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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Jersey Unreported Judgments >> V v AG [2024] JRC 044 (23 February 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/je/cases/UR/2024/2024_044.html Cite as: [2024] JRC 44, [2024] JRC 044 |
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Application under Article 5(5) of the Sex Offenders (Jersey) Law 2010
Before : |
R. J. MacRae, Esq., Deputy Bailiff, and Jurats Averty and Le Heuzé |
V
-v-
The Attorney General
IN THE MATTER OF V
AND IN THE MATTER OF AN APPLICATION UNDER ARTICLE 5(5) OF THE SEX OFFENDERS (JERSEY) LAW 2010
Advocate G. F. Herold-Howes for the Applicant.
Advocate L. Taylor for the Attorney General.
EX TEMPORE JUDGMENT
THE DEPUTY BAILIFF:
1. The Applicant was convicted of a count of indecent assault and sentenced to a non-custodial sentence approximately 10 years ago. The Court then ordered that a period of five years should elapse before the Applicant be entitled to apply under Article 5(5) of the Sex Offenders (Jersey) Law 2010 ("the Law"). The Applicant became eligible to make such an application approximately five years ago.
2. The Applicant requests that this application is heard in private. It needs to be understood that following the decision of the Royal Court in S v AG [2023] JRC 140 the burden of proving that it is necessary for such an order to be made is on the Applicant. It is not on the Crown.
3. We set out what the Court said in S v AG at paragraphs 4 to 7 inclusive:
4. The decision of the Royal Court in S v AG was not drawn to the attention of the Court in the subsequent and recent case of Z v AG [2024] JRC 002 and ought to have been. It is important that counsel draw to the attention of the Royal Court the decision in S v AG when these applications are made.
5. We now consider whether the Applicant has shown that this application should be determined in private. Counsel for the applicant distinguished between general factors in favour or such an order common to all such applications and factors specific to the Applicant in this case. Foremost amongst the general considerations are practical management of what is colloquially described as the Jersey Sex Offenders Registry by the Offender Management Unit. The Register would, it was said, become unmanageable if no one was ever removed from it and accordingly there is a public interest in such applications, so long as they are meritorious, being made. Publication of applications would, it was said, act as a deterrent to those making applications as they would fear consequences in terms of the attendant publicity, particularly publicity in relation to matters which had occurred many years before. Indeed in the case of S v AG the Court referred at paragraph 9 to its own recent experience of hearing an application by an offender to vary the terms of a restraining order imposed upon him under Article 10 of the Law which he applied to vary very shortly after his release from a custodial sentence and during the currency of that restraining order. When the Court determined the application would be heard in public the application was subsequently withdrawn.
6. These general concerns expressed in the terms that we have outlined were supported by the evidence this morning given on oath by DC Le Chevalier of the Offenders Management Unit who gave evidence principally in relation to a matter which we will come to in due course, but she told the Court that if these applications were determined in public then people would not apply for such orders. In her view people simply would not make applications because of concerns they would have about losing employment, friendships, new relationships and in extreme cases being compelled to leave the Island. An absence of such applications would ultimately in her opinion make the register unmanageable. There are now, she observed, 192 people on the Register who they need to monitor. The extent of that monitoring depends on the risk that those individuals present.
7. In terms of considerations which were germane to this Applicant, a number of matters were drawn to our attention specific to him which we do not need to set out in detail as they are all matters which support the Applicant's contention that this application ought to be granted and some are matters we will come to in due course. It is plain from the evidence that the Applicant is a suitable candidate for denotification and we accept that the stronger the merits of an application such as this the greater the public interest in the application being granted. In view of the general consideration to which we have referred it is axiomatic that it will often be necessary to determine such matters in private bearing in mind, as we have said, that in each case the applicant will need to show that that is necessary.
8. We are also told the Applicant has a longstanding job in what may be described as a light industrial environment which he secured after the offending. His co-workers are not aware of this offence. Our attention was also drawn to the contents of the original and most recent Probation Report in this case which speak to various challenging and sensitive adverse childhood experiences of a delicate nature which provide a background to the Applicant's original offending. Such circumstances are not perhaps particularly unusual in cases such as this but, nonetheless, if those circumstances were matters that the Court thought it necessary to set out in a reasoned published judgment to support a decision made such as this then it would cause difficulty for the Applicant if the judgment identified him.
9. Accordingly, having regard to those factors of general application and those specific to the Applicant, noting that the Crown does not oppose the application, we have determined that it is necessary in the interests of justice for this application to be heard in private. Nonetheless we remind ourselves that in the usual way this judgment will be published so that the public can properly understand the reasons why the Court has made the decision that it has.
10. Article 5(6) of the Law provides:
11. Accordingly today the Court needs to be satisfied that the risk of sexual harm to the public or any particular person or persons that the Applicant poses by virtue of the likelihood of his re-offending does not justify him being subject to those requirements in future.
12. We have been furnished with a report from the Probation Service for the purpose of this hearing which indicated that when the Applicant admitted the offence ten years ago he was assessed at that time of posing a significant risk of sexual re-offending.
13. The Applicant is now single and not in a relationship. He has a small number of close friends and a good employment record. He lives with a member of his family. He has a good relationships with various members of his family and proposes to move to the United Kingdom in a few years' time.
14. The Offender Management Unit, in conjunction with the Probation Service, carried out a risk assessment of the Applicant in January. The Court is familiar with the risk assessments in relation to this sort of application, namely the Stable and Acute 2007 Risk Assessments. These tools were considered in the case of C v AG [2020] (1) JLR 236, and at paragraph 8, 9 and 11 the Court described those tools and the scoring methodology as follows:
15. We heard from DC Le Chevalier in relation to assessments in this case. As to the SA07 Acute Assessments, in recent tests the Applicant has scored zero and is accordingly at low risk. As to the SA07 Stable Assessments, recent assessments have yielded a score of 5 which is at the low end of the moderate range. However, as explained to us by DC Le Chevalier and accepted by the Probation Service, the scores that have led to that assessment in the Stable Risk Assessment have largely arisen by virtue of the Applicant scoring in static risk domains which are unlikely to change - such is the fact that the Applicant has limited social support and is not currently in a relationship. Those matters, on analysis, do not necessarily demonstrate an objective risk of likelihood of sexual offending and in the circumstances, having regard to all the factors of which the Probation Service and the OMU are aware, their most recent overall assessment of risk is low. There has been no offending of any nature for over a decade, with the exception of minor motoring offences. The police observe that this is the Applicant's first application for a denotification order and that he appears to have made several positive changes in his life over the last decade. Indeed at the end of her report DC Le Chevalier says that, on the available evidence, the applicant "now appears to be living a productive lifestyle, and there is no indication that he has a proclivity to sexual offending."
16. The Crown does not oppose this application and, having regard to the matters to which we have referred, we grant the application. Accordingly the Applicant is no longer subject to the notification requirements under the Law.