BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
Crown Court for Northern Ireland Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Crown Court for Northern Ireland Decisions >> Sikorskas, R v [2018] NICC 13 (27 September 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/nie/cases/NICC/2018/13.html Cite as: [2018] NICC 13 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
Ref: McB10709
Neutral Citation No: [2018] NICC 13
Judgment: approved by the Court for handing down
(subject to editorial corrections)*
Delivered: 30/7/2018
McBRIDE J
Introduction
Background
"Sviridovas was struck by both the deceased and the defendant whilst in a garage. It is difficult for the complainant to be exact as to which injuries were caused by which man. Injuries were caused by punches, kicks and metal bars.
At one stage the defendant was in possession of a gun with a silencer and it was being presented in a way which made Sviridovas believe he might be shot. That action gives rise to the charge under Article 58 of the Firearms (Northern Ireland) Order 2004. At one stage whilst the defendant was heavily under the influence of drugs he had forced the complainant's hand on the gun and it was then that the complainant sustained a gunshot to the leg. This gives rise to the offence of GBH with intent. When the defendant came out of the influence of drugs, he attempted to assist the complainant by cleaning and cauterising the wound."
"The defendant and the deceased had been known to each over a number of years.
In the days leading up to the death of the deceased both men had been consuming considerable amounts of alcohol and drugs.
There had been a number of drunken and drug induced verbal and physical altercations between them over this period.
In the course of one such physical altercation, in the heat of the moment, the defendant struck the deceased to the body with considerable force with the palm of his hand knocking the deceased to the ground. The deceased fell forcefully to the floor and struck his head.
The defendant accepts that his actions were unlawful in that he used force in excess of what was either reasonable or necessary to defend himself. Whilst the defendant had not intended to cause death or serious harm he nevertheless accepts that his actions were unlawful and led to the head injury which resulted in the death of the deceased.
The defendant attempted to aid the deceased by placing tape around his head so as to stop the bleeding. This defendant was not involved in the later wrapping and moving of the body to the upstairs in the garage."
Appropriate sentence – First Defendant
(a) A person is convicted on indictment of a serious offence committed after 15 May 2008;(b) The court is of the opinion that there is a significant risk to members of the public of serious harm occasioned by the commission by the offender of further specified offences.
" (a) Shall take into account all such information as is available to it about the nature and circumstances of the offence;
(b) May take into account any information which is before it about any pattern of behaviour of which the offence forms part; and
(c) May take into account any information about the offender which is before it."
"(i) The risk identified must be significant. This is a higher threshold than mere possibility of occurrence and could be taken to mean "noteworthy, of considerable amount or importance".
(ii) In assessing the risk of further offences being committed, the sentencer should take into account the nature and circumstances of the current offence; the offender's history of offending including not just the kind of offence but its circumstances and the sentence passed, details of which the prosecution must have available, and, whether the offending demonstrated any pattern; social and economic factors in relation to the offender including accommodation, employability, education, associates, relationships and drug or alcohol abuse; and the offender's thinking, attitude towards offending and supervision and emotional state. Information in relation to these matters will most readily, though not exclusively, come from antecedents and pre-sentence probation and medical reports. The sentencer would be guided, but not bound by, the assessment of risk in such reports. …
(iii) If the foreseen specified offence is serious, there would clearly be some cases, though not by any means all, in which there may be a significant risk of serious harm. For example, robbery was a serious offence. But it can be committed in a wide variety of ways, many of which do not give rise to a significant risk of serious harm. Sentencers must therefore guard against assuming there was a significant risk of serious harm merely because the foreseen specified offence was serious. …
(iv) If the foreseen specified offence was not serious, there would be comparatively few cases in which a risk of serious harm would properly be regarded as significant. …"
Assessment of dangerousness
(i) The defendant's extensive criminal records in this jurisdiction and the Republic of Ireland and Lithuania.(ii) The defendant's misuse of alcohol and other substances.
(iii) The defendant's apparent failure to learn from past experiences and court sanctions.
(iv) The defendant's inability to demonstrate consequential thinking regarding his offending behaviours.
(v) The limited insight demonstrated by the defendant regarding victim awareness.
(vi) The serious violent nature of the current offences.
(i) The premeditated nature of these serious offences, sustained use of orchestrated violence over a prolonged period.(ii) The significant and graphic level of violence and degradation used by the defendant towards the injured parties which resulted in serious injuries being inflicted to both parties and the death of Mr Gediminas Stauskas.
(iii) The defendant's apparent inability to evidence learning from past experiences.
(iv) The defendant's lack of insight into his behaviour and the impact of his behaviours on others.
(v) The defendant's misuse of alcohol and other substances.
(vi) The defendant's evidenced use of weapons including firearms.
(vii) The defendant's criminal record in this jurisdiction and confirmation of previous convictions in the Republic of Ireland and Lithuania.
(viii) The defendant's minimisation of his role in the index offences and his attempt to focus the blame on the deceased man.
"[26] … Apart from a discretionary life sentence an indeterminate custodial sentence is the most draconian sentence the court can impose. A discretionary life sentence is reserved for those cases where the seriousness of the offending is so exceptionally high that just punishment requires that the offender should be kept in prison for the rest of his life. It is not a borderline decision. … An indeterminate custodial sentence is primarily concerned with future risk and public protection. …
[27] However, in a case in which a life sentence is not appropriate an indeterminate custodial sentence should not be imposed without full consideration of whether alternative and cumulative methods might provide the necessary public protection against the risk posed by the individual offender. In that sense it is a sentence of last resort. The issue of whether the necessary public protection can be achieved is clearly fact specific. That requires, therefore, a careful evaluation of the methods by which such protection can be achieved under the extended sentence regime."
"(a) The appropriate custodial term; and
(b) A further period of ("the extension period") for which the offender is to be subject to a licence and which is of such length as the court considers necessary for the purposes of protecting members of the public from serious harm occasioned by the commission by the offender of further specified offences."
"It is difficult to know how his mental health will fair over the next few years. He has set himself goals regarding abstinence and education and he told me his incentives are linked to his partner and seven year old child. It is not possible to comment on the likelihood that his long term relationship will continue while he serves a sentence but at this present time he is confident that it will. His success with abstinence in an environment where drugs are readily available is hopeful and he has reported enthusiasm and success in undertaking educational courses. This is an indication of hope on his part. Before being released it is essential that preparations are made and precautions taken as to his possible mental health problems and release. Furthermore it should be possible to set up the provision of relapse counselling even though he may on release have been abstinent from substances for a number of years."
Term
Manslaughter
"[26] We consider that the time has now arrived where, in the case of manslaughter where the charge has been preferred or a plea has been accepted on the basis that it cannot be proved that the offender intended to kill or cause really serious harm to the victim and where deliberate, substantial injury has been inflicted, the range of sentence after a not guilty plea should be between eight and fifteen years' imprisonment. …
[27] Aggravating and mitigating features will be instrumental in fixing the chosen sentence within or – in exceptional cases – beyond this range. Aggravating factors may include - (i) the use of a weapon; (ii) that the attack was unprovoked; (iii) that the offender evinced an indifference to the seriousness of the likely injury; (iv) that there is a substantial criminal record for offences of violence; and (v) more than one blow or stabbing has occurred."
"Whilst sentences range from 6 years on a plea to 14 years on a contest, pleas in cases of the upper end of the spectrum attract sentences of 10 to 12 years, with sentences of 12 years being common. Sentences of 6 to 8 years tend to be reserved for cases where there are strong mitigating personal factors, or the defendant was not a principal offender."
In single punch cases he states,
"Sentences range between 2 and 5½ years, with sentences of 4 to 5 years reserved for cases where there are many aggravating factors and few mitigating factors."
(i) The first defendant administered a blow of "considerable" force which caused the deceased to fall forcibly to the floor. As a result of the force used the deceased sustained a fracture to his skull with consequent bleeding to his brain which ultimately led to his loss of consciousness and death.
(ii) Although the first defendant rendered some limited assistance by placing tape around the deceased's head he demonstrated indifference by failing to seek any professional medical assistance for the deceased over a period of some 8 to 12 hours when the deceased remained alive.
(iii) Whilst I accept the first defendant's judgment was impaired arising from his consumption of drugs and alcohol nonetheless he was able to leave the scene and take steps to avoid police detection for a period of five days. During all this time he continued to show a callous disregard for the plight of the deceased.
(iv) Although the defendant does not have a substantial criminal record for offences of violence he nonetheless has a criminal record and therefore is not a person of good character.
(v) The defendant was under the influence of alcohol and drugs at the time of offending. Mr Duffy QC submitted this should be a mitigating factor in light of the defendant's addiction and indicated there was a first instance decision in this jurisdiction where the court accepted addiction as a mitigating factor. The case referred to was not provided to the court but I note that Sir Anthony Hart refers to a case of Hunter [2007] NICC 33 in which the court appears to have accepted addiction as a mitigating factor. Notwithstanding this, I do not accept the submission that addiction is a mitigating factor. The sentencing guidelines provide that committing a crime whilst under the influence of drink or drugs is an aggravating factor. Further there are 2 cases in this jurisdiction in which the Court expressly indicated that addiction was not a mitigating factor. In R v Stalford & O'Neill (unreported 3 May 1996) MacDermott LJ stated:-
"(f) The Appellant's Addiction
This is not a mitigating factor. We would repeat the forceful observation of Simon Brown J (as he then was) in R v Lawrence 10 CAR(S) 463 at 464:-
"We cannot make too plain the principle to be followed. It is no mitigation whatever that a crime is committed to feed an addiction, whether that addiction be drugs, drink, gambling, sex, fast cars or anything else. If anyone hitherto has been labouring under the misapprehension that it was mitigation, then the sooner and more firmly they are disabused of it the better."
In R v Henderson, (unreported 8 March 1996) Carswell LJ adopted a similar approach.
Grievous bodily harm
(i) The defendant summoned the complainant to the premises and therefore this was a pre-planned attack.(ii) The attack was entirely unprovoked.
(iii) The attack took place over a prolonged period namely from approximately 4.00 pm on 13 October through to the early hours of the 14 October, probably in or around 7 - 8 am.
(iv) The attack involved extreme violence which included punches, kicks, use of iron bars and a gun to inflict injury. Although the injuries were inflicted by both the defendant and the deceased, the defendant was involved in a joint enterprise.
(v) The complainant was subject to degradation as he was made to telephone his former girlfriend and tell her he was being rehabilitated from drugs and in addition was made to get down on his knees and say he loved his family.
(vi) The use of a multiplicity of weapons including metal bars and a gun.
(vii) The complainant was forced to shoot himself in the leg.
(viii) The defendant failed to seek professional medical help. The medical help administered was amateurish and in all likelihood inflicted further pain and injury.
(viii) The defendant went to the premises armed with a gun which he subsequently used to threaten the complainant and later used to cause serious injury the defendant.
(xi) The offence was carried out whilst the defendant was under the influence of alcohol and drugs.
Firearms offence
"(1) What sort of weapon is involved? Genuine firearms are more dangerous than imitation firearms. Loaded firearms are more dangerous than unloaded firearms. Unloaded firearms for which ammunition is available are more dangerous than firearms for which no ammunition is available. Possession of a firearm which has no lawful use (such as a sawn-off shotgun) will be viewed even more seriously than possession of a firearm which is capable of lawful use.
(2) What (if any) use has been made of the firearm? It is necessary for the court, as with any other offence, to take account of all circumstances surrounding any use made of the firearm: the more prolonged and premeditated and violent the use, the more serious the offence is likely to be.
(3) With what intention (if any) did the defendant possess or use the firearm? Generally speaking, the most serious offences under the Act are those which require proof of a specific criminal intent (to endanger life, to cause fear of violence …). The more serious the act intended, the more serious the offence.
(4) What is the defendant's record? The seriousness of any firearms offence is inevitably increased if the offender has an established record of committing firearms offences or crimes of violence.
(5) Where was the firearm discharged, and who and how many were exposed to danger by its use or their use?
(6) Was any injury or damage caused by the discharge of the firearm or firearms, and if so how serious was it?"
Totality
The extension period
"The extended period will be for such period as is considered necessary to protect the public from serious harm. The protective element should not be fixed as a percentage increase of the commensurate sentence. On the contrary, the protective element should be geared specifically to meet the statutory objective i.e. the protection of the public from serious harm and to secure the rehabilitation of the offender to prevent his further offending. The punishment element cannot dictate the period required to ensure the necessary level of protection. The two aspects of sentence thus serve different purposes."
Appropriate Sentence– Second and Third Defendants
"Dmitrijus Indrisiunas (herein "the defendant") discovered the deceased's body on 15 October 2015. That day he made a 19 page witness statement to police, without the benefit of an interpreter, detailing the movements and activities of Darius Sikorskas and the deceased at the defendant's garage over a number of days. All of that information was accurate, however the defendant omitted to mention that he left the garage with Darius Sikorskas on 14 October 2015 in a car driven by Marius Dzimisevicius and had gone to a flat in Coalisland.
As it appears that Darius Sikorskas left that flat very shortly afterwards there is no evidence that the defendant's omission to mention the journey in fact prejudiced the police investigation, although it is accepted that such information may have been of material assistance."
"The defendant found out about the death at 1 Moor Road, Coalisland only when he heard about it in the news (thus, on or after 15 October 2015) and he believed at that stage an offence may have been committed which he had information about which was likely to have been of material assistance in securing the apprehension of some other person for that offence. The information was his knowledge of other Lithuanian nationals association with the premises at 1 Moor Road, Coalisland in October 2015. He failed to give this information to a constable within a reasonable time after learning of the death at 1 Moor Road.
It is accepted as a fact that this defendant drove Mr Sikorskas away from 1 Moor Road, Coalisland but at that stage he had no knowledge or suspicions of any offence having been committed. The defendant is 29 years of age and has no previous convictions."
Dmitrijus Indrisiunas
- The gravity of the principal offending.
- Delay by this defendant in providing the information even when the matters were specifically put to him at interview in November 2015.
- His actions caused a delay in the arrest of the first defendant.
- He is assessed as posing a medium likelihood of re-offending as appears from the pre-sentence report.
- There is no evidence that his actions actually prejudiced the police investigation.
- This defendant otherwise co-operated with the police by giving them a 19 page statement which although it omitted the relevant information on which the charge is based, he did nonetheless provide other information which was accurate about the movements and activities of the first defendant and which must therefore have been of some assistance to the police.
- His remorse and regret as expressed in the pre-sentence report where he indicates that he wished he had never allowed himself to get involved and wants to put this episode in his life behind him and return to what he describes as a "normal family life".
- His personal circumstances and work record.
- His plea.
Marius Dzimisevicius – Third Defendant
- The gravity of the principal offence.
- The defendant's actions led to delay in the arrest of the first defendant for a number of days.
- The defendant continued to fail to give information even when stopped on 20 October by police. This persisted even when he was arrested and interviewed on 2 November.