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Offender fantasy not unlawful

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Published Date: 19 October 2007
A REPEAT sex offender is to be freed from prison after appeal judges dismissed charges which alleged he had threatened to attack a child.
Colin Macdonald, 33, was accused of alarming psychologists during an interview in preparation for his release from a six-year sentence for assaulting a schoolgirl. He was said to have described himself as a dangerous predator who had not been rehabil
itated and discussed the Soham killer, Ian Huntley.

Macdonald, from Falkirk, already had convictions for sexual offences and was on probation when, in September 2001, he grabbed a girl, 11, in Denny, Stirlingshire. He admitted a charge of assaulting the girl with intent to rape her.

Last year, during interviews for a pre-release risk assessment, he was charged with breaches of the peace.

The first charge alleged that, to cause fear and alarm, he stated he was a dangerous predator and that he intended to commit the kind of sexually violent crime which would attract a life sentence. The second charge accused him of threatening to use a knife on his victim, and of referring to murdered children Sarah Payne, Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman.

At a pre-trial hearing, Lord Bracadale rejected a submission that it was not open to the Crown to charge Macdonald.

Macdonald appealed and his argument succeeded, on a split decision of the appeal judges. Lords Johnston and Clarke upheld the plea that the charges were not competent.

Defence counsel, Gordon Jackson, QC, said: "You cannot charge anyone who tells a psychologist of a sexual fantasy with breach of the peace."



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  • Last Updated: 18 October 2007 8:46 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Paedophilia
 
1

MacFergus,

ZEIST 08/05/2009 09:22:23
A tragic situation. Of course a court cannot lengthen a prison sentence that has ended, nor convict someone to prison because of intentions or fantasies expressed. This is a clear case where the law does not protect society adequately.

In the Netherlands, such mentally deranged offenders are often sentenced to "TBS": the offender is detained in a special "TBS" centre for psychological and social treatment until it is deemed that (s)he can be safely released; no prior time limit is set. In most cases, TBS replaces the prison sentence, so that treatment can start at once. Most TBS detainees eventually return to society.

It would be wise for Scotland to study the pros and cons of this system, and consider adopting a law of the same nature.


 

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