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Strangulation or suffocation / Racially or religiously aggravated strangulation or suffocation

Serious Crime Act 2015, s.75A, Crime and Disorder Act 1998, s.29

Effective from 1 January 2025

Strangulation, Serious Crime Act 2015 (section 75A(1)(a))
Suffocation,
Serious Crime Act 2015 (section 75A(1)(b))
Racially or religiously aggravated offences, Crime and Disorder Act 1998 (section 29)

Triable either way

Section 75A
Maximum: 5 years’ custody

Offence range: High level community order – 4 years 6 months’ custody

Section 29
Maximum: 7 years’ custody

These are specified offences listed in part 1 of Schedule 18 for the purposes of sections 266 and 279 (extended sentence for certain violent, sexual or terrorism offences) of the Sentencing Code.

User guide for this offence


Guideline users should be aware that the Equal Treatment Bench Book covers important aspects of fair treatment and disparity of outcomes for different groups in the criminal justice system. It provides guidance which sentencers are encouraged to take into account wherever applicable, to ensure that there is fairness for all involved in court proceedings.

For racially or religiously aggravated offences the category of the offence should be identified with reference to the factors below, and the sentence increased in accordance with the guidance at Step Three

Step 1 – Determining the offence category

The court should determine the offence category with reference only to the factors listed in the tables below. In order to determine the category the court should assess culpability and harm.

Culpability

A

  • Sustained or repeated strangulation or suffocation
  • Use of ligature or other item

B

  • Cases falling between category A or C because:
    • Factors in both high and lesser categories are present which balance each other out; and/or
    • The offender’s culpability falls between the factors as described in high and lesser culpability

C

  • Fleeting incident from which offender almost immediately voluntarily desisted
  • Excessive self defence (this would rarely apply in a domestic abuse context)
  • Mental disorder or learning disability, where linked to the commission of the offence

Harm

All cases of strangulation involve a very high degree of inherent harm.  A victim may experience extreme terror, fear for their life and be deeply traumatised. Harm can include a range of internal and external physical injuries and psychological impacts, immediate and delayed, for which presentation may vary between victims. The harm assessment already provides for the risk of harm inherent in these offences, with the highest category providing for offences where the trauma suffered results in particularly severe impacts.

1

  • Offence results in a severe physical injury or psychological condition which has a substantial effect on the victim’s ability to carry out their normal day to day activities or on their ability to work.

 2

  • All other cases

Step 2 – Starting point and category range

Having determined the category, the court should use the corresponding starting points to reach a sentence within the category range below. The starting point applies to all offenders irrespective of plea or previous convictions.

Culpability
Harm A B C
Harm 1

Starting point
3 years 6 months’ custody

Starting point
2 years 6 months’ custody

Starting point
1 years 6 months’ custody

Category range
2 – 4 years 6 months’ custody

Category range
1 year 6 months’ custody – 3 years 6 months’ custody

Category range
1 year’s custody – 3 years’ custody

Harm 2

Starting point
2 years 6 months’ custody

Starting point
1 years 6 months’ custody

Starting point
1 year’s custody

Category range
1 year 6 months’ custody – 3 years 6 months’ custody

Category range
1 year’s custody – 3 years’ custody

Category range
High level community order – 2 years 6 months’ custody

The court should then consider further adjustment for any aggravating or mitigating factors. The following is a non-exhaustive list of additional factual elements providing the context of the offence and factors relating to the offender. Identify whether any combination of these, or other relevant factors, should result in an upward or downward adjustment from the sentence arrived at so far.

Factors increasing seriousness

Statutory aggravating factors:

  • having regard to a) the nature of the offence to which the conviction relates and its relevance to the current offence; and b) the time that has elapsed since the conviction

Other aggravating factors:

  • Victim isolated and unable to seek assistance
  • History of violence or abuse towards victim by offender
  • Victim pregnant at time of offence
  • Any steps taken to prevent the victim reporting an incident, obtaining assistance and/or from assisting or supporting the prosecution

Factors reducing seriousness or reflecting personal mitigation

  • History of significant violence or abuse towards the offender by the victim

Step 3 – Aggravated offences

SECTION 29 RACIALLY OR RELIGIOUSLY AGGRAVATED OFFENCES

Having determined the category of the basic offence to identify the sentence of a non-aggravated offence, the court should now consider the level of racial or religious aggravation involved and apply an appropriate uplift to the sentence in accordance with the guidance below. The following is a list of factors which the court should consider to determine the level of aggravation. Where there are characteristics present which fall under different levels of aggravation, the court should balance these to reach a fair assessment of the level of aggravation present in the offence.

Maximum sentence for the racially or religiously aggravated offence is 7 years’ custody

Care should be taken to avoid double counting factors already taken into account in assessing the level of harm at step one

HIGH LEVEL OF RACIAL OR RELIGIOUS AGGRAVATION SENTENCE UPLIFT
  • Racial or religious aggravation was the predominant motivation for the offence.
  • Offender was a member of, or was associated with, a group promoting hostility based on race or religion.
  • Aggravated nature of the offence caused severe distress to the victim or the victim’s family (over and above the distress already considered at step one).
  • Aggravated nature of the offence caused serious fear and distress throughout local community or more widely.
  • Increase the length of custodial sentence if already considered for the basic offence or consider a custodial sentence, if not already considered for the basic offence.
MEDIUM LEVEL OF RACIAL OR RELIGIOUS AGGRAVATION SENTENCE UPLIFT
  • Racial or religious aggravation formed a significant proportion of the offence as a whole.
  • Aggravated nature of the offence caused some distress to the victim or the victim’s family (over and above the distress already considered at step one).
  • Aggravated nature of the offence caused some fear and distress throughout local community or more widely.
  • Consider a significantly more onerous penalty of the same type or consider a more severe type of sentence than for the basic offence.
LOW LEVEL OF RACIAL OR RELIGIOUS AGGRAVATION SENTENCE UPLIFT
  • Aggravated element formed a minimal part of the offence as a whole.
  • Aggravated nature of the offence caused minimal or no distress to the victim or the victim’s family (over and above the distress already considered at step one).
  • Consider a more onerous penalty of the same type identified for the basic offence.

The sentencer should state in open court that the offence was aggravated by reason of race or religion, and should also state what the sentence would have been without that element of aggravation.

Step 4 – Consider any factors which indicate a reduction for assistance to the prosecution

The court should take into account section 74 of the Sentencing Code (reduction in sentence for assistance to prosecution) and any other rule of law by virtue of which an offender may receive a discounted sentence in consequence of assistance given (or offered) to the prosecutor or investigator.

Step 5 – Reduction for guilty pleas

The court should take account of any potential reduction for a guilty plea in accordance with section 73 of the Sentencing Code and the Reduction in Sentence for a Guilty Plea guideline.

Step 6 – Dangerousness

The court should consider whether having regard to the criteria contained in Chapter 6 of Part 10 of the Sentencing Code it would be appropriate to impose an extended sentence (sections 266 and 279).

Step 7 – Totality principle

If sentencing an offender for more than one offence, or where the offender is already serving a sentence, consider whether the total sentence is just and proportionate to the overall offending behaviour in accordance with the Totality guideline.

Step 8 – Compensation and ancillary orders

In all cases, the court should consider whether to make compensation and/or other ancillary orders. The court must give reasons if it decides not to order compensation (Sentencing Code, s.55).

Step 9 – Reasons

Section 52 of the Sentencing Code imposes a duty to give reasons for, and explain the effect of, the sentence.

Step 10 – Consideration for time spent on bail (tagged curfew)

The court must consider whether to give credit for time spent on bail in accordance with section 240A of the Criminal Justice Act 2003 and section 325 of the Sentencing Code.

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