Craig Sweeney
Jun. 12th, 2006 11:27 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
So the minimum possible time inside is five years. Given that he's a repeat offender anyway, one might reasonable imagine that whoever is in charge of determining whether he poses a "significant risk" will take a rather skeptical view. The judge seems to be of similar view. Nevertheless, I have some sympathy with the view that five years is kind of short for kidnap and rape, even in the face of positively angelic behaviour for the duration. So how was that number reached?
The arithmetic seems a bit off there. However assuming that the reporting is basically right, and the journalist involved merely too innumerate to notice the discrepancy, isn't the government ultimately attacking its own sentencing policy here?
(no subject)
Date: 2006-06-13 12:06 am (UTC)According to the Sentencing Guidelines (PDF) para 2.1.3 (p18):
(This has all been tightened up by the Criminal Justice Act 2003. Section 229 talks about what 'dangerous' means here. Note also the stuff about life sentences, which I suspect of being a bone thrown to the life-means-life crowd, though I haven't looked closely at them.)
Note that the Sentencing Guidelines say that the sentencer is supposed to clearly spell out what the sentence means and that it's really in two parts, one custodial and one in the community.