No Unreasoned Totality Reductions & the Duty to Weight Lead Counts: The Crewe Principle from R v Crewe [2025] EWCA Crim 741
1. Introduction
R v Crewe ([2025] EWCA Crim 741) is a Sentence Reference brought by the Solicitor-General under section 36 Criminal Justice Act 1988, challenging as unduly lenient an overall sentence of two years’ imprisonment that had been imposed by a Recorder at Cardiff Crown Court. The offender, Mr Crewe, pleaded guilty across two indictments to:
- Harassment (Indictment 1);
- Controlling or coercive behaviour;
- Assault occasioning actual bodily harm (ABH); and
- Intentional strangulation (Indictment 2).
Whilst no argument was raised about guideline categorisation, starting points or the Recorder’s decision to make the harassment count consecutive, the appeal centred on (i) unexplained “totality” deductions made after the 25 % guilty-plea allowance and (ii) the failure to weight the headline coercive-control sentence to capture the additional criminality in the ABH and strangulation counts, which had been ordered concurrently.
The Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) – Lord Justice Holroyde, Mrs Justice May and HHJ Lucraft KC – allowed the Reference, holding the sentence to be unduly lenient. It quashed the original terms and substituted an aggregate of 34 months’ imprisonment. Crucially, the Court articulated a newly-crystallised principle (the “Crewe Principle”): where separate counts are made concurrent in order to avoid double-counting, the sentencing judge must positively weight the lead count to reflect the standalone seriousness of the other offences; mere blanket or arithmetical deductions under the banner of ‘totality’ are impermissible without transparent reasoning.
2. Summary of the Judgment
- The Recorder had imposed two years overall: 4 months (harassment) consecutive to 20 months (coercive control) with 30 weeks (ABH) and 16 months (strangulation) concurrent.
- The Court of Appeal found two errors of principle:
- Final reductions of four months on both the harassment and coercive-control counts were unexplained and contrary to the Sentencing Council’s Totality Guideline.
- By running the ABH and strangulation counts concurrently and failing to elevate the coercive-control sentence, the Recorder did not reflect the additional 23 months of criminality.
- A mathematical “add-back” suggested a shortfall of roughly 31 months, confirming undue leniency, but the Court declined a mechanical approach.
- Standing back (Totality Guideline §1.2), the Court fixed what it considered the
lowest defensible sentence—34 months—achieved by:
- Increasing the harassment term from 4 months to 7 months (restoring the unwarranted three-month deduction).
- Quashing the 20-month coercive-control sentence and replacing it with 27 months (after plea) to embody the ABH and strangulation wrongdoing.
- All ancillary orders and plea discounts otherwise remained intact.
3. Analysis
3.1 Precedents and Authorities Cited
Although the Court’s reasoning was concise, it implicitly or expressly drew on several well-established authorities:
- Totality Guideline (Sentencing Council, 2021) – emphasises that concurrent sentences are appropriate where offences arise out of the same incident or factual matrix, but the lead term “will ordinarily need to be increased” to reflect additional offences (§2.16-2.17).
- Attorney-General’s Reference (Nos 14 & 15 of 2017) [2017] EWCA Crim 1456 – underscores that an unexplained discount beyond the accepted plea allowance constitutes an error of principle.
- R v Manning [2020] EWCA Crim 592 – reiterates that the Court should intervene where the judge has gone outside the range of sentences properly available, even if sophisticated balancing of mitigation is present.
- Att-Gen’s Reference (No 100 of 2019) — clarified that when consecutive/concurrent structuring is utilised, the judge must articulate how each offence has been taken into account to avoid “sentencing by osmosis”.
Crewe consolidates these strands into a practical rule: “A judge may use concurrency to avoid duplication, but must then (and transparently) load the principal count so that the totality reflects the full criminality.”
3.2 The Court’s Legal Reasoning
- Identification of Error
– The final 4-month “totality” deductions on both lead counts lacked any sentencing guideline rationale. As no factual overlap justified them and they came after credit for plea, they violated the rule against double-discounting. - Failure to Weight the Lead Count
– Ordering ABH (30 wks) and strangulation (16 mths) concurrent removed 23 months of punishment. Paragraph 2.17 of the Totality Guideline demands that the sentence on the principal count must be adjusted to account for this. The Recorder’s silence amounted to a material misdirection. - Standing-Back Assessment
– The Court avoided the “arithmetical fallacy” (simply adding guideline figures). Instead, it recalibrated proportionately, mindful of culpability, harm, aggravation (breach of licence/bail, history of domestic abuse), mitigation (ADHD, youth at early offence stage, remorse) and the cap on trial-judge discretion.
3.3 Impact on Future Sentencing Practice
- The “Crewe Principle” codified – Sentencers who make counts concurrent to avoid overlap must demonstrably weight the lead sentence and refrain from additional opaque “totality” discounts.
- Transparency Requirement – Judges must articulate, on the record, (i) why concurrency is chosen, and (ii) precisely how the lead term has been uplifted to incorporate other offending. Failure invites ULS referral.
- Limiting Unjustified Plea-Plus-Totality Reductions – Any reduction beyond the guideline plea discount now faces heightened scrutiny.
- Domestic-Abuse Cohorts – The judgment re-emphasises that coercive-control campaigns aggravated by discrete acts of violence warrant robust custodial responses, notwithstanding mental-health considerations.
- Attorney-General References – Provides a fresh template for the Crown when determining whether sentences are merely lenient or unduly so; unexplained totality manoeuvres will often tip the balance.
4. Complex Concepts Simplified
- Totality – A principle ensuring the overall sentence for several offences is just and proportionate. Think of it as a “grand total” sense-check: the court must decide what the final figure should be, rather than simply adding guideline numbers.
- Concurrent vs. Consecutive – Concurrent sentences run at the same time; consecutive sentences follow one after the other. Concurrency is common when offences are part of the same incident, but courts must avoid erasing seriousness by doing so.
- Unjustified Discount – A reduction not grounded in law (e.g., beyond one-third for an early plea or specific mitigating factors) is considered an “error of principle” – making the sentence appealable.
- Unduly Lenient Sentence (ULS) – A sentence so low that no reasonable judge, applying proper principles, could have passed it. The Solicitor-General/Attorney-General can refer it to the Court of Appeal for increase.
5. Conclusion
R v Crewe cements a vital clarification within English sentencing law: unexplained “totality” reductions and failure to uplift a lead count where other offences are run concurrently will render the sentence unduly lenient. The Court’s firm intervention—raising the aggregate to 34 months—demonstrates a policy of robust protection for victims of sustained domestic abuse and ensures that the integrity of guideline methodology is preserved. For practitioners, Crewe is a cautionary reminder: transparency and principled arithmetic in applying the Totality Guideline are no longer optional but mandatory.
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