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Mike Amesbury has prison sentence of 10 weeks suspended for two years.
Still means the recall will go ahead.
Still means the recall will go ahead.


Mike Amesbury has prison sentence of 10 weeks suspended for two years.
Still means the recall will go ahead.

Right again."any of us" would be getting a suspended sentence for punching somebody in all probability
If only he’d been convicted of common assault. He wasn’t.
Assault by beating is set out in section 39 of the Criminal Justice Act 1988 and is a variation of the offence of Common Assault. Assault by beating refers to a common assault where physical force is applied. It is sometimes referred to as battery.


Notch was using the sentencing guide for common assault. It's not relevant to Assault by beating.I think most people would call it that:
Notch was using the sentencing guide for common assault. It's not relevant to Assault by beating.

Stats on sentencing for common assault do not apply to someone convicted of assault by beating. was the point.
Common assault (section 39, Criminal Justice Act 1988)
A person is guilty of common assault if they either inflict violence on another person – however slight this might be – or make that person think they are about to be attacked.
They do not have to be physically violent – for example, threatening words or a raised fist could lead the victim to believe they are going to be attacked – and that is enough for the crime to have been committed. Other acts like spitting at someone may also classed as common assault.
The offence covers both intentional and reckless acts. For example, the offender may not have intended to cause the victim to think an attack was imminent but if they behaved in way that was likely to make the victim think they were about to be attacked, and they didn’t care what effect that behaviour would have, the offender is guilty of the offence.
If violence is used in a common assault, it is called a “battery” and the perpetrator would be charged with “assault by beating”. This does not however, mean that the victim was actually ‘beaten up’ or even hit or kicked – it could be that they were pushed, grabbed or spat at. The victim may not therefore have suffered any physical injury, and if any injury was caused, it would need to be quite minor to fall under common assault.

The offences of assault and battery are separate summary offences. An assault is committed when the Defendant intentionally or recklessly causes another to apprehend immediate and unlawful violence and battery is committed when a defendant intentionally or recklessly inflicts unlawful force.

what stats?

apart from the bit that said "the average custodial sentence was 3 months."