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Crown Court

Causing grievous bodily harm with intent to do grievous bodily harm / Wounding with intent to do GBH

Offences against the Person Act 1861, s.18

Effective from 1 July 2021

Triable only on indictment
Maximum: Life imprisonment
Offence range: 2 – 16 years’ custody

This is a Schedule 19 offence for the purposes of sections 274 and 285 (required life sentence for offence carrying life sentence) of the Sentencing Code.

For offences committed on or after 3 December 2012, this is an offence listed in Part 1 of Schedule 15 for the purposes of sections 273 and 283 (life sentence for second listed offence) of the Sentencing Code.

This is a specified offence 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.

Step 1 – Determining the offence category

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

Culpability

Where there are factors present from more than one category of culpability, the court should weigh those factors in order to decide which category most resembles the offender’s case.

A -  High culpability

  • Significant degree of planning or premeditation
  • Victim obviously vulnerable due to age, personal characteristics or circumstances
  • Use of a highly dangerous weapon or weapon equivalent*
  • Strangulation/suffocation/asphyxiation
  • Leading role in group activity
  • Prolonged/persistent assault
  • Revenge

B – Medium culpability

  • Use of a weapon or weapon equivalent which does not fall within category A
  • Lesser role in group activity
  • Cases falling between category high and low culpability 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 – Lesser culpability

  • No weapon used
  • Excessive self defence
  • Offender acted in response to prolonged or extreme violence or abuse by victim
  • Mental disorder or learning disability, where linked to the commission of the offence

* A highly dangerous weapon can include weapons such as knives and firearms. Highly dangerous weapon equivalents can include corrosive substances (such as acid), whose dangerous nature must be substantially above and beyond the legislative definition of an offensive weapon which is; ‘any article made or adapted for use for causing injury, or is intended by the person having it with him for such use’.  The court must determine whether the weapon or weapon equivalent is highly dangerous on the facts and circumstances of the case.

Harm

All cases will involve ‘really serious harm’, which can be physical or psychological, or wounding. The court should assess the level of harm caused with reference to the impact on the victim.

Where there are factors present from more than one category of harm, the court should weigh those factors in order to decide which category most resembles the offender’s case.

Category 1

  • Particularly grave or life-threatening injury caused
  • Injury results in physical or psychological harm resulting in lifelong dependency on third party care or medical treatment
  • Offence results in a permanent, irreversible injury or psychological condition which has a substantial and long term effect on the victim’s ability to carry out their normal day to day activities or on their ability to work

Category 2

  • Grave injury
  • Offence results in a permanent, irreversible injury or condition not falling within category 1

Category 3

  • All other cases of really serious harm
  • All other cases of wounding

Step 2 – Starting point and category range 

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

An adjustment from the starting point, upwards or downwards, may be necessary to reflect particular features of culpability and/or harm (for example, the presence of multiple factors within one category, the presence of factors from more than one category (where not already taken into account at step 1), or where a case falls close to a borderline between categories).

Sentencers should be aware that there is evidence of a disparity in sentence outcomes for this offence which indicates that for Black and Asian offenders immediate custodial sentence lengths have on average been longer than for White, Mixed and Chinese or Other ethnicity offenders. There may be many reasons for these differences, but in order to apply the guidelines fairly sentencers may find useful information and guidance at Chapter 8 of the Equal Treatment Bench Book.

For category A1 offences the extreme nature of one or more high culpability factors or the extreme impact caused by a combination of high culpability factors may attract a sentence higher than the category range

Culpability
Harm A B C
Category 1

Starting point
12 years’ custody

Starting point
7 years’ custody

Starting point
5 years’ custody

Category range
10 – 16 years’ custody

Category range
6 – 10 years’ custody

Category range
4 – 7 years’ custody

Category 2

Starting point
7 years’ custody

Starting point
5 years’ custody

Starting point
4 years’ custody

Category range
6 – 10 years’ custody

Category range
4 – 7 years’ custody

Category range
3 – 6 years’ custody

Category 3

Starting point
5 years’ custody

Starting point
4 years’ custody

Starting point
3 years’ custody

Category range
4 –7 years’ custody

Category range
3 – 6 years’ custody

Category range
2 – 4 years’ custody

The tables below contain 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 a further upward or downward adjustment. In some cases, having considered these factors, it may be appropriate to move outside the identified category range.

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:

  • History of violence or abuse towards victim by offender (where not taken into account at step one)

Factors reducing seriousness or reflecting personal mitigation

  • Significant degree of provocation
  • History of significant violence or abuse towards the offender by the victim (where not taken into account at step one)

Step 3 – Consider any other factors which indicate a reduction, such as 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 4 – 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 5 – Dangerousness

The court should consider:

1) whether having regard to the criteria contained in Chapter 6 of Part 10 of the Sentencing Code it would be appropriate to impose a life sentence (sections 274 and 285)

2) whether having regard to sections 273 and 283 of the Sentencing Code it would be appropriate to impose a life sentence.

3) 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)

When sentencing offenders to a life sentence under these provisions, the notional determinate sentence should be used as the basis for the setting of a minimum term.

Step 6 – 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 offending behaviour. See Totality guideline.

Step 7 – 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.

Step 8 – Reasons

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

Step 9 – 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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