Mental disorder, intellectual disability, intoxication and drug addiction are factors that are often raised in sentencing hearings, but the effect that these four conditions can have on an offender’s sentence is rarely studied. This article fills two gaps in our understanding of the relevance of these ambiguous sentencing factors: first, by analysing how judges in the County Court of Victoria responded to these factors in 122 sentencing cases relating to 140 sentenced offenders; and second, by comparing the views of the judges with those of 426 jurors who had tried those cases and who participated in the Victorian Jury Sentencing Study. It concludes that lay opinion on the relevance of these factors does not always align with judicial practice and discusses the implications of these findings.
Funding
Australian Research Council
History
Publication title
Journal of Judicial Administration
Volume
28
Pagination
51-66
ISSN
1036-7918
Department/School
Faculty of Law
Publisher
Lawbook Co.
Place of publication
Australia
Rights statement
Copyright 2018 Thomson Reuters
Repository Status
Restricted
Socio-economic Objectives
Legal processes; Justice and the law not elsewhere classified