Last year, significant changes were made to the sentencing guidelines for driving offences in England & Wales, including the introduction of potential life sentences for dangerous driving. Here, we answer some key questions concerning the driving sentencing guidelines and explore how these could affect fleets and the ways they manage and assess risk.
What are the sentencing guidelines?
The sentencing guidelines are developed, published, and updated by the Sentencing Council, an independent body that was set up to “promote greater transparency and consistency in sentencing, while maintaining the independence of the judiciary”.
The driving sentencing guidelines cover a range of driving-related offences, including causing death by dangerous driving and driving whilst disqualified. They provide judges and magistrates with a minimum and maximum range for years in custody or financial penalties, as well as guidance on elements of a case that may affect or change their decision.
Under the latest guidelines, for example, the maximum sentence for causing death by dangerous driving is life imprisonment, while two years is the minimum number of years’ custody that can be given.
Why were the sentencing guidelines for driving changed?
The guidelines were changed in July 2023 to reflect new maximum sentences and offences brought in by the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act 2022 (the PCSCA 2022). These sought to address concerns that sentences for certain offences were unduly lenient, particularly where an offence led to serious, life-changing injuries, but fell below the threshold for dangerous driving.
Under the PCSCA 2022, a new offence of ‘causing injury by careless driving’ was created, which could receive a maximum sentence of two years’ custody, as well as an obligatory minimum 12-month disqualification.
The PCSCA 2022 also introduced new maximum sentences for certain offences, which are reflected in the guidelines, again to address concerns that sentences for causing death by dangerous driving were too lenient.
What does ‘culpability’ mean?
‘Culpability’ is a category by which offences are measured for the purposes of sentencing. Culpability concerns an offender’s level of guilt, and is usually considered in relation to intention, recklessness, knowledge, and negligence. There are several levels of culpability, with Category A being the highest.
The sentencing guidelines will sometimes provide examples of the different categories to help judges and magistrates decide where an offence falls. For example, in causing death by dangerous driving, a Category A culpability offence may also demonstrate a “deliberate decision to ignore the rules of the road and disregard for the risk of danger to others”, or it may have occurred “in course of evading the police”. A Category C culpability offence, however, would involve a “standard of driving [that] was just over [the] threshold for dangerous driving.”
How do judges measure ‘harm’?
‘Harm’ is an additional consideration when an offence has resulted in serious injuries, but not death. It measures the severity of the injuries caused, and the impact these have had, and continue to have, on the victim(s). As such, harm is not considered where an offence results in death, as it is automatically of the utmost seriousness.
Like culpability, ‘harm’ is split into different levels. The higher the level of harm, the greater the sentence. To be considered a high level of harm, an offence will have caused “particularly grave and/ or life-threatening injury” and may have resulted in “lifelong dependency on third party care or medical treatment”.