The 2011 English summer riots: Courts accused of ‘collective hysteria’

Report this content

A review of sentencing following the 2011 English riots has shown that sentences were much harsher than realised at first.  Research carried out by Liverpool John Moores University and The University of Manchester, published in The British Journal of Criminology, found that the courts got caught up in a similar kind of collective hysteria to the people who acted out of character during the riots.

Dr Carly Lightowlers, a lecturer in Criminal Justice at LJMU, was the co-author of the research and says the courts decided not to follow sentencing guidelines which led to excessive and arbitrary punishments.

She commented: “It was not just the courts that over-reacted.  An ‘uplift’ was applied at every stage from arrest, to charge, to remand, to which court dealt with the case.”

Co-author Dr Hannah Quirk, a Senior Lecturer in Criminal Law and Justice from The University of Manchester said: “Whilst the offending may have been impulsive, sentencing should not be.”

The summer riots of 2011 were commonly described as the worst in living memory due to the speed with which they spread over such a wide geographical area. The disorder began after Mark Duggan, was shot dead by the police in Tottenham, north London.

Over three thousand prosecutions were brought in connection with the unrest, which saw streets in parts of the country awash with violence, looting and arson. By 31 August 2012, of the 2,158 convicted, all but 20 had been sentenced with the vast majority of offending having taken place in London, followed by the West Midlands and Greater Manchester.

Much of the drive came from the Crown Prosecution Service. Suspects were charged with burglary rather than theft which carries a tougher sentence.

Dr Quirk said: “The CPS are prosecutors and not Judge Dredd. From arrest to sentence our research found that a tougher stance was adopted for sentencing riot-related offending and an air of prosecutorial zeal and judicial abandon was commonplace.

All the agencies were working under great pressure to restore order and the courts made it clear that they saw their role as being to pass enhanced sentences to reinforce notions of punishment and deterrence.”

Dr Quirk continued: “The position for sentencing riot-related offending in the future is unclear but the courts should make decisions on an individual level rather than as a blanket decision that all disorder-related offending should fall outside the existing guidelines.”

The study used Ministry of Justice statistics and data collected by the Manchester Evening News.

NOTES FOR EDITORS

The paper entitled ‘The 2011 English ‘Riots’: Prosecutorial Zeal and Judicial Abandon’ by Carly Lightowlers and Hannah Quirk is available on request. 

Clare Coombes, Press and Publications Officer, Liverpool John Moores University, T: 0151 231 3004 press@ljmu.ac.uk 

Media

Media

Quotes

It was not just the courts that over-reacted. An ‘uplift’ was applied at every stage from arrest, to charge, to remand, to which court dealt with the case.
Dr Carly Lightowlers, LJMU lecturer in Criminal Justice