After months of claiming his innocence, Chris Huhne has plead guilty to peverting the course of justice:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-21320992
I wonder he he will explain his sudden change of heart.
PCoJ is usually six months to a year inside - and with only a limited discount for his guilty plea, since he put the crown to the time and expense of preparing a full trial by his late change of plea. If he'd entered a guilty plea right at the start, he'd get a 33% discount on his sentence. A guilty plea once the trial date has been set is 25%, and 10% at any time after that.
So he will get only a 10% discount off his sentence - five weeks if he's sentenced to a year. He'll then serve half of the sentence in prison and the remaining half on probation; he could be made to wear an electronic tag so that he is under home curfew from 7pm to 7am. He will have to engage with the probation service, meeting his probation officer regularly and taking steps to address his offending behaviour. Given his previous occupation, he'll probably be sent to an 'open' prison, where he'll be able to wear his own clothes and have more home comforts than in a prison where murderers, rapists etc are sent.
PCoJ is usually six months to a year inside - and with only a limited discount for his guilty plea, since he put the crown to the time and expense of preparing a full trial by his late change of plea. If he'd entered a guilty plea right at the start, he'd get a 33% discount on his sentence. A guilty plea once the trial date has been set is 25%, and 10% at any time after that.
So he will get only a 10% discount off his sentence - five weeks if he's sentenced to a year.
well, the wheels of justice turn pretty slowly - exactly a year ago today that I started the thread - hello younger me
It's such a curious case - I am surprised it's taken as such a serious offense - I guess it's one of those where you start with a very small offense (3 points) and then by repeatedly lying about it end up with a very large one....
there's a lesson there somewhere.
I'm curious as to whether the judge will take into account the waste of time caused by a change of plea at this late stage - and also what are the likely outcomes for his vengeful ex-wife. If he pleads guilty then will he be called as a witness against her? Or is she pleading not guilty by marital coercion - ie admitting she did it but portraying herself as a actor with no-free will bound by her controlling husband?
Anglolawyer could probably tell you more, but I doubt he qualifies for legal aid, so he'll have to pay his defence costs at the very least. PCoJ is almost always custodial, I'll have a look to see if a fine can be associated with it as well.I wonder if we couldn't have some system of fines to compensate for the loss to the taxpayers for such a waste of time? Does that happen? Could it work? It seems a bit galling that a multi-millionaire (I presume - as most of the big wig politicians are) can repeatedly lie, cost the state however many tens/hundreds of thousands and then go, "oh yeah, actually I did do it...."
He's entered a guilty plea, so there will be no trial for him, he'll be convicted today and then sentencing will (probably) be adjourned for reports. On the day of the sentencing hearing, the Crown Prosecution Service will summarise the offence, his solicitor will present what mitigation s/he can, and the judge will have already read any reports produced - like a report on his mental state, the impact on his family if he's jailed etc. Then the judge will sentence him, and as explained above, he'll get a 10% discount of the sentence (and off any fine) on account of his late plea.
I don't know what his ex-wife intends to plead, but she'll have difficulty making a case for a not guilty plea now that Mr Huhne has been convicted.
Anglolawyer could probably tell you more, but I doubt he qualifies for legal aid, so he'll have to pay his defence costs at the very least. PCoJ is almost always custodial, I'll have a look to see if a fine can be associated with it as well.
Nigel Farage considering whether to stand in resulting by election.
Granting Huhne unconditional bail until a sentence date to be fixed, Mr Justice Sweeney said: "As Mr Kelsey-Fry has foreshadowed, you should have no illusions whatsoever as to the sort of sentence that you are likely to receive."