Like all blanket rules, this one should be interpreted with care, and with regard to the individual circumstances. Defending criminals who perpetrate this type of vicious crime is beyond the moral pale. It is absolutely OK (and indeed worthy) to test the prosecution evidence, and to require proof rather than mere likelihood. But where guilt is not in question - as it was not in this instance - and the evil of the crime so gruesomely self-evident, it is neither moral nor decent to attempt to get a criminal off scot-free, which is what was successfully done for these violent scum. That's just a disgrace, and the lawyer responsible should be utterly ashamed of himself.Pies4shaw wrote:The "scum lawyers" you refer to are required to represent those people. It would be a sorry day for all of us if lawyers could decline to appear for us because they didn't like what we had done.
Moving on, I think it is a really big mistake to say that "Judges don't get "tough on crime", Parliaments do."
That route is the route to a far less flexible and far less fair justice system. There are plenty of populist right-wing "crime-busting" politicians who would take delight in doubling and tripling sentences, and in introducing much harsher and less flexible minimum sentences. And, for that matter, quite a few on the other side of the house who are keen on doing the same thing, especially when there is an election in sight.
And that would be huge blow to justice. The whole point of granting judges the discretion they have is that they, judges, are then supposed to be able to look at the circumstances of each particular case on its merits. The idea is that the judge is able to make allowance for special circumstances, and in consequence select a lighter or a heavier sentence, or even a different sort of sentence. This freedom granted to judges makes it possible for the justice system to dispense something much more closely approximating "justice" than would otherwise be the case.
And what have judges done with this freedom - they have pissed it up against the wall by using it to hand down ridiculous sentences such as the community service orders granted in this instance.
Yes, judges have the freedom to do that sort of thing, and so they should. But with freedom goes responsibility, and the courts have manifestly failed to exercise their responsibility in this and in many other cases involving violent crime. If I hire a worker, I have the right to expect that worker to exercise reasonable responsibility in the discharge of his duties. If he behaves irresponsibly, I am entitles to counsel him, warn him, and if his performance does not improve, sack him. Why should judges be any different?
The real worry is that because the courts are choosing to hand down these get-off-scot-free sentences for very serious offences, the parliament will indeed intervene, and take away the right of judges to be lenient when this would serve the cause of justice best. We will see people who are guilty of an offence, but who, for a variety of circumstances, should not be punished with the full weight of the law, sentenced to the statutory minimum anyway - and that would be a very bad thing indeed.
Judges have the power to hand down sensible sentences for this type of offence. One of the offenders in this particular case was charged on 8 counts. The first two counts alone have a combinerd maximum penalty under Victorian law of 20 years in prison. I don't know what the other 6 charges were - but we are already up to 20 years in the cooler just for the first two.
So we have a offences for which parliament has laid down a 20-year maximum penalty, and the judge has decided to give one year. Hello? What planet are we on? Can anyone honestly say that this particularly nasty bashing was only one-twentieth as bad as others? That's what the judge said with his sentence. Presented with irrefutable evidence of a particularly evil bashing of a young lad, evidence that wasnt even contested by the defence, the judge handed down a sentence one twentieth of the maximum set by parliament. That is a disgrace.
Now, you may argue that this case is being appealed and that the appeal will do something to rectify matters. Yes - in this one case. That says nothing for the many others, some of them very well-documented, that go uncorrected.