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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 >> Cooper, R. v [2010] EWCA Crim 2335 (20 September 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2010/2335.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Crim 2335, [2010] MHLR 240 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE DAVIS
MR JUSTICE LLOYD JONES
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R E G I N A | ||
v | ||
BENJAMIN ALAN COOPER |
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Mr H L Bentham Appeared On Behalf Of The Crown
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Crown Copyright ©
"While I accept that you need treatment for your mental disorder in your case, the sentence I must impose must also meet two other objectives. Your psychosis can cause you to be an extremely dangerous person, as these offences demonstrate. There should be no question of release until the responsible authorities are clear that you no longer represent a danger to public safety. Second, while your responsibility for these crimes is diminished by your mental disorder, it is not wholly extinguished. A significant degree of responsibility remains. You have pleaded guilty to manslaughter on the basis of diminished responsibility. Once you were in the grip of the severe psychosis, I accept that your responsibility for Claire's death was very considerably diminished. It is not, though, eliminated entirely. Professor Peckitt thought that it was overwhelmingly likely that this psychosis was stimulated by your misuse of illegal drugs, particularly amphetamines, and, somewhat ironically, your withdrawal from them in the Autumn of 2009. Dr Green thought it was more likely than not that your drug abuse contributed to your illness. It is true that you had not taken illegal drugs or alcohol at the time of these offences. I accept that you would not have foreseen that these drugs would drive you to mental disorder, but by starting to take them you did voluntarily embark upon a course which was to have such tragic consequences. For that you must bear some responsibility. That applies as much to the attack on Gerald. Here, too, the attack would not have happened but for your delusions, yet you had regained sufficient control after killing Claire to drive your car to his house and to appear relatively calm when you first spoke to him. Although you thought that Gerald was part of the conspiracy against you, your attack on him was not prompted by the same motives as had been your attack on Claire. This means that the difference between these two offences is not just the illegal one, but there is no partial defence to the offence of attempted murder based on diminished responsibility. For these reasons I consider that I must impose a sentence of imprisonment. You undoubtedly pose a very significant risk of causing very serious violence to members of the public. That risk may diminish as treatment continues to be successful, but when, if at all, that will occur is uncertain. The risk will continue for an indefinite time into the future. Only an indeterminate sentence of imprisonment will adequately protect the public."
"8.12. The government proposes changes in the arrangements for the remand, sentencing and subsequent management of mentally disordered offenders to provide greater protection to the public, and to improve access to effective medical treatment for those offenders who need it. The central change, if adopted, would be the provision of a "hybrid order" for certain mentally disordered offenders, for whom the present form of hospital order is unsatisfactory, particularly those who are considered to bear a significant degree of responsibility for their offences. The order will enable the court in effect to pass a prison sentence upon an offender and at the same time his immediate admission to hospital for medical treatment.
8.13. The hybrid order, together with other proposals amending the detail of the Mental Health Act 1983 would substantially increase the flexibility of arrangments for dealing with mentally disordered offenders at all stages from remand through to rehabilitation. In particular it would enable the court to deal with some of the most difficult cases in a way which took proper account of the offender's need for treatment, the demands of justice and the right of other people to be protected from harm.
8.14. Existing sentencing arrangements for offenders who are mentally disordered require the court to decide either to order the offender's detention in hospital for treatment or to sentence him to imprisonment or to make some other disposal. In some cases an offender needs treatment in hospital but the circumstances of the offence also require a fixed period to be served in detention. This may be because the offender is found to bear some significant responsibility for the offence, notwithstanding his disorder, or because the link between the offending behaviour and the mental disorder is not clear at the time of sentencing. The hybrid disposal would be a way of enabling the requirement of sentencing in such cases to be met. Under an order an offender would remain in hospital for as long as his mental condition required but if he recovered or was found to be untreatable during the fixed period set by the court he would be remitted to prison. The hybrid order was recommended for use in sentencing offenders suffering from psychopathic disorders by the Department of Health and Home Office working group on psychopathic disorder. The Government is considering whether it might be made available in respect of offenders suffering from all types of mental disorder currently covered by Mental Health legislation."