The case reported on Monday of Sarah Catt cannot evoke much sympathy.And yet…I bet you’ll dig deep and find some, won’t you?
What conceivable good can be served by such a sentence? It appears merely a gesture of abhorrent rage on the judge's part.I rather think ‘abhorrent rage’ is quite a sane response to a case such as this one.
The judge used the cliche often used of wrongdoing women, that she was "cool and calculating", as if any women expecting sympathy should be hot and emotional.Actually, that’s not a description reserved only for women at all. It’s often used to distinguish crimes passionelle from malice-aforethought-style murder. It’s applied to men AND women.
A quick look at Google could have told you that.
Leeds police then added the traditional damnation "on the steps of the court house", a modern version of the pillory. Catt was "extremely deceitful, cold and calculating". She had shown no remorse and had lied to everyone concerned.Yes. Those are considered aggravating factors in the justice system. No matter what the crime.
Little in the case tells in Catt's favour, except that she had a loving husband who stood by her, and a family that was still together. A previous pregnancy at university had led to an adoption. She had an affair and, on the facts as presented, she acted from panic and desperation on finding she was pregnant.That’s a pretty long bout of ‘panic and desperation’ there, isn’t it, Simon?
Catt asserted that the foetus was stillborn, though she clearly did not help herself by refusing to say where it was.Oh, I think she did help herself. I think she helped herself by ensuring her story of a stillbirth couldn’t be disproved…
The judge said the act was between manslaughter and murder, but you cannot murder a foetus. It may be almost a person, but in common law it is not one until born alive and independent of its mother. It is legal to terminate a pregnancy after 24 weeks and indeed up to full term, albeit under strict medical supervision and only where there is a risk of serious abnormality or a grave, permanent injury to the mother. What Catt did was clearly illegal, but not manslaughter or murder.Not under the law as it stands, no. Most would, quite rightly, view it as abhorrent beyond belief.
… it does not seem the role of the justice system to pass judgment and sentence on the basis of female demeanour, let alone to expect a better emotional performance from those who have been to university.Really? But aren’t we supposed to believe in ‘bettering oneself’ through education?
Catt should not have done what she did, but locking her away for eight years will cost the state about £225,000, at the going rate. It must come near to destroying her family. A long sentence is, as any judge should know, "for life", given the impact it has on life thereafter. Everything about the case suggests a woman badly in need of care and treatment.Actually, it doesn’t. This is no naïve teenager scared of her parents, denying and concealing a pregnancy until too late. This is a grown woman, who has already been around the block several times.
In Catt's case, no social purpose is served by a fine or prison. A civilised response would be to find some way of piecing together a life so clearly devastated, especially for the sake of a family. Instead, the judge is punishing the living members of a family for the sake of a dead one.But isn’t this always the case when women who commit crimes go to prison? Indeed, it isn’t even confined to women, unless you believe them to be the sole caregiver.
You might as well argue that women shouldn’t go to ja…
Oh. I see.
The harm to society done by the judges in sending women unnecessarily to jail must far outweigh that of the original crime. In this matter Britain is still in the middle ages. And we have the cheek to go round the world, lecturing others on justice and the rule of law.In many other parts of the world, she’d have been stoned to death for this crime. Without the need for a trial! You know, I think Britain’s still ahead, somehow…
Blogging solicitor Amanda Bancroft weighs in with the God question:
The sentencing remarks in this case are in full here. Paragraph 15 mentions the Abortion Act. The judge says: "There is no mitigation available by reference to the Abortion Act, whatever view one takes of its provisions which are, wrongly, liberally construed in practice so as to make abortion available essentially on demand prior to 24 weeks with the approval of registered medical practitioners." Of course, interpreting the precise meaning of a person's words is never easy. However, one reading of that passage suggests that the judge considers we as a society are wrong in giving the Abortion Act a liberal construct to allow as many women as possible abortions under its terms. Considering the offence he is sentencing, the remarks are cause for concern. One starts to wonder if there are motivations involved that ought have no place in the sentencing of any person.Those motivations being religious ones, of course.
When one starts looking into the background of the judge, it transpires that he was appointed vice-president of the Lawyers' Christian Fellowship in 2003, and remains in post today.*gasp* The smoking gun!
When one reads the remarks of the judge knowing his belief system, one can only ask: did the judge view this case only on the context of the crime she actually committed, or also in the context of a crime against a god which may not be hers?Sorry to burst your bubble, Amanda, but I’m not in the slightest bit religious, and I feel nothing but utter revulsion for a woman who does what this one has done.
I think the judge was too lenient. She should have got double the prison sentence.
I wonder if CIF would have had had the same outrage if the Judge had not been a Christian or had been a member of another religion?
ReplyDeleteThe Guardian never seems to cease snide digs at Christians.
Call me a wishy washy liberal libertarian, but whilst I think she does need to be punished the comments by the police don't really help. Jail is for deterrence, prevention and punishment. The first two don't really cover her case, it being so unusual (the fact that the law doesn't ready cover her situation shows out to be rare) But her punishment could be mental help, but a long prison sentence won't help.
ReplyDeleteCost is not the issue, nor is the fact that jail is a life sentence. A conviction is a life sentence.
As for the judge's Christianity I would have thought he would have given her very long sentence.
A judge handing out a reasonable sentence, we need more like this. As for comment is free, is this seepage from a useless alternative reality?
ReplyDeleteSBML,
ReplyDeleteHuman life is sacrosanct and this needs to be reflected in law and the punishments borne by those that callously kill for their own selfish ends. The baby (that is what he was, not a foetus) was killed in the womb. A couple of weeks later and, had the child been killed outside the womb, the law would have called her a murderer.
We only have her word that she killed him inside the womb. The body has not been recovered. She could and should have been facing charges for that offence as well, Preventing the Proper Disposal of a Body..
The current law does account for people who commit crimes such as hers, the CPS have, yet again, simply failed to bring the correct charges. She is guilty of Child Destruction, the maximum sentence for which is life imprisonment.
She got off lightly.
I thought the sentence was a little extreme, especially when compared to this case
ReplyDeleteA mother from Bury who admitted trying to hide her dead baby in a garden has received a suspended jail term.
Fatima Ali, 26, admitted cruelty to a person under 16 and endeavouring to conceal the birth of a child, at Bolton Crown Court in February.
The baby girl's body was found wrapped in a shawl outside a house in Bury on 6 September 2010. The court heard Ali intended to keep the birth secret.
Ali, of Alfred Street, was given a 26-week sentence, suspended for two years.
The court heard the baby girl, which Ali had kept secret from family and friends, had died within two hours of her cutting the umbilical cord in her bedroom.
A post-mortem examination could not determine the cause of death.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-manchester-17706537
SBML,
ReplyDeleteHuman life is sacrosanct and this needs to be reflected in law and the punishments borne by those that callously kill for their own selfish ends. The baby (that is what he was, not a foetus) was killed in the womb. A couple of weeks later and, had the child been killed outside the womb, the law would have called her a murderer.
We only have her word that she killed him inside the womb. The body has not been recovered. She could and should have been facing charges for that offence as well, Preventing the Proper Disposal of a Body..
The current law does account for people who commit crimes such as hers, the CPS have, yet again, simply failed to bring the correct charges. She is guilty of Child Destruction, the maximum sentence for which is life imprisonment.
She got off lightly.
If she treats her foetus this way, imagine the fun she could get up to with a living, breathing child, sentient enough to appreciate what it's like to suffer.
ReplyDeleteShe belongs in an asylum - not because I don't think that she should be punished, but because she is Radio Rental.
Commit a crime and go to prison. Really not seeing a problem here.
ReplyDeleteThat other people commit other crimes and do not go to prison...the old "two wrongs make a right"...is completely irrelevant.
She has no one but herself to blame for the effects of her actions on her family.
Comparing the revolting act of killing of a baby... one week short and literally inches away from it's first breath... to not paying your fricking TV license in ANY way is truly disgusting.
Jenkins is as vile as Catt.
"The harm to society done by the judges in sending women unnecessarily to jail must far outweigh that of the original crime. In this matter Britain is still in the middle ages. And we have the cheek to go round the world, lecturing others on justice and the rule of law."
ReplyDeleteUm...
The whole point of "the rule of law" is that is matters not, under the law, whether you are a duke or a vagabond—or a man or, ahem, a woman—you are subject and sentenced by reference to your actions, not you social position—or your sex.
DK
"As for the judge's Christianity I would have thought he would have given her very long sentence."
ReplyDeleteHe's as bound by sentencing guidelines as any Muslim, Jew or Jedi...
"The baby (that is what he was, not a foetus) was killed in the womb. A couple of weeks later and, had the child been killed outside the womb, the law would have called her a murderer."
Her refusal to tell police where the body was means we just don't know which it was.
"I thought the sentence was a little extreme, especially when compared to this case"
I suspect the fact it was a first offence played a part in this case; and no doubt the name helped.
"The whole point of "the rule of law" is that is matters not, under the law, whether you are a duke or a vagabond—or a man or, ahem, a woman—you are subject and sentenced by reference to your actions..."
And that's what they loathe, and are working to change, day by day, piece by piece.