Perverting the course of justice charge information from the Crown Prosecution Service
Perverting the Course of Justice
Date Produced: 1 July 2011
Title: Administration of Justice
Offence: Perverting the Course of Justice
Legislation: Common law
Mode of Trial: Indictable only
Statutory Limitations & Maximum Penalty: At large
Sentencing Range: 4 months to 36 months
Aggravating & Mitigating Factors
Nature and number of offences
Whether premeditated or spontaneous
Degree of persistence
Arrest of innocent person
Innocent person maliciously targeted
Any impact upon prosecution
Relevant Sentencing Guidelines
R v Tunney [2007] 1 Cr. App. R. (S) 91
The sentence appropriate for perverting the course of justice essentially depends on three matters:
the seriousness of the substantive offence to which the perverting of the course of justice related;
the degree of persistence; and
the effect of the attempt to pervert the course of justice on the course of justice itself.
Relevant Sentencing Case Law
General sentencing brackets summarised in Archbold at 28-28 as follows:
threatening or interfering with witnesses - 4 months to 24 months
concealing evidence - 4 months to 18 months, possibly longer if serious crime
false allegation of crime resulting in arrest of innocent person - 4 to 12 months
Recent Decisions reported in Current Sentencing Practice reported at B 8-2.3 divided into: interference with prosecution witness; threatening or intimidating witness; making false allegation of crime; concealing evidence; interfering with jurors; false information in mitigation.
AG's Ref (No. 1 of 1990) (John Cameron Atkinson) (1990-1991) 12 Cr. App. R. (S.) 245
Sentence should normally be consecutive to substantive offence.
AG's Ref (No 35 of 2009) (R v Binsteed) [2010] 1 Cr. App. R. (S.) 61
Sentences of imprisonment should not normally be suspended.
http://www.cps.gov.uk/legal/s_to_u/sentencing_manual/perverting_the_course_of_justice/