So Weatherston is pursuing his appeal to the Supreme Court. There may be another chance to see the kind of judgment I hoped to see from the Court of Appeal.
But the appeal is likely to be a waste of money, time and emotion. It is not yet clear whether he has leave. The Court of Appeal seemed to me to have not left much room for the Supreme Court to express second thoughts. But even Weatherston's willingness to inflict the application costs on us, and on his victim's family, reminds us of the mumbling gummy weakness projected by criminal law that fails to deter silly appeals.
There is no point in railing against Robert Lithgow QC. He is obliged to act on his client's instructions. As Sophie's father says, "There is absolutely no cost, risk or disadvantage to Weatherston for appealing. The system just invites abuse". So it continues.
If Lithgow tried to refuse some other lawyer would have been obliged to do act for Weatherston. The lawyer’s duty is to act for the client, and as long as the law leaves open these costless abuses the lawyer would be in breach of duty not to try, because there is only upside and no downside for the client.
Maybe this case does not leave the Court room to ensure that the offender faces some downside for the hurt caused in pursuing fanciful appeals. But even if he was appealing against sentence, where there would be room to increase it, our judges are too wussy to use their powers in that way. I've explained earlier how it might have affected Weatherston. UK judges can deter meritless appeals, and sometimes do. So can the German Supreme Court.
Why not ours? I think they've pushed a virtue, objectivity, too far. Objectivity is imperative before guilt is established. But after conviction there is no reason to show apparent indifference to the morality of steps the convict takes.
I fear that they've become professional sooks. In too many areas they seem to dare not 'judge' lest they be thought too 'judgmental'. They remind me, when they complain of their appeal workload, of doctors complaining about thuggish ingratitude and bullying in A and E. The remedy is in their own hands. Draw distinctions in priority of service or quality of service. All service is rationed in some form. Try some rationing according to moral deserts.
A UK court hearing Weatherston's appeal could at the least ensure that time stopped running on Weatherston's sentence while the appeal was heard. That small cost seems to be enough to reduce the propensity to waste time with meritless appeals in the UK.
“Offenders must be [made] aware that while an appeal is their right there is substantial personal risk and consequence to be considered.”
An evil, self absorbed murderer is allowed to continue to victimise the parents of the girl he murdered in their home and to bring expense and disruption to the legal system in circumstances where there is absolutely no downside to him. It calls to mind the expression "what we tolerate, we teach" and never was there a more teachable moment available to the courts to show that a cost will be levied. A significant increase to the sentence given in the light of complete absence of any contrition for his egregious act would not only serve the cause of justice, but also give ammunition to lawyers compelled to act such scum in future to caution them that appealing may well bring an increase in time to be served. I dream of a day when such things become reality.
.