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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 >> Lawrence, R. v [2011] EWCA Crim 3129 (16 December 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2011/3129.html Cite as: [2011] EWCA Crim 3129 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE ROYCE
MRS JUSTICE SHARP DBE
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R E G I N A | ||
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JEROME LAWRENCE |
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"This was a Sunday League football match, under the auspices of the Football Association, for which an umpire was provided. It is the sort of Sunday match tens if not hundreds of thousands of people enjoy up and down the country, and which I am afraid anybody involved in sport knows has been blighted over many years now by the behaviour of those on the pitch. This is a classic example of that. Mr Browning, who played for the opposition team, may have been guilty of a foul. That is why there is a referee. That referee gave evidence in this trial and struck me as an impressive individual, who I have no doubt would have controlled the game properly. He was not only giving a foul, but proposing to send Mr Browning off. The person he tackled clearly was not injured, because they got up almost immediately and began remonstrating with Mr Browning, which caused a further confrontation in which that person was pushed over. Again they were uninjured.
"The reaction then of both teams was disgraceful. They confronted each other at the halfway line or thereabouts and those that had been watching the game or substitutes felt the need to come on and engage in that confrontation.
"You were one of those substitutes. There was no possible justification for you coming on the pitch at all, but it goes beyond that. What you actually did was this, as described by all the witnesses so graphically. You ran at full tilt from the sidelines, launched yourself with such force at Mr Browning you actually took off, and punched him with considerable force to the side of the head. He wasn't even looking at you at the point you hit him. He presented no threat to you or anybody else. It was gratuitous revenge.
"The force of that blow broke his eye socket and cheek in four places. He suffered a depressed fracture which required surgery under general anaesthetic to insert a metal plate into his face. He still has symptoms today. It was a wholly unprovoked, cowardly attack on a man who presented no threat to you or anybody else.
"You then contested the matter. Throughout interview and trial, you denied being the person responsible but you were disbelieved by the jury. If ever there was a case where credit for plea was so important, this was it. Had you been able to acknowledge from the beginning [...] that you were involved in a moment of madness which you deeply and fundamentally regretted, it would have given the courts a far greater range of potential sentencing. You chose not to do that. You are not punished for exercising your right to trial, but what it meant was you lost the only true mitigation you had above and beyond your good character."