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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 >> Attorney General Refrence No 101 of 2009 [2010] EWCA Crim 238 (10 February 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2010/238.html Cite as: [2010] 2 Cr App R (S) 81, [2010] EWCA Crim 238, [2010] 2 Cr App Rep (S) 81 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(LORD JUSTICE HUGHES)
MR JUSTICE MACKAY
MR JUSTICE LLOYD JONES
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REFERENCE BY THE ATTORNEY GENERAL UNDER | ||
S.36 OF THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE ACT 1988 | ||
ATTORNEY-GENERAL'S REFERENCE NO 101 OF 2009 |
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Mr J Boyd appeared on behalf of the Offender
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"The defendant had developed a chronic drug habit up to the point of his arrest, in which he was using large amounts of cocaine and cannabis. This involved occasionally purchasing up to £500 of drugs at a time. Although this was primarily to fund his own habit he accepts that there were a small number of other drug abusers well-known to him, who knew that he sometimes had significant supplies of cocaine and/or cannabis and would ask if they could obtain some from him. He accepts that he would be paid for this, although his supply would only be to people well known to him, and he did [not] profit by this arrangement significantly."
"Nothing which we say is intended to affect the level of sentence indicated by Djahit and Twisse for offenders, whether or not themselves addicts, who, for largely commercial motives, stock and repeatedly supply to drug users small quantities of class A drugs."
When the case is cited that observation is, in our experience, frequently ignored. Rose LJ went on to say this:
"But there is a group of offenders who supply class A drugs to whom we believe that the level of sentence indicated by Djahit and Twisse, namely in the region of six years following a trial, is disproportionately high and we think some review is called for. These are the offenders who are out-of-work drug addicts, whose motive is solely to finance the feeding of their own addiction, who hold no stock of drugs and who are shown to have made a few retail supplies of the drug to which they are addicted to undercover police officers only."
He went on to indicate why that can properly be regarded as a different case. The only conditions in which that decision applies accordingly are those in which (1) the defendant is himself an addict, (2) he is out of work so he has no honest possibility of income (3) he holds no stock and (4) the only supply that he has made has been in the course of a test purchase by a police officer so that his actions have not in fact increased the circulation of dangerous drugs.