWCR 5 (31 July 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/Misc/2024/CR5.html Cite as: [2024] EWCR 5 |
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B e f o r e :
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REX |
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- and - |
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(1) BGI (2) CMB |
Defendants |
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Miss Michelle Heeley KC and Mr Peter Grieves-Smith for the Prosecution (instructed by the Crown Prosecution Service)
Miss Rachel Brand KC and Mr Justin Jarmola for the First Defendant (instructed by Sundip Murria (Wolverhampton) Solicitors Limited)
Mr Paul Lewis KC and Mr Amir Riaz for the Second Defendant (instructed by Riaz Law Solicitors)
Hearing date: 29 July 2024
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(ON MEDIA'S APPLICATION FOR EXCEPTING DIRECTION)
Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Tipples DBE:
Introduction
"No matter relating to the youth may be published that would identify them, including their name, address, any educational establishment or any workplace they attend, and any picture of them. This order lasts until the youth reaches the age of 18. No matter relating to [the First Defendant] in the proceedings, shall while he is under the age of 18 be included in any publication if it is likely to lead members of the public to identify him in the proceedings".
a. The application dated 20 June 2024 signed by Mr Bunting. This sets out the legal basis of the application, together with the facts his clients rely upon.
b. The prosecution responses to the application dated 16 and 17 July 2024.
c. The first defendant's response to the application dated 22 July 2024, together with:
i. The pre-sentence report in relation to the first defendant dated 12 July 2024. This report has been prepared by the two social workers from Wolverhampton Youth Justice Service ("WYJS") who were allocated to work with the first defendant from when he was remanded in a secure unit on 17 November 2023. The first page of the report states that it has been prepared "in accordance with the National Standards for Youth Justice Services and relevant guidance". Further, paragraph 1.1 of the report identifies that it has been prepared in conjunction with a YJS ASSETPLUS assessment Tool in line with the Youth Justice Board Guidance and has been gatekept in line with YJS best practice guidelines.
ii. A letter dated 10 July 2024 from Independent Child Trafficking Guardian, Barnardo's National Counter Trafficking Centre.
iii. The witness statement of the first defendant's grandmother dated 24 July 2024.
iv. An article entitled: What's in a name? The identification of children in trouble with the law Dr Di Hart (and published by the Standing Committee for Youth Justice in May 2014).
d. The second defendant's response to the application dated 20 July 2024, together with the pre-sentence report in relation to the second defendant dated 9 July 2024. This report has also been prepared by the two social workers from WYJS who were allocated to work with the second defendant from when he was remanded in a secure unit on 17 November 2023. The report, again, states that it has been prepared in accordance with the appropriate Youth Justice Board Guidance: see paragraph 1.1.
The offence
The evidence in relation to each defendant
The first defendant
a. The first defendant and they have interviewed him twice since the conclusion of the trial in June 2024, although they have been working with him since 17 November 2023.
b. The first defendant's grandmother and his allocated social worker, and they have viewed the records of Children's Services.
c. The first defendant's case worker at the secure unit, and they have attended monthly remand planning meetings.
d. The headteachers of the primary schools the first defendant attended, together with the safeguarding and welfare manager at his secondary school.
e. A Child & Adolescent Mental Health Services' Nurse in order to access information in relation to the first defendant's mental health.
f. The Independent Child Trafficking Guardian from Barnardo's National Counter Trafficking Centre.
"… having spoken with [the first defendant] and consulted records held about him, we would assess that [the first defendant] seems to function at a lower level than his chronological age both in terms of understanding and his emotional literacy. [The first defendant] is a child with extremely complex needs…. "
"[5.2] … We would assess that naming [the first defendant] publicly would have an extremely detrimental impact on his mental health. He is finding it difficult to comprehend his current situation and his future. He is only 12 years old, and he has experienced multiple childhood adversities in addition to now facing a life sentence. Lifting his anonymity could increase the likelihood of bullying and negative attention from other young people within the unit. This in turn could have a detrimental impact on his current positive behaviour and impede the rehabilitation process. … [the first defendant] has been exploited and is assessed as vulnerable to negative influence. Should knowledge of his offence and conviction become more widely known, it would also have an impact on his ability to build a more positive future in the longer term. We have also considered the likely impact of lifting anonymity on his family. His grandmother has shared that she is very fearful for her own safety and possible repercussions should [the first defendant's] name become known …".
The second defendant
a. The second defendant and they have interviewed him three times.
b. The second defendant's parents and two other family members; his child in care social worker; his key worker at the secure unit; and his solicitor.
c. The remand review meetings at the secure unit which they have attended throughout the second defendant's time there.
d. The safeguarding officer at the school where the second defendant was a pupil.
e. The operations manager at the Restorative Justice Unit at WYJS.
f. The second defendant's social workers.
30. The report explains in detail the second defendant's background and upbringing, and refers to his mother's mental health problems. The report identifies that whilst the second defendant is "physically mature for his age, he is still young, and it will take time for him to mature emotionally and developmentally, in an environment where he feels safe …" (paragraph 5.1).
"[5.2] … the lifting of [the second defendant's] anonymity is likely to increase the likelihood of negative attention within the secure estate, and this would negatively impact on [the second defendant's] rehabilitation, and feeling of safety within the unit. We hope that when [the second defendant] is released from custody he can reintegrate into society and lead a law-abiding life. However, this might be put at risk if his name is known in the public domain… there are concerns for [second defendant's] brother should anonymity be lifted. He is an adolescent in school. His current emotional wellbeing is fragile, in part due to being concerned regarding repercussions for him in the community. The fragility in [the second defendant's] mother's mental health means that lifting anonymity could be detrimental for her emotional wellbeing, impacting further on her emotional availability for [the second defendant's] brother and [the second defendant]."
Relevant law
"(1) The general approach to be taken is that reports of proceedings in open court should not be restricted unless there are reasons to do so which outweigh the legitimate interests of the public in receiving fair and accurate reports of criminal proceedings and in knowing the identity of those in the community who have been guilty of criminal conduct.
(2) The fact that the person before the court is a child or young person will normally be a good reason for restricting reports of the proceedings in the way permitted by the legislation; and it will only be in rare cases that a direction under section 45(3) of the 1999 Act will not be given or, having been given, will be discharged.
(3) The reason why removal of a restriction will be rare is the very great weight that the court must give to the welfare of a child or young person. In practical terms, this means that the power to dispense with anonymity must be exercised with "very great care, caution and circumspection". See the guidance given by Lord Bingham of Cornhill CJ in the context of the 1933 Act in McKerry v. Teesdale and Wear Valley Justices [2001] EMLR 5, para 17.
(4) However, the welfare of the child or young person will not always trump other considerations. Even in the Youth Court, where the regime requires that proceedings should be held in private, with the public excluded, the court has power to lift restrictions. When a juvenile is tried on indictment in the Crown Court there is a strong presumption that justice takes place in open court and the press may report the proceedings.
(5) The decision for the trial judge is a case specific and discretionary assessment where, guided by the above considerations, a balance falls to be struck between the interests of the child and the wider public interest in open justice and unrestricted reporting.
(6) When considering a challenge to an excepting direction made by the Crown Court by way of judicial review, the Divisional Court will "respect the trial judge's assessment of the weight to be given to particular factors, interfering only where an error of principle is identified, or the decision is plainly wrong": see Aziz [2020] EMLR 5, para 36.
(7) To this standard public law approach must be added the conventional public law requirements that: (i) a fair process should be adopted by the judge in considering an application [to] remove a restriction; and (ii) the judge should give reasons sufficient to explain why the balance has come down in favour of removal of the restriction. This latter point is particularly important because the judge's reasons are the only indicator that the parties (and a reviewing court) will have to satisfy themselves that the judge has indeed performed a lawful balancing exercise."
42. Third, the weight to be attributed to different factors may shift at different stages in the proceedings and, in particular, after a defendant has been found guilty and sentenced. In R v Winchester Crown Court [1999] 1 WLR 788 at 790F, Simon Brown LJ said that at that stage: "It may then be appropriate to place greater weight on the interests of the public in knowing the identity of those who have committed crimes, particularly serious and detestable crimes". A judge must nevertheless keep in mind that "the principal aim of the youth justice system is to prevent offending, and then, if the identity of the offender is made public, that may have a detrimental effect on his/her rehabilitation … which may in turn impede the effectiveness of that principal aim": see paragraphs 60 to 62 of Youth Defendants in the Crown Court.
The parties' submissions
The balancing exercise
The first defendant
The second defendant
Final points