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Trevor William
HAMILTON
Trevor Hamilton (born June 19, 1982), is a Northern Irish murderer.
He abducted and murdered 65-year-old Attracta Harron, a recently-retired
librarian, when she was returning from Mass in Murlog, Lifford, County
Donegal on 11 December 2003. Four months earlier he had been released
from prison after serving a sentence for a violent rape and other
offences, including threats to kill.
Attracta Harron's body was found on 5 April 2004, four months after she
was last seen alive, hidden in a river bank less than 50 yards from
Hamilton's home.
Hamilton was found guilty of her murder on 12 April 2006. The trial
judge, when sentencing him on 4 August 2006, recommended that he should
never be released from prison. This was the first time that such a
recommendation had been made in Northern Ireland, although these
recommendations had been made almost 30 times previously (by both
politicians and judges) in England and Wales.
Attracta Harron went missing on 11th December 2003 when she was
returning to her home from Mass in Murlog, outside Lifford, Co. Donegal.
Over the following months, amidst
intense media coverage, her family searched desperately for her
throughout Ireland in the hope that she was still alive.
On 28th March, 2004, 21 year old
Trevor Hamilton from near Sion Mills (about 3 miles from Strabane) was
charged with Attracta's murder.
On 5th April, 2004, police using
specially trained sniffer dogs recovered Attracta's body from a shallow
grave beside a stream outside Sion Mills.
On Easter Sunday 11th April, 2004
Attracta was finally laid to rest in the cemetery attached to Murlog
church - the church where she was married and were she had attended mass
on the morning she disappeared.
Hamilton's trial commenced on 27th
February, 2006 and on 12th April 2006 he was found guilty of her murder.
On 4th August 2006, Hamilton was
given a 'whole life' sentence for the brutal murder of Attracta.
Murdered former Strabane
librarian, Mrs Attracta Harron, was buried in a shallow grave to the
rear of her alleged killer’s home, stripped of all clothing and
possessions save for her wedding ring, a court has heard.
The hushed crowded No. 1 Courtroom
at Dungannon Crown Court also heard that Mrs Harron died from blunt
force trauma to the head and face, causing fractures and brain damage,
and that she was wrapped in a ‘shroud’ made from a meal bag, while slabs
of stone were used to conceal the dead woman’s remains, which lay
undiscovered for almost five months.
A 23-year-old farmer from Sion
Mills, Trevor William Hamilton, of Concess Road, denies murdering the
65-year-old librarian. He is charged with committing the murder on a
date unknown between December 10, 2003, and April 6, 2004.
An estimated 120 witnesses are due to give evidence and it is
anticipated that the trial will last for six weeks.
On Monday a jury of six men and
six women were selected to try the defendant, and the case is being
presided over by His Honour Mr Justice McLaughlin. On Tuesday morning an
unsuccessful attempt was made by senior defence counsel, Mr Philip
Mooney, QC, to have the publication or broadcast of media reports
suppressed. He alleged that the extensive media interest and reporting
which would follow might prove prejudicial.
The gallery of Courtroom No 1 was
filled with members of Mrs Harron’s family, including her husband,
Michael. From the outset, one of the woman’s daughters found it
impossible to control her grief, sobbing quietly as the legal process
got underway.
Later in the day, when two videos were shown of Mrs Harron walking past
Daly’s shop and filling station, in Lifford, Mr Harron was unable to
watch his wife’s final known movements and left the courtroom, followed
by his sister who was also distressed. Other family members followed
them.
The accused, casually dressed in a
fleece and jeans, had been brought in wearing handcuffs and flanked by
two security staff. He was seated in the dock a few feet in front of the
front row of the public gallery.
Meanwhile, outlining the case,
prosecuting counsel, Mr Terence Mooney QC, said the evidence he would
put before the court was a clear, coherent and conclusive mixture of
circumstantial evidence and forensic science examination, and when
viewed in totality the jury would be left with compelling evidence,
leaving no room for doubt that the accused, Hamilton, had murdered Mrs
Harron.
Mr Mooney went on to say that
pathological and medical evidence would show Mrs Harron sustained blows
to the head and face, that they were blows from a blunt instrument, and
they caused fractures and resulted in “massive damage to the underlying
brain”.
He said the jury would have little
doubt that due to the nature of the injuries, the perpetrator had
intended to kill Mrs Harron.
“So the issue really before you is not a question of whether or not Mrs
Harron was killed...murdered... but the issue is if the accused is
guilty of that offence, or that he committed that offence,” Mr Mooney
said.
“I say it is clear the murderer is Hamilton. When you consider the
evidence in the case you will have no doubt he is the killer and
inflicted the blows upon Mrs Harron that caused her to die.”
Giving the jury an overview of the late Mrs Harron’s life, background
and habits, Mr Mooney said at the time of her death she lived at Curley
Hill Road with her husband and close family, and she was well known in
the town. She was a former librarian and her husband a retired school
teacher.
“Mrs Harron loved walking very
much, was very devout in her devotion to her faith, and was a member of
the Roman Catholic faith. For a number of weeks prior to her
disappearance she had begun to attend Mass in Murlog Church in Lifford
in Co Donegal. She wanted to gain fitness and lose weight, and she made
the daily journey from her home in Curley Hill to Murlog and then she
returned on foot again to Curley Hill,” Mr Mooney said.
Describing the daily route she
took, Mr Mooney said Mrs Harron was seen and identified by a number of
witnesses going and returning to the church.
“A number of people who knew her
identified her because of the very distinctive clothing she was wearing
on this particular day. She wore a bright red coat and red jumper and
grey slacks, and she was carrying a handbag.”
“The last time she was seen was
about 10.45am as she re-crossed the bridge from Lifford into Strabane,”
Mr Mooney said, adding that Mrs Harron was noted passing a garage, and
it was at this stage that he introduced the two selections of CCTV
footage which appeared to upset the late woman’s husband.
Describing Mrs Harron as a woman
who “made the ordinary plans that the mother of a family would”, Mr
Mooney said Mrs Harron was expected home from Mass that day, and had
plans to go on a shopping trip to a factory outlet later in the day.
“She was a devoted family person
looking forward to Christmas and her family coming home. She had made
plans in respect of Christmas and there was no reason why she should
suddenly disappear that day,” Mr Mooney said.
Following the appearance of Mrs
Harron on the CCTV footage on the Lifford bridge, the next believed
sighting was by a farmer.
The farmer, Edward McAuley,
contacted police on December 14, 2003. He had called at the police
station and told them he had seen a woman fitting Mrs Harron’s
description in a car sometime between 10am and 11.30am on the day Mrs
Harron disappeared, as he drove along Orchard Road near Sion Mills on
his tractor.
Mr Mooney said the witness
recalled a car approaching him at speed in the opposite direction and
while he did not take note of the driver, he did notice the passenger, a
woman whom he believed to be the same woman he had seen in the missing
persons’ reports circulating at the time.
Mr Mooney said the witness
described what he called ‘red streaks on her face’, which he believed to
be blood, and she was moving her hands up and down over her chest.
Mr Mooney said Mr McAuley also
noted the woman’s clothing was red and she had blonde hair and described
the car as being similar to his own sister’s.
Separately to this, Mr Mooney told
the jury, the Fire Brigade had been called to a car fire at 12.57pm on
December 11 to Hamilton’s home.
He said that the call had been
made by the an aunt of the accused, who was not at 3 Concess Road at the
time she made the call on behalf of her nephew, while Hamilton, who
claimed to police investigating the fire that he had not left home all
day, had access to his own telephone at home.
Mr Mooney said that when the Fire
Brigade arrived to deal with the blaze they were alarmed to find it
close to an oil tank. Hamilton’s car was a red Hyundai Lantra.
“There were a number of people
present, and one person was the young man Trevor Hamilton. Hamilton will
say he told the fire officers and later told the police the car had not
moved all day from 3 Concess Road. That was untrue, because the police
later uncovered evidence. In fact the car had been driven by Hamilton
around and into Sion Mills and on some roads between Sion Mills and
Strabane that day,” he said, adding: “The assertion made that day by
Hamilton when asked, was a lie. He said he was not out of the house.”
In a subsequent police examination
no source of combustion could be discovered, yet forensic science
examination showed that the fire probably began in the front passenger
compartment.
On February 20, 2004, police
employed the use of the Victim Recovery Unit dogs from England, which
were highly trained to detect and alert handlers to the presence of
human remains. A video without sound was shown in the court showing a
Springer Spaniel dog examining two cars and a small van before being
taken to the Lantra that had been driven by Hamilton and subsequently
burned out, allegedly maliciously.
The video clearly showed the
spaniel examining the other vehicles without reacting, and as soon as it
entered the Lantra it began barking and refused to get out. Its search
of the vehicle focused on the front passenger and rear seats.
Further forensic examination was
carried out in the rear and passenger compartments of the vehicle and
blood was detected from material taken from the car for examination. A
car mat from the rear of the car was also shown to contain blood, and
because of that, the investigation focused on Hamilton, Mr Mooney said,
which included a comprehensive search of the property at Concess Road
and in particular the sites of fires in the garden.
Recovered from these were rosary
beads, blue plasters, a religious text, a business card, red material
and an AIB bank receipt, all of which Mr Mooney described and linked to
Mrs Harron; the rosary beads were identical to a set owned by Mr Harron;
the bank receipt came from a withdrawal of cash made when Mr and Mrs
Harron were at a wedding anniversary function in the south of Ireland on
September 5, 2003; the business card was from an architect involved in
the design of the new library in Strabane who was friends with Mrs
Harron; the plaster matched those exactly which were missing from a box
of plasters Mrs Harron bought in Lidl and which bore the same batch
number, and the religious text came from a book of devotions available
during a special service at the Church of the Immaculate Conception at
Barrack Street or from the local religious shop in Strabane.
All of this Mr Mooney said, when
taken together, provided compelling evidence connecting Hamilton to the
late Mrs Harron.
Mr Mooney claimed the items were
taken from Mrs Harron and an attempt was deliberately made to destroy
them. The red material taken from the fire was sent off for examination
together with filaments of fibre taken from the Harron family car, and
these also matched, and showed signs of blood. The car mat which was
taken for examination also showed blood traces, and a DNA profile was
made which matched that of Mrs Harron.
Mr Mooney said the chances of the
blood not being Mrs Harron’s were a billion to one and for that reason
any notion that it was not her blood in Hamilton’s car could be
discounted.
“You cannot elimiate Mrs Harron as
being the person who was the source of the blood on the mat,” he told
the silent courtroom, adding: “The chance of another person being the
source of the blood other than Attracta Harron is so minute it can be
safely discounted”.
He said telephone records for
Hamilton were examined using ‘cell site analysis’ which showed his claim
he was at home all day were incorrect. His mother was away all day and
his father was out at work, meaning Hamilton knew the house was empty
all day and he could move freely.
Following lunch Mr Mooney took the
jury through various maps and pictures outlining the scene, marking the
sites of the fires, the oil tank, where items were recovered, the
location of the stream to the house and the shallow grave in the river
where Mrs Harron’s remains were found.
He said highly trained dogs were
also employed on April 5, 2004 to search the property and the river, and
it was through the dogs that the remains were found. He also said a
rancid smell, that of rotting flesh, was also strong in the area where
the grave had been dug and the area around the discovery had all the
hallmarks of not being consistent with the terrain, as it had been
disturbed.
He told the jury how Mrs Harron’s
body was pulled from a hide, concealed by slabs, which were later traced
back to the back yard at 3 Concess Road, and Mrs Harron had been
stripped naked and placed in a shroud made from a meal sack, also unique
to the property, and that other identical meal sacks were found at
Hamilton’s home.
Pathological examination of Mrs
Harron’s remains showed she had died from head injuries.
She had suffered at least three
blows to the head from a heavy object which had a cutting edge like that
found on an axe or hatchet, and the State Pathologist concluded that
death was due to blunt trauma and not from natural causes.
The trauma caused fractures to the
skull and facial bones, and the trauma to the brain caused rapid death.
Mr Mooney said such injuries would
have bled heavily and could easily have been responsible for the blood
found in Hamilton’s car.
“Is it a coincidence her personal
items were found in the back garden at Concess Road? Or that the items
used to conceal her body were found in the back garden of Concess Road?
Or that blood found in the car owned by Hamilton, and apparently
destroyed by a mysterious fire on December 11, 2003, within a very short
time of the last sighting of Mrs Harron?” Mr Mooney asked the jury,
adding: “It must be an unavoidable fact that the only time Mrs Harron
got into that car was on December 11, 2003.”
“The evidence that we are able to
present to you is so compelling that it releases any doubt any person
could possibly have as to the guilt of the accused,” Mr Mooney said.
He said evidence from those who
knew her would show Mrs Attracta Harron came from a generation where
people accepted lifts from strangers and were trusting, and Mrs Harron
would have no concept of why or how anyone would wish ill will toward
her or could hurt her, such was her nature.
Drawing his overview of the
prosecution facts to a close, Mr Mooney said there was no evidence to
suggest that Mrs Harron was alive after December 11, despite alleged
sightings, and he asked if there could be any doubt as to the identity
of the person responsible, given the location of the body and all the
personal effects found at Concess Road, the fires and the lies told by
the defendant.
“He lied to try and diminish the
risk of a link being made between himself and Mrs Harron. His father was
at work, his mother was in Ballymena shopping and he knew that house was
vacant and there was no person to disturb him. There is no room for
doubt. There is nothing to upset the proposition that we put forward. I
put it to the jury that the perpetrator is in the dock, before you at
this time. He put Mrs Harron in the car and some time on December 11 he
killed her,” Mr Mooney said.
The first two witnesses in the
case were technical experts, a civilian mapping officer who identified
the maps which will be used during the case, and the managing director
of a firm specialising in computer-based image construction and analysis
tools used on-screen to facilitate location of sites and places named
during the trial.
Appearances: Prosecution, Mr
Terence Mooney QC, with junior counsel, Mr Simon Reid, BL and Mr Philip
Mateer, BL; Defence: Mr Philip Mooney, QC, supported by Mr Des Fahy, BL,
instructed by P Fahy and Co, Solicitors.
IN THE CROWN COURT
OF NORTHERN IRELAND
THE QUEEN
TREVOR WILLIAM HAMILTON
McLAUGHLIN J
[1] Trevor William Hamilton you were convicted of the murder of
Bridgit Attracta Harron on 12 April 2006, after a trial before a jury
which commenced on 27 February this year. It was a killing which caused
great shock and revulsion throughout the community and the trial was a
harrowing experience for everyone who took part in it. As the evidence
unfolded it became apparent that the prosecution case was irrefutable
and your conviction was entirely justified. That outcome was the
product of co-operation from the public, painstaking forensic analysis
of material, co-operation between police forces, especially from An
Garda Siochana, and above all to the professionalism, dedication and
persistence of Acting Chief Inspector Gilmore and his colleagues in the
PSNI.
[2] Mrs Harron was 65 years old and had retired just a short time
before after lengthy and dedicated service as a librarian in Strabane.
She was in excellent health, a devoted mother and wife, had a dynamic
and outgoing personality and was regarded with great affection and
respect by all who knew her; she maintained very close ties with her
family including her sisters and brother. She was physically fit and
often walked the hills and countryside of Tyrone, Donegal and further
afield. For her retirement was to be an opportunity, a new and
fulfilling phase of her life, and she was determined it should continue
to be as productive and enjoyable as it had been hitherto.
[3] She was also a woman of intense religious conviction who
attended church on a daily basis, sang in the choir and participated
fully in the life of her church and parish. Possibly because of her
religious beliefs she had a charitable view of people, was trusting of
those she met and was rarely suspicious of their motives. She was so
trusting in fact that, in spite of reservations expressed by others, she
was known to accept lifts in cars, occasionally from strangers both
young and old. She may have been particularly easy to persuade to
accept a lift when she was at, or close to the foot of Curleyhill Road
which was near the town centre because the road rose steeply from there
and parts of it had no footpath. It would seem that ultimately her
trusting and devout disposition led to her death at your hands however.
[4] On 11 December 2003, she left home at 13 Curleyhill Road,
Strabane, about 9.00am to walk to Murlough Chapel outside Lifford, Co
Donegal, to attend morning Mass. It was her intention to walk home and
then to go shopping with her daughter Eilis; she did attend Mass but
never arrived home.
[5] She undertook the rather long walk to and from Mass as part
of a determined fitness and weight control programme and she was also
completing a special prayer cycle to the Devine Mercy on behalf of her
daughter who had suffered ill health but was about to undergo an
interview for a new job at Queen’s University, Belfast. Fragments of
her prayer book and rosary beads were recovered from the bed of a fire
at the garden of your home and were an important part of the evidence
leading to your conviction.
[6] Her body was found on 5 April 2004 in a burial site at the
base of the river bank behind your home. The suspicions of the police
fell on you at an early stage and you were charged with Mrs Harron’s
murder in March 2004 before her body was found. When her body was
hidden she had been stripped of all her clothes and further indignity
was heaped upon her by you by placing her body in an animal feed sack.
So determined were you to destroy all possible evidence that you burnt
not just her clothes and personal effects in your garden, but you also
set fire to your car. Fortunately your attempts were so clumsy that
sufficient traces remained from them to be identified as hers, including
traces of her blood which miraculously survived the fire in your car.
[7] Having heard the evidence I am satisfied, as was the jury,
that you killed Mrs Harron after abducting her, almost certainly after
you offered her a lift, when she was close to the centre of Strabane on
her way home from Mass. What happened thereafter can be put together
only partly for it seems sure that Mr McCauley saw her in your car
within a half hour of the last sighting of her in Strabane. The
presence of her blood in the rear of the car, which must have been there
before it was set on fire, means that she was almost certainly dead
within an hour or so of her abduction.
[8] The manner of her death was callous and brutal in the extreme
as is apparent from the nature and extent of the injuries revealed at
the post mortem; I quote from the report of Professor Crane:
“This
was the decomposing body of an adult female of apparent average build
and measuring 154 cm (5 feet ½ inch) in height. The autopsy revealed no
apparent serious natural disease to cause or accelerate death, however a
detailed examination of the internal organs was precluded by the extent
of the decomposition. There was a fibroid in the womb but this was just
an incidental finding.
There
was clear evidence that she had sustained head injuries. There was a
laceration on the left side of the scalp above the left ear and a
further laceration, with clean-cut margins, just behind the pinna of the
ear. The skull subjacent to these wounds was badly fractured and the
fragments depressed inwards into the liquefying brain. A further
laceration was located on the left side of the face extending from the
root of the nose to the upper lip and this was associated with fractures
of the nasal bones and the upper jaw. Although there was no apparent
external injury to the right side of the head there was a fairly
extensive curved fracture of the skull here which extended to the upper
margin of the bony eye socket.
The
scalp and facial injuries would suggest at least three blows to the head
with a heavy object possibly with a cutting edge such as an axe or
hatchet. The damage to the right side of the skull could have been due
to a further blow from a blunt object or as a result of counter pressure
if one of the blows to the left side of the scalp was inflicted whilst
the right side of the head was resting on a hard surface such as the
ground.
Although the skull was of somewhat less than normal thickness and
density the extent of comminution of the bone would nonetheless indicate
fairly substantial force having been used. There can be little doubt
that these injuries would have been associated with significant damage
to the underlying brain sufficient to cause fairly rapid death.
No
other antemortem injuries were apparent and there was no evidence of
sexual assault.”
[9] These findings were reviewed by Dr John Rutherford, Forensic
Pathologist, and there was no significant difference in their opinions,
although he could find no clear indication of a particular type of
weapon having been used. He suggested that, whilst an axe or other
similar sharp edged object could have been used, on balance he would
have expected to find more cleanly cut external wounds and perhaps more
linear fracturing of the underlying skull. He broadened the possible
“weapon” used to include the edge of a brick or stone, a metal bar, a
lump hammer or the heel of a boot. By whatever mechanism the fatal
injuries were inflicted there can be no dispute that very significant
force was used and it was applied pitilessly with chilling cruelty and
without regard for the suffering of a helpless woman unable to escape,
to fight back or otherwise defend herself. For reasons which I shall
set out later I am sure the motive for the original abduction of Mrs
Harron was a sexual one and that you killed her as part of your attempts
to ensure you would not be caught.
[10] The murder of Mrs Harron not only destroyed her prospect of a
happy retirement but has also had the most profound consequences for her
husband, children and wider family circle. The prosecution has
presented to me for consideration the statements of her husband Michael
Anthony, her son Michael Eoin and her daughter Camille in which they
analyse the impact of your actions on them as individuals and the wider
family. It is easy, but incorrect, to believe that one can understand
what they went through after she disappeared: the long wait for her body
to be found, their desperate efforts to keep believing she might be
alive, their lonely and failed attempts to find her – including walking
the streets of Dublin on a freezing Christmas Day, the grief and
exhaustion during the wake and funeral and the awful void that has
resulted in their lives since. To comprehend the enormity of these
events it is necessary to read those statements. I accept their
accuracy without reservation and they accord entirely with the evidence
given at the trial by Mr Harron Snr, Eilis, her sisters Mary and Camille
and her brother Joseph. I also received the evidence of Brienin Marie,
another daughter of Mrs Harron: she was too ill to attend the trial and
her witness statement, made before her mother’s body was found, was
distressing in the extreme as she described her belief that Mrs Harron
was still alive. The dreadful deterioration in her health following the
finding of her mother’s body is another facet of the terrible toll this
killing has wrought. The devastating impact of what you did led Michael
Eoin to say in his statement that your actions “will reverberate for
generations through our family”. I consider that to be an appropriate
point at which to turn to consider the sentence which I should impose
upon you.
[11] The determination of the punishment for this crime is made
within the framework of the Life Sentences (Northern Ireland) Order 2001
which came into operation on 8 October 2001. It requires that in a
case, such as this, which involves the imposition of a life sentence,
the judge is required to fix a term of imprisonment – known as the
tariff – which is intended to serve as retribution and deterrence given
the seriousness of the offence in question. I was reminded repeatedly
in the course of the hearing in relation to sentence that the matter of
detaining a murderer in custody in order to protect the public is given
effectively to the Life Sentence Review Commissioners established by the
2001 Order. This is an area of practice which has been well rehearsed
in a number of cases and I accept that interpretation of the provisions
of Article 5(1) and (2) of the Order.
[12] In England and Wales a Practice Statement was formulated in
May 2002 by Lord Wolff LCJ to give guidance to judges in these cases.
The background events leading to its issue and its terms are set out
fully in R v McCandless and Others [2004] NI 269 and I need not
repeat those details now. Although the Practice Statement has been
superseded in England and Wales by the provisions of the Criminal
Justice Act 2003 it continues to have effect in this jurisdiction: this
was affirmed in McCandless by the Court of Appeal (see paragraph
10 of the judgment of the court) and again in Attorney General’s
Reference No 6 of 2004 when the Court headed by Sir Brian Kerr, the
present Lord Chief Justice, stated that it did not consider the
principles set out in the 2003 Act could be applied in Northern Ireland
without legislation and so the Practice Statement of May 2002 would
remain the basis for sentencing in cases of murder. I seek, therefore,
to fix the tariff in accordance with its provisions.
[13] The initial step in the sentencing process is to establish
whether the higher or lower starting point applies. In this case there
is no dispute that the former applies and so initially I have decided
that the higher starting point of 15/16 years applies as it appears to
be self evident from the facts proven and clearly accepted by the jury
that this is the appropriate point at which to begin.
[14] The guidelines then lead to a consideration of the aggravating
and mitigating factors relating to the accused and the offence which may
produce a variation of the initial starting point. A considerable
number of these factors are relevant and I shall look at these in more
detail. I should record at this stage however that Mr Phillip Mooney QC
when entering the plea in mitigation was able to point to only one
possible mitigating factor in your favour, namely your age. At the time
of the offence you were 21 years 6 months old. By any standards you
were still a young man but you were also a fully developed adult and
functioned in a normal way in that you enjoy average intelligence and
held down a regular job. As the medical evidence shows you do not
suffer from any mental illness or abnormality of personality. Your
experiences of the criminal justice system were extensive and you were
therefore fully aware of what was right or wrong and had much advice,
direction and counselling to assist you. I do not consider it
appropriate therefore to regard your age as a mitigating factor.
[15] You have a dreadful criminal record made worse by the sequence
and pattern of your offending which began when you were just under 16.
On 17 December 1999 you were convicted of five counts of indecent
behaviour which were committed between 12 May and 25 June 1998. These
offences involved exposing yourself and masturbating before women
drivers who were passing along country roads. You denied involvement
initially, then pleaded guilty, later admitted to Dr Fred Browne that
you had begun to expose yourself when you were 16 and that your victims
were women in their 20’s who were driving alone. After your conviction
you were placed on probation and were referred to the Barnardo’s project
for young sexual offenders which was due to commence in February 2000;
this did not occur however because of your arrest in connection with a
rape and other offences which were committed on 16 February 2000. This
was an alarming development in its own right but more so as it was just
two months after you had been before the Youth Court and placed on
probation for the earlier offences. The February 2000 charges were very
serious by any standard. You were convicted of Rape, Attempted Buggery,
Indecent Assault on a female (forced oral sexual contact) and making
threats to kill. The circumstances of those offences were dealt with in
detail at this trial as the convictions were admitted in evidence before
the jury. The victim, Ms H, was abducted by you after she had taken a
lift in your car on the pretext that you would leave her home whereas
she was taken to your parents’ home, when you knew they were absent, and
she was subjected to a prolonged sexual attack leading to your
conviction for the various offences I have mentioned. The victim was so
greatly traumatised that even six years later she was unable to come to
this court to give evidence of what happened and her statement made at
the time of the events was read to the court. The examination of the
details of those offences which that took place in this trial, including
hearing evidence from you as the accused, showed that Ms H was subjected
to a dreadful ordeal and it is not surprising she was unable to attend
the court so long after. A particularly significant feature was that
you threatened to kill her in order to frighten her and so prevent her
reporting the attack to the police. This is something seen often in
such cases and may or may not be intended to be taken seriously. In
this case however Ms H was so fearful that she pleaded for her life and
was eventually allowed to go free. She took the threats very seriously
indeed.
[16] Following your arrest in 2000 you denied involvement and only
pleaded guilty at the “door of the court”. The evidence against you was
overwhelming but despite that, and your plea of guilty, you now deny
your guilt and did so on oath before the jury. I observed you carefully
when you gave your evidence and witnessed what I regard as a pathetic,
puerile and transparently lying exercise which revealed a complete lack
of insight or empathy for your victim. The original sentence imposed
upon you at Fermanagh and Tyrone Crown Court was referred to the Court
of Appeal by the Attorney General and found to be unduly lenient and it
was increased to seven years’ imprisonment to be followed by one year’s
probation. The Court of Appeal considered the appropriate sentence
ought to have been higher still but for reasons set out in its decision
it limited the sentence as you are aware. These events were remarkable
in the life of anyone but when they occur in respect of the behaviour of
a person not yet 18 they suggest that something alarming has occurred.
You served that sentence and were released with 50% remission on 18
August 2003.
[17] You were refused home leave during your detention because you
were assessed as posing a high risk to women and demonstrated a high
risk of re-offending and when released you refused to live in a hostel
approved by the Probation Service. A measure of the concern that your
release engendered is that in the four months following it the Probation
Service had 41 contacts in connection with your work plan including
unannounced visits to your home and informing your employer of your
status. You were also required to undertake the programme for the
prevention of sexual abuse, details of which were also given during the
trial. Within four months of your release you had abducted and murdered
Mrs Harron thus vindicating all the fears and anxieties of those who had
worked with you. There can be little room for doubt that if you had not
been caught and imprisoned again that you would offend again in the same
or a similar manner. I have no doubt that you are an extreme danger to
women and a life sentence in your case, even with a fixed tariff, could
quite possibly mean you would never be released.
[18] The question I must now ask and answer is whether the
seriousness of the offence is such that I should make no order under
Article 5(1) of the 2001 Order – which would mean in effect that I would
impose a “whole life tariff” – or if I should fix a minimum term and
allow the Life Sentence Commissioners to determine whether you should be
released at some date thereafter should they conclude your continued
detention was no longer necessary for the protection of the public. To
answer the question I must consider which aggravating or mitigating
factors relating to you or the offence are present.
[19] I consider that the facts proved at the trial show the
following aggravating and other relevant factors are present:
(i) By reason of your appalling previous record, which I have
just outlined, I consider your culpability in this offence to be
extremely high. Although you have not killed before you have been
guilty of violent sexual offences of a grave kind and have made credible
threats of death to your victim. The infliction of violence and
indignity on vulnerable women is part of your stock in trade.
(ii) The pattern of the previous offending shows a complete
failure to respond to the work of the various agencies and there has
been devious behaviour on your part designed to mislead them and secure
a more favourable outcome for yourself. By pleading guilty at the last
moment in the rape case you sought to gain credit and reduction of
sentence by “sparing” your victim the ordeal of giving evidence but in
the present case you asserted your innocence, claimed you were
pressurised into pleading guilty and engineered a situation which but
for her illness would have forced Ms H into giving evidence. You were
willing to say what suited you when the pre-sentence report was prepared
and to mislead the sexual therapists in order to get through your period
on probation while all the time you had no intention of reforming.
These factors of course point to the risk of further offending, which I
am not considering, but they also point to the extent of your
culpability in abducting and murdering Mrs Harron so soon after your
release. This is undoubtedly what makes this case so very different
from other cases where the instant charge or charges may be similar.
(iii) The concealment of the body of Mrs Harron and the destruction
of evidence in such a calculating and systematic fashion evidence a high
degree of culpability. The manner of the disposal of her body involved
great indignity and has added immeasurably to the prolongation of the
agony of her family. As Mr Harron Jnr put it:
“The
fact that he hid her body massively increased my torture as we did not
know if she was alive or dead. This uncertainty leads to a false hope
that is exceptionally cruel.”
The
frantic efforts made by all the family to find Mrs Harron, including
those bleak and fruitless searches in Dublin, as described by Camille
and Mr Harron, are sufficient to explain why hiding her body in such a
way, intending that it should never by found, constitutes a major
aggravating featur
(iv) The abduction of Mrs Harron when she was alone, albeit walking
in public, must have added greatly to her distress and fear but because
of her trusting character and religious belief she might have failed to
recognise initially just how perilous her plight was. She was held
captive for a substantial period however and driven in the opposite
direction to her home and it must have become obvious to her that your
intentions were malign. If Mr McCauley was correct – and I am sure he
was – she was injured and in distress soon after her abduction.
(v) The advanced state of decomposition of the body when found
precluded evidence being found which might have established a sexual
assault upon Mrs Harron. I am sure however that her abduction was for a
sexual purpose. As Mr Terence Mooney QC for the prosecution put it,
there was no other logical reason for it. No other explanation has ever
been advanced even on a theoretical basis and it is impossible to think
of a credible one. This overwhelming inference is supported by the
similarity of the pattern of your previous offending and by the fact
that you have a proven “enduring predilection to predatory, sexual and
violent offending against women” as it was described by Dr Bownes,
Consultant Forensic Psychiatrist.
(vi) Finally, although they may not fall within the actual terms of
the Practice Statement, just as the issue of abduction is not, there
are other matters which nevertheless should be taken into account. Mrs
Harron was 65 and retired although she was fit, strong and healthy. She
was out walking alone however and was by any standards vulnerable to
attack by someone as young, strong and criminally disposed as you. The
reference in the Practice Statement to the factors which attract the
higher starting point include where “the victim was a child or was
otherwise vulnerable”.
No
doubt someone who was mentally or physically feeble or of advanced years
would be “vulnerable”. I consider however that a women of 65 walking
alone, even in daylight and in an urban environment, is also
“vulnerable” in terms of the above provision notwithstanding that it has
been said a woman of 56 years when fit and well could not be considered
vulnerable. There is a significant difference between being 56 and 65.
This factor can therefore be taken into account in fixing upon the
higher starting point.
[20] The killing of Mrs Harron had the effect of removing the main
or perhaps the only witness to her abduction and assault, even assuming
that no sexual offence was committed. It may be that such circumstances
were not envisaged as falling within the concept of a murder intended to
obstruct the course of justice which is specified in the 2003 Act.
Nevertheless the law must be astute to recognise the need for deterrence
of any offender who may be tempted to kill as part of the cover up of
other offences.
[21] I conclude the review of all the evidence and circumstances by
referring briefly to the psychiatric and psychological reports of Dr
Bownes and Dr Hanley respectively. They show you have no mental
illness, are of average ability, have no apparent antisocial personality
disorder and your mental functioning, judgment and perception of events
are not impaired. Indeed your upbringing by your parents and your
relationships with them and your siblings all appear to be normal.
These combine to make it all the more difficult to understand your
offending. The contents were not relied upon by your counsel as
demonstrating any mitigating factor.
CONCLUSION
[22] The Practice Statement makes clear throughout that its purpose
is to give judges guidelines and does so by giving examples of certain
factors which can be regarded as aggravating or mitigating factors.
These are not directions and are not intended to be exhaustive. The
statutory guidelines in the 2003 Act are more comprehensive and
demonstrate a difference in approach but it may be that the Practice
Statement provides more flexibility and room for the exercise of
discretion. The provision of stronger guidance or directions to judges
in England and Wales does not, in my opinion, mean that murder is
punished more severely there than in Northern Ireland. I believe that
the two processes should be seen as two roads, different in some ways,
but ultimately leading in the same direction.
[23] Having regard to the presence of a number of the factors which
attract the higher starting point, the major aggravating factors and the
absence of any mitigating factors a very high tariff figure is
justified, indeed demanded in this case. The rapidity of your
reoffending within months of your first convictions and later release
from prison, the gravity of the offences committed against Ms H in 2000,
the sinister similarity in the circumstances of those offences and the
death of Mrs Harron together with the complete lack of any remorse on
your part have however driven me to the conclusion that the demand for
retribution and the need for deterrence of people who think and act like
you that this is a quite exceptional case. A rapist who treats a victim
as you treated Ms H and who threatens to kill her to secure her silence
and who then kills another victim whom he has abducted in these
circumstances and does so within four months of completing a seven year
term of detention must face a severe sanction in the absence of any
mitigation. What you did to Mrs Harron, a good and loving woman, was at
once nauseating and horrifying, it was the stuff of nightmares and the
epitome of the loss of innocence in our community. What that poor woman
experienced as you prepared to execute her, whatever weapon you used to
accomplish it, was so appalling that it demands retribution of the most
severe kind. When the multiple aggravating factors are taken into
account, particularly that you murdered her so soon after your release
from prison from such serious offences, I conclude that only one
punishment is appropriate especially as you have been given a second
chance in the past but it had no effect on your behaviour.
[24] I shall therefore order you to be sentenced to life
imprisonment and that the release provisions of Article 5(1) of the 2001
Order shall not apply to you. This is necessary in my opinion to
satisfy the demand for retribution and to deter others from committing
such appalling acts. You will in consequence spend the rest of your
life in prison.
Notification of Sentence
Friday 4 August
2006
JUDGE HANDS DOWN “WHOLE LIFE” SENTENCE TO TREVOR HAMILTON FOR THE
MURDER OF ATTRACTA HARRON
Mr
Justice McLaughlin, sitting in the Crown Court in Dungannon, today
confirmed that Trevor Hamilton will spend the rest of his life in prison
for the murder of Attracta Harron in December 2003. Trevor Hamilton was
convicted of murder on 12 April 2006 after trial before a jury.
In
passing sentence, Mr Justice McLaughlin, said that:
“The
manner of her death was callous and brutal in the extreme .. . By
whatever mechanism the fatal injuries were inflicted there can be no
dispute that very significant force was used and it was applied
pitilessly with chilling cruelty and without regard for the suffering of
a helpless woman unable to escape, fight back or otherwise defend
herself.”
The
sentencing process involves the judge establishing the starting point
for the sentence and considering whether the mitigating and aggravating
factors relating to the accused and the offence may produce a variation
of the initial starting point.
In determining the
sentence, Mr Justice McLaughlin considered that there was no dispute
that a higher starting point should apply and that there were no
mitigating factors. He told Trevor Hamilton:
“As the medical evidence
shows you do not suffer from any mental illness or abnormality of
personality. Your experiences of the criminal justice system were
extensive and you were therefore fully aware of what was right or wrong
and had much advice, direction and counselling to assist you. I do not
consider it appropriate therefore to regard your age as a mitigating
factor.”
The judge then set out
the aggravating factors including Trevor Hamilton’s “appalling
previous record”; the pattern of previous offending which showed a
“complete failure to respond to the work of the various agencies and …
devious behaviour on your part designed to mislead them to seek a more
favourable outcome”; the concealment of the body and the destruction of
evidence in a calculating and systematic fashion; the abduction of Mrs
Harron when she was alone which must have added greatly to her distress
and fear; and the fact that Mrs Harron was attacked when walking alone
and therefore “vulnerable”. Mr Justice McLaughlin also noted that,
although the advanced state of decomposition of the body when found
precluded evidence being found which might have established a sexual
assault upon Mrs Harron, he was sure that her abduction was for a sexual
purpose. He said that “this overwhelming inference is supported by the
similarity of the pattern of your previous offending and by the fact
that you have a proven “enduring predilection to predatory, sexual and
violent offending against women”.”
Mr Justice McLaughlin
considered whether the seriousness of the offence was such that he
should, in effect, impose a “whole life tariff” or whether he should fix
a minimum term and allow the Life Sentence Commissioners to determine
whether Trevor Hamilton should be released at some date in the future
should they conclude his continued detention was no longer necessary for
the protection of the public.
In conclusion, Mr
Justice McLaughlin said that:
“Having regard to the
presence of a number of factors which attract the higher starting point,
the major aggravating factors and the absence of any mitigating factors,
a very high tariff figure is justified, indeed demanded in this case.
The rapidity of your re-offending within months of your first
convictions and later release from prison, the gravity of the offences
committed […] in 2000, the sinister similarity in the circumstances of
those offences and the death of Mrs Harron together with the complete
lack of any remorse on your part have however driven me to the
conclusion that the demand for retribution and the need for deterrence
of people who think and act like you that this is quite an exceptional
case. A rapist who treats a victim as you treated [your victim in 2000]
and who threatens to kill her to secure her silence, and who then kills
another victim who he has abducted in these circumstances and does so
within four months of completing a seven year term of detention must
face a severe sanction in the absence of any mitigation.
What you did to Mrs
Harron, a good and loving woman, was at once nauseating and horrifying,
it was the stuff of nightmares and the epitome of the loss of innocence
in our community. What that poor woman experienced as you prepared to
execute her, whatever weapon you used to accomplish it, was so appalling
that it demands retribution of the most severe kind. When the multiple
aggravating factors are taken into account, particularly that you
murdered her so soon after your release from prison from such serious
offences, I conclude that only one punishment is appropriate especially
as you have been given a second chance in the past but it had no effect
on your behaviour.
I shall therefore order
you to be sentenced to life imprisonment and that the release provisions
of Article 5(1) of the 2001 Order [The Life Sentence (Northern Ireland)
Order 2001] shall not apply to you. This is necessary in my opinion to
satisfy the demand for retribution and to deter others from committing
such appalling acts. You will in consequence spend the rest of your
life in prison.”
NOTES FOR EDITORS
1. The Life
Sentences (Northern Ireland) Order 2001 requires the judge in a case
such as this to fix a term of imprisonment, known as the tariff, which
is intended to serve as retribution and deterrence given the seriousness
of the offence. Guidance to judges in these cases is available in a
Practice Statement which was formulated by Lord Wolff LCJ in 2002 but
which remains the basis for sentencing in cases of murder in Northern
Ireland (in the absence of legislation in Northern Ireland equivalent to
the Criminal Justice Act 2003). The background events leading to the
issue of the Practice Statement and its terms are set out fully in R
v McCandless and Others [2004] NI 269.
2. Trevor
Hamilton was convicted of five counts of indecent behaviour on 17
December 1999. He was placed on probation but was then charged and
later convicted of rape, attempted buggery, indecent assault and making
threats to kill in connection with offences which were committed on 16
February 2000. He was sentenced to seven years imprisonment to be
followed by one year’s probation and was released on 18 August 2003. On
release, he was required to undertake a programme for the prevention of
sexual abuse and was subjected to visits and contact by the Probation
Service. However, within four months of his release he had abducted and
murdered Mrs Harron.
IN HER MAJESTY'S COURT
OF APPEAL IN NORTHERN IRELAND
REFERENCE BY HER
MAJESTY'S ATTORNEY GENERAL FOR NORTHERN IRELAND (No 2 of 2001) (TREVOR
WILLIAM HAMILTON)
CARSWELL LCJ
In this reference,
brought under section 36 of the Criminal Justice Act 1988, the Attorney
General for Northern Ireland sought leave to refer to the court
sentences imposed upon the offender Trevor William Hamilton, on the
ground that they were unduly lenient. They were imposed at Enniskillen
Crown Court on 19 September 2001 by His Honour Judge Foote QC, when the
offender pleaded guilty to four offences committed against the victim, a
woman in her late twenties. At the outset of the hearing we granted
leave and proceeded with the reference.
The counts in the
indictment in respect of which the offender was sentenced on 19
September 2001 were as follows:
• Count 1 – rape;
• Count 4 – attempted
buggery, contrary to section 62 of the Offences Against the Person Act
1861;
• Count 5 – indecent
assault, contrary to section 52 of the Offences Against the Person Act
1861;
• Count 6 – making a
threat to kill, contrary to section 16 of the Offences Against the
Person Act 1861.
The judge imposed the
same concurrent sentence on each count, a custody probation order
consisting of three years and eleven months' detention in the Young
Offenders' Centre, followed by three years' supervision by a probation
officer.
The offences all arose
out of an incident which occurred in the vicinity of Sion Mills, Co
Tyrone in the afternoon of 16 February 2000. Just before 2.30 pm the
victim was waiting in Sion Mills for a bus to take her home to
Newtownstewart when the offender stopped his car beside her and offered
her a lift. She accepted the offer and got into the car. Instead of
driving directly towards Newtownstewart the offender headed along a
country road, on the pretext that he had to collect something from his
mother's house. He stopped in the yard of a house in a rural area and
left the victim in the car for a few minutes.
The offender then
returned to the car, got in and jumped in on top of the victim, whom he
pushed down on the seat. He leaned on her with his full weight, abused
her and put his hand over her mouth. He squeezed her neck and then
placed his hand on her private parts. She struggled and tried without
success to fight him off. He said "I'm going to fuck you" and dragged
her out of the car, pulling her by the wrist and the hair. He ignored
her pleas to stop and to let her go and pulled her into a nearby
caravan. He closed the caravan doors and pushed the victim down on to a
seat, saying repeatedly that he was going to fuck her. He sat on top of
her, holding her wrist and squeezing her neck. He attempted to kiss
her, placing his tongue in her mouth.
The victim tried very
hard to fight him off, but the offender was too strong for her. He
forcibly pulled off much of her clothing. As she struggled he made a
threat to kill her, which she believed to be serious. He placed his
finger inside her vagina, then proceeded to rape her. She told him
several times that she was menstruating and he pulled a tampon out of
her vagina, where the intercourse had driven it in deep. Hamilton then
attempted to have anal intercourse, but was unsuccessful, as the victim
was still struggling. He raped her again and then withdrew his penis
and compelled her to suck it. He finally entered her vagina again
before ejaculating over her pubic and abdominal areas. The episode went
on, by her reckoning, for about an hour.
He then required the
victim to swear on her son's life that she would not tell the police.
He said that he was sorry for the marks on her neck and said that he
could not believe what he had done. He drove her to Newtownstewart and
dropped her off. The victim took the number of his car as he drove off,
then ran to her sister's house and reported the incident to the police.
She took police officers to the scene of the rape, where Hamilton was
working at his car. The number plates had been removed and Hamilton
claimed that he had not been out in the car and that he had taken the
plates off a couple of days before. In the house there was evidence
that clothing had been recently washed and it appeared that Hamilton's
hair had been cut in an attempt to alter his appearance.
The offender maintained
during interview his denial that he had had anything to do with the
offence. He was charged on the indictment with three counts of rape
and the three other offences of attempted buggery, indecent assault and
making a threat to kill. He pleaded not guilty on arraignment to all
charges and only changed his plea when the trial was ready to commence
on 26 March 2001. He then pleaded guilty on re-arraignment to one count
of rape and to the other charges and was put back for sentence. The
judge ordered that the other charges lie on the file, not to be
proceeded with save by leave of the court.
The offender was aged 17
years and 8 months at the time of the offence and is now aged 19 years.
He was convicted on 17 December 1999 of five offences of indecent
behaviour, apparently consisting of exposing himself to women drivers on
a country road. He was placed on probation for two years, with a
condition that he attend the Barnardo's Therapeutic Project.
The pre-sentence report
stated that it was evident from his offending that Hamilton has a major
difficulty in controlling and channelling his sexual feelings, which
gave rise to major concern. It was difficult to assess the full extent
of this, given his ongoing failure to discuss and fully confront his
behaviour. He admitted that the crimes were premeditated but professed
not to have any clear memory of committing them. The probation officer
expressed the view that he while he expressed remorse he tended to lack
insight into the violent nature of his behaviour, which in turn might
lead to underestimating the trauma suffered by his victim. The report
went on to state:
"However he has now
expressed a willingness to participate in a Sex Offenders Programme
which would lead him to address victim awareness and distorted
thinking. Nevertheless, he continues to minimise his responsibility for
his offending by claiming he can't remember committing the offences.
His persistence in expressing such views could greatly undermine the
impact that participation in a Sex Offenders Programme would hope to
achieve.
Mr Hamilton accepts that
given the gravity of his offences that he will probably receive a
custodial sentence and that any treatment he receives will initially be
in a prison setting. On his return to the community, I feel that the
defendant should continue to confront these issues in a constructive
manner through the auspices of Probation supervision in order to help
protect the community from any further risk of such behaviour.
If subject to post
release Probation supervision, the defendant would be seen at least
weekly for the first 4 months, after which time a further assessment
would be made to match future contact with perceived risk of offending.
In addition he would receive unscheduled home visits on a monthly basis
to monitor any child protection issues and any concerns regarding risk
of re-offending.
He will be required to
participate effectively in a programme of work. His participation will
be measured by his willingness to be more open about his offending, and
the attitudes and thought process that underlie his offending. He will
be expected to help identify strategies to control his sexual feelings
and to evidence that he is putting such strategies into effect.
His risk of re-offending
will be assessed and managed on an on-going basis through the
inter-agency process for managing the risk that sex offenders pose.
Through this process control measures will be identified to ensure
effective controls over his lifestyle thereby contributing to community
safety."
We were furnished with
an educational psychologist's report, which the judge had had before
him. The conclusion reached by the psychologist was that the offender
is an immature, somewhat naïve man, with fairly underdeveloped social
skills. He described his level of intelligence as follows:
"Mr Hamilton is a person
of limited intelligence, with a verbal IQ which places him in the
`extremely low' category, in the bottom 2% of the population. (It might
be noted that the previous description of the IQ range of 60 and below
was `mentally retarded'). With an IQ of 68, however, I would expect Mr
Hamilton to know the difference between right and wrong, at least in
situations usually regarded as straightforward.
With such a low IQ,
however, I would expect him to experience difficulty understanding the
more subtle aspects of a situation, and to be less able than the
majority of the population in providing appropriate responses in a
challenging situation."
The immediate effects
upon the victim's psychiatric health were serious. She had a history of
previous depressive illness which left her vulnerable. When a
consultant psychiatrist examined her in July 2000, over five months
after the incident, he found that she was suffering from a moderately
severe depressive episode, which had been precipitated by the assault.
She had been severely traumatized and described fear of another
assault, which restricted her social and personal activities. She
related to him recent weight loss related to poor appetite, panic
attacks, regular diarrhoea and vomiting, anhedonia and reduced
concentration. We did not have any more recent report on the effects on
the victim.
In his sentencing
remarks the judge described the case as very serious and stated that if
the offender had been three or four years older he would have sent him
to prison for a term "well in double figures". He took the view that he
needed help as well as punishment and expressed his conclusion that he
should not be sent to prison at his age but should remain in the Young
Offenders' Centre. He assessed the appropriate sentence as six years
and eleven months. He therefore imposed a sentence of three years and
eleven months' detention (the maximum being four years) in the Young
Offenders' Centre, to be followed by three years' probation (again the
maximum for a custody probation order under Article 24 of the Criminal
Justice (Northern Ireland) Order 1996).
In his reference the
Attorney General identified the following aggravating features:
"(a) This is a
serious and prolonged assault which included attempted buggery and
forced oral sex as well as rape. During the course of the assault the
offender threatened to strangle the victim.
(b) The victim's
pain and distress would have been exacerbated by her menstrual
condition.
(c) The physical
force used throughout a long period was considerable.
(d) The serious
psychiatric impact on the victim.
(e) The offender
was in breach of a probation order imposed on 17 December 1999 for five
offences of indecent behaviour."
He also identified the
mitigating features:
"(a) The age of the
offender (17 years when the offences were committed) and the fact that
he is of low intellectual ability.
(b) His plea of
guilty."
We agree that these
factors, which were not disputed by the offender's counsel, are material
to consideration of the case. We regard it as a bad case of its type,
premeditated, violent, repeated rape, accompanied by other degrading
treatment of the victim, which occasioned her severe and lasting
distress. We agree with the judge's statement that prima facie it would
attract a sentence into double figures. The features in favour of the
offender are his age and intellectual state, but the latter is less
relevant in judging the quality of his acts than in some offences, given
his knowledge of right and wrong. Where it is of potential significance
is in the question of the way in which the criminal sanction to be
applied should bear on him. The judge focused primarily on what might
have the best prospect of effecting some improvement in him, which is a
proper and important consideration, but the submission of the Attorney
General is that he failed to give enough weight to the public interest
of marking the obloquy of such sexual preying on vulnerable females and
deterring those who might be tempted to follow such a course.
Mr CA Simpson QC for the
offender stressed his need for treatment rather than retribution and
submitted that imprisonment would be likely to prove counter-productive
in effecting rehabilitation. While not minimising the seriousness of
the case, he suggested that the first priority in a case such as the
present should be treatment of the offender, as the judge had
appreciated, and that his approach through detention in the Young
Offenders' Centre and the Probation Service was justified.
We would repeat again
what we have quoted in previous cases, a passage from the Wolfenden
Committee's report, in which it summarised the function of the criminal
law in the field of sexual offences:
"To preserve public
order and decency, to protect the citizen from what is offensive and
injurious and to provide sufficient safeguards against exploitation and
corruption of others, particularly those who are specially vulnerable
because they are young, weak in body or mind, inexperienced or in a
state of special physical, official or economic dependence."
We would also refer to
what we said in R v Molloy [1997] NIJB 241 at 245-6:
"The courts must be
concerned to protect women against the predatory instinct of males who
see them as vulnerable objects for the gratification of their baser
desires. We would return to the point which the court adumbrated in
R v J M (1997, unreported), that in view of the increasing frequency
of cases of rape, the courts will have to give serious consideration to
reviewing the starting or baseline figure of seven years for a contested
rape. We consider that sentencers should in any event regard it as no
more than a general guide, rather than a fixed tariff for rape cases.
Certainly in cases where the offence is aggravated by violence, sexual
indignities or perversions, the scale should rise steeply and judges
should not hesitate to visit such cases with penalties that they
consider appropriate."
It is a prime function
of criminal justice to impose condign punishment on those who attack
vulnerable members of society, in order to deter others from attempting
to follow their example. In particular, the courts will bring the full
weight of criminal sanctions down on those who prey on women and subject
them to sexual assaults.
The judge was entirely
right in his assessment of the normal range of sentence for such cases.
If this case had been contested, it would in our judgment have merited a
sentence of 12 years' imprisonment. Because of the lateness of the
offender's plea of guilty, which meant that the victim had to endure
right up to the time of trial the stress of facing the prospect of
having to give evidence, and the limited degree of remorse shown by him,
he is not entitled to a substantial discount. We would have regarded a
sentence of ten years as fully justified if the judge had imposed it.
In the circumstances of the case we cannot regard a commensurate
sentence of six years and eleven months as adequate, still less a
disposition which limits the custodial period to three years and eleven
months. The judge was entitled to consider the offender's youth and the
possibility of rehabilitation through the regime which is available in
the Young Offenders' Centre and the supervision of the Probation
Service. We consider, however, that he placed too much weight on these
factors and too little on the need to pass severe deterrent sentences
for crimes of this kind, which must take priority over considerations
personal to the offender.
We therefore consider
that the sentence was unduly lenient. We accede to the application of
the Attorney General and quash the sentences imposed by the judge.
Taking into account the factor of double jeopardy and also the fact that
the offender has almost completed the period of detention ordered by the
judge, we would regard a sentence of eight years' imprisonment on the
rape charge as appropriate, with lesser terms on the other counts. We
have, however, given consideration to the possibility of making a
custody probation order under Article 24 of the Criminal Justice
(Northern Ireland) Order 1996. The terms of the pre-sentence report are
somewhat equivocal and to some extent inconsistent, and we have felt a
degree of doubt whether the offender is really likely to benefit from
probation, given his limited insight and his minimising of his
responsibility for his actions. On balance, however, we feel that some
opportunity should be afforded to the offender to benefit from the
supervision of the Probation Service, in the hope that it will, as the
pre-sentence report says, help to protect the community from any further
risk of such behaviour.
We therefore shall
substitute the following sentences for those passed by the judge:
• Count 1, rape:
custody probation order, consisting of a custodial element of seven
years, followed by one year's probation supervision;
• Count 4, attempted
buggery: five years' imprisonment;
• Count 5, indecent
assault: two years' imprisonment;
• Count 6, making a
threat to kill: two years' imprisonment.
All sentences will be concurrent. The probation
supervision will be subject to the condition imposed by the judge, that
the offender must attend and participate in a sex offender treatment
programme specified by the supervising probation officer and while there
comply with the instructions given by the person or persons in charge.
The victim
65-year-old Attracta Harron, a recently-retired librarian.