https://www.mondaq.com/uk/crime/1478758/new-guidelines-on-perverting-the-course-of-justice--on-the-path-to-more-clarity


New Guidelines On Perverting The Course Of Justice – On The Path To More
Clarity?
PP
Peters & Peters
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The Sentencing Council introduced new guidelines for perverting the course
of justice and witness intimidation in England and Wales, aiming to ensure
consistency and clarity in sentencing. These guidelines are expected to
provide a structured approach and address variations in previous case law.
UK
Criminal Law
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AUTHORS
The concept of 'perverting the course of justice' might commonly feature in
televised series, where crooked cops tamper with evidence for money or
baddies interfere with witnesses, but before HBO and Netflix came on the
scene, it had a long-established history as an offence in the common law of
England and Wales.

In October 2023, the Sentencing Council introduced new guidelines for
sentencing offenders convicted of perverting the course of justice and
witness intimidation in England and Wales. These aim to provide consistency
and clarity across all cases, whereas before a wide range of case law had
to be relied on to devise the correct type or length of sentences based on
the individual circumstances of each case.

We look at how the guidelines, which have now been in force for just over
six months, will likely impact sentencing going forward in less severe
cases. This is of particular interest at a time when the offence is once
again in the limelight, following a recent high-profile boiler room fraud
case brought by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), which has resulted
on 7 May 2024 in an individual receiving a custodial sentence for
perverting the course of justice.

An old offence

The current interpretation of the doctrine was crafted in 1891, when
Justice Pollock B considered whether the defendant's attempt to fool
arbitrators in a dispute about the quality of grains amounted to a fraud or
cheat against the administration of public justice. In R v Vreones, he
offered the dictum that "the real offence... is the doing of some act which
has a tendency and is intended to pervert the administration of public
justice".

Since this dictum, the law around perverting the course of justice has been
used and developed to assist the courts in a wide range of situations, such
as:

– discontinuing a criminal prosecution in return for payments;
– making false statement to police officers investigating an offence;
– making a false retraction of a true allegation of rape;
– doing an act calculated to assist another to avoid arrest;
– interfering with a witness or a juror; or
– the whole gambit of potential scenarios that would make for good crime
cop drama.

Perverting the course of justice has remained a serious offence: it is
indictable only, with maximum life imprisonment and an offence range
between a community order and seven years in custody.

Long-standing principles thrown into question

Before the new guidelines were introduced, practitioners relied on the
long-standing principle that custodial sentences should be imposed in all
but the most exceptional cases.

Indeed, before the guidelines came out, the courts considered, in R v
Abdulwahab [2018] EWCA Crim 1399, that conduct intended to pervert the
course of justice almost invariably called for a custodial sentence; the
idea being that deterrence was necessary.

In this case, the appellant, a young man with no previous convictions, had
given a false account of events when interviewed under caution. His friend
had used his leased car to deal drugs. The appellant claimed that he had
left it at a car park for his friend to collect, when in fact, his friend
had driven the car to the car park himself. Drugs were found in the car,
and the friend and two other men were arrested for intent to supply Class A
and Class B drugs. The appellant voluntarily attended the police station a
few days later to collect the car and was interviewed under caution when he
gave the false account. The police had CCTV evidence contradicted his
account.

On reviewing the 15-month custodial sentence that he had received, and
giving full credit for his guilty plea, the appeal judge observed that
there was a "clear, deliberate, and focused lie told by the appellant with
intent to pervert the course of justice" by either providing his friend
with a defence or by weakening the prosecution case against him. However,
he also observed that "there does not appear to have been any evidence
pointing unequivocally to this appellant having gone to the police station
always intending to put forward that lie...".

In the Court of Appeal, the appellant submitted that his lie not been
elaborate or well thought out, it did not exonerate the friend from
suspicion, it was put forward only during the interview under caution and,
although it was maintained throughout the interview, it was not repeated on
other occasions, and the false account did not in fact obstruct the course
of justice to any significant extent and did not adversely affect the
police investigation.

The judgment further explored that there was "no Definitive Sentencing
Guideline for offences of this nature". However, a number of relevant
principles could be drawn from another case, R v Radcliffe [2016] 1 Cr App
R(S) 65, and other decisions of the Court of Appeal.

These included that:

1. conduct which tends and intends to pervert the course of justice
striking "at the heart of the administration of justice and almost
invariably calls for a custodial sentence";
2. the appropriate sentence depends on the particular circumstances of each
case and these can vary widely and therefore only limited assistance can be
derived from considering previous decisions in other cases;
3. in assessing the seriousness of any particular offence of perverting the
course of justice, the seriousness of the underlying offence, the nature of
the deceptive conduct, the period of time over which it was continued,
whether it cast suspicion on or led to the arrest of an innocent person,
and the success or otherwise of the attempt should also be considered; and
4. the offender's previous character and any personal mitigation must be
taken into account.

New structure

The sentencing guidelines offer a step-by-step approach for reaching a
conclusion on sentencing which broadly reflects the common law approach
previously relied on.

As per all sentencing guidelines issued under the Sentencing Code, step 1
involves "determining the offence category". This requires assessing the
seriousness of the offence to provide a starting point for sentencing. The
seriousness of the offence is determined by assessing culpability and harm,
based on three categories: A – high culpability, B – medium culpability, C
– lower culpability.

Some demonstrable behaviour for each category includes:

– high culpability: conduct over a sustained period of time and
sophisticated and/or planned nature of conduct, as well as seriousness of
underlying offence;
– medium culpability: factors present in A and C which balance each other
out and/or the offender's culpability falls between the facts described in
A and C; and
– lower culpability: unplanned and/or limited in scope and duration,
unsophisticated nature of conduct, involved through coercion, intimidation
and underlying offence not serious for lower culpability.

A hypothetical review

If we were to hypothetically review Abdulwahab with the help of the
sentencing guidelines, the first step would also be to assess the young
man's culpability. Here, it may be argued that he was of medium/low
culpability. Although the underlying offence was "serious", all other
factors, such as the lack of sophistication in the lie, the fact that he
did not attend the police station with a plan to lie, and that the lie was
not repeated, point towards low culpability.

Next, the level of harm should be assessed. This is also divided into three
categories:

– Category 1: where there has been serious consequences or distress for an
innocent party, a serious impact on the administration of justice, and a
substantial delay caused to the course of justice.
– Category 2: where suspicion was cast on an innocent party and there has
been some, distress, some impact, and some delay.
– Category 3: limited distress, limited impact, limited delay.

In our hypothetical review, a judge may find that the young man had caused
a category 3 level of harm: no innocent party was involved, the impact on
the administration of justice and the delay caused to the course of justice
were limited (although bearing in mind that had it not been for the CCTV
the police already had in their possession, the impact would have been more
significant).

Once the level of culpability and the level of harm have been assessed and
a prognosis has been reached, step 2 of the sentencing guidelines calls for
both to be used to identify the corresponding starting point to reach a
sentence within a category range.

The guidelines provide a table to help assess the starting point and
category range, which specifies "the starting point applied to all
offenders, irrespective of plea or previous convictions". Should our
hypothetical appellant be a B3, i.e. someone of medium culpability
(category B) with low level of harm (category 3), the starting point would
be nine months' custody and the category range between six months' and one
year's custody.

Once the starting point has been reached, the sentencing guidelines provide
additional considerations to be considered in relation to community orders
and custodial sentences. Steps 3 to 8 can then be used to arrive at an
appropriate sentence. These are not considered in detail here, but include:

– Step 3: consider any factors which indicate a reduction for assistance to
the prosecution.
– Step 4: reduction for guilty pleas.
– Step 5: totality principle.
– Step 6: compensation and ancillary orders.
– Step 7: reasons.
– Step 8: consideration for time spent on bail.

All of these considerations are usually taken into account for the
conviction of criminal offences, which the judge considered in Abdulwahab.

Time will tell

In Abdulwahab, the Court of Appeal accepted that the 15 months' custodial
sentence that had been handed down was too long and that 11 months were
more adequate. In his judgment, the judge accepted the appellant's
submissions finding that "the sentence after trial which the learned judge
had in mind was manifestly excessive in length... [he] had therefore erred
in taking too high a starting point for sentence after trial". In the
context of our hypothetical review, this updated sentence would fall within
the range of the guidelines, albeit at the higher end of the category range.

The guidelines have been in place for only a few months, so their
effectiveness and how they will affect the sentencing landscape remain to
be seen. However, their introduction is likely to be positive, and it is
very much hoped that they will offer consistency and clarity for all
involved, from lawyers, their clients and the courts.

What remains crystal clear is that notwithstanding the introduction of the
guidelines, serious wrongdoing will continue attracting sufficiently severe
punishment.

This is apparent from the recent 18-month custodial sentence handed down by
Southwark Crown Court in a prosecution brought by the FCA for a relatively
sophisticated and premeditated attempt at perverting the course of justice
(the forging of documents), which was committed in the context of broader,
serious offending by finance professionals (who ended up receiving lengthy
custodial sentences of their own for fraud offences).

It was undoubtedly considered an aggravating feature in the case that the
forged document was provided to FCA investigators to mislead them. The
individual – who was not found to have played any part in the boiler room
fraud scheme itself – pleaded guilty but was nonetheless sentenced to 18
months in prison.

Originally published 20 May, 2024.

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the
subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific
circumstances.

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