R v Johnston - Sentencing Appeal (Indecent Photographs)
Summary
The Court of Appeal Criminal Division granted leave to appeal in R v Johnston, considering whether a 78-year-old defendant should have been sentenced for producing rather than possessing indecent photographs of a child. The case arose from offences under the Protection of Children Act 1978, where the prosecution could not prove photographs were taken after the Act came into force in August 1978. The full court will determine the correct sentencing approach for this historical sexual offending case.
What changed
The Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) granted leave to appeal against sentence in R v Johnston, a 78-year-old man convicted of buggery contrary to section 12(1) of the Sexual Offences Act 1956 (between 1976-1977) and making indecent photographs of a child contrary to section 1 of the Protection of Children Act 1978. The key issue is whether the trial court correctly sentenced on the basis of production rather than possession, particularly given the Act came into force in August 1978 and the prosecution could not prove when the photographs were taken.
Criminal defence practitioners and sentencing courts should note this case establishes precedent on how to approach historical Protection of Children Act offences where the timing of conduct relative to the Act's commencement cannot be precisely established. The case has been referred to the Full Court by the Registrar of Criminal Appeals, indicating a need for authoritative guidance on sentencing in such circumstances.
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Johnston, R. v [2026] EWCA Crim 341 (04 March 2026)
URL: https://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2026/341.html
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[2026] EWCA Crim 341 | | |
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WARNING: reporting restrictions may apply to the contents transcribed in this document, particularly if the case concerned a sexual offence or involved a child. Reporting restrictions prohibit the publication of the applicable information to the public or any section of the public, in writing, in a broadcast or by means of the internet, including social media. Anyone who receives a copy of this transcript is responsible in law for making sure that applicable restrictions are not breached. A person who breaches a reporting restriction is liable to a fine and/or imprisonment. For guidance on whether reporting restrictions apply, and to what information, ask at the court office or take legal advice.
| | | Neutral Citation Number: [2026] EWCA Crim 341 |
| | | CASE NO 202600424/A2 |
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL
CRIMINAL DIVISION
ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT CAMBRIDGE
(HHJ PHILIP GREY) [41B21099623]
| | | Royal Courts of Justice
Strand
London
WC2A 2LL |
| | | 4 March 2026 |
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE DINGEMANS
Senior President of Tribunals
MRS JUSTICE O'FARRELL
RECORDER OF BRISTOL
HIS HONOUR JUDGE BLAIR KC
(Sitting as a Judge of the CACD)
| | REX | |
| | - v - | |
| | ALEXANDER JOHNSTON | |
Computer Aided Transcript of Epiq Europe Ltd,
Lower Ground, 46 Chancery Lane, London WC2A 1JE
Tel No: 020 7404 1400; Email: rcj@epiqglobal.co.uk (Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
____________________ MR S SULLIVAN appeared on behalf of the Applicant.
MR C MYATT appeared on behalf of the Crown.
HTML VERSION OF JUDGMENT (APPROVED) ____________________
Crown Copyright ©
- This Transcript is Crown Copyright.? It may not be reproduced in whole or in part other than in accordance with relevant licence or with the express consent of the Authority.? All rights are reserved.
- Lord Justice Dingemans, Senior President of Tribunals:
- Introduction
- This application for leave to appeal against sentence has been referred by the Registrar of Criminal Appeals to the Full Court. The application raises the issue of whether the applicant, Mr?Johnston, a 78-year-old man of previous good character, should have been sentenced on the basis that he produced, rather than possessed, indecent photographs of a child. We grant leave to appeal against sentence.
- The victim of this offending (who we will refer to as "C") has the benefit of life-long anonymity pursuant to the provisions of the Sexual Offences (Amendment) Act 1992.
- Mr?Johnston was prosecuted for two?offences of buggery of C, contrary to section 12(1) of the Sexual Offences Act 1956 between 1976 and 1977, and making indecent photographs of a child, contrary to section 1 of?the Protection of Children Act 1978. It appears that the offence under the Protection of Children Act 1978 came into force in?August 1978, and the prosecution were unable to prove that the photographs had been taken after that date. Another count was added to the indictment, and Mr?Johnston then pleaded guilty to possession of 63 category C indecent photographs of a child, contrary to section 160(1) of the Criminal Justice?Act 1988 and the 1978 offence was not proceeded with.
- At trial, Mr?Johnston was acquitted of the two offences of buggery but during the course of cross-examination to C, it was put to C that the worst Mr?Johnston had done?to him was to take the photographs of him, and to not destroy them when C left school as Mr?Johnston had promised that he would.
- The factual background
- Mr?Johnston was a teacher at Bishop Stortford College, a boarding school in Hertfordshire. C was a pupil and was at material times homesick and struggling academically. He went to Mr?Johnston for support, who took advantage of his vulnerability.
- Sometime in 1976 to 1977 Mr?Johnston purchased a Polaroid camera and took photographs of C in the bath and in the bedroom at Mr?Johnston's flat in Sutton House which was on the premises of the school. This was during several of their meetings together when the applicant Mr?Johnston was a teacher and C was a pupil. The evidence shows that C was about the age of 15 in all of the photographs and in the majority of them his penis was visible.
- After C left school he kept in contact with Mr?Johnston as C grew up, married and had children. It is apparent from C's victim personal statement that he considered this to be part of Mr?Johnston's continuing hold over him.
- In 2016 Mr?Johnston and C met up in Cornwall. During this meeting Mr?Johnston gave C a USB stick which contained 63 assorted digital images taken from the Polaroid photographs which Mr?Johnston had taken of C when he was 15. Mr?Johnston asked C to look after the USB stick.
- The Crown's case was that it was a reasonable assumption and inference that Mr?Johnston must have downloaded those images of the Polaroid photographs onto the computer and then transferred them onto a USB stick. Thereafter C handed that stick to the?police on 26?April 2022. The photographs were category C images, meaning that they were indecent images of a child which were not demonstrating penetrative or non-penetrative sexual activity. C reported Mr?Johnston to the?police at the same time and the trial was subsequently heard, as we have already related.
- The sentencing remarks
- After Mr Johnston had been acquitted of the offences of buggery, the judge then turned to sentencing of Mr?Johnston for possession of?the indecent images. The offence specific guideline which covers both the 1988 Act and the 1978 Act has categories for: possession of indecent images, with a starting point of a high-level community order with a category range of medium-level community order to 26 weeks' custody; distribution with a starting point of 13 weeks' custody and a category range of high-level community order to 26 weeks' custody; and production, which has a starting point of 18 months' custody, with a category range of 1 to 3 years' custody.
- The judge who heard the trial sentenced Mr?Johnston on the basis that he had produced the images. The judge found that Mr?Johnston had taken the photographs for sexual purposes, and turned to the offence specific guidelines. The judge identified that the appropriate category of the guideline was production with the starting point of 18 months. The judge identified aggravating factors of abuse of trust, the fact that the victim C was known to the offender and that the child was intoxicated. The judge said that having regard to mitigation, he would have come to a sentence of 14 months after trial. With credit for plea, this gave a sentence of 51 weeks.
- The respective cases
- Mr?Sullivan, on behalf of Mr?Johnston, submits that the judge was wrong to take a starting point that was consistent with the applicant being convicted of an offence that was more serious than the offence for which he had pleaded guilty and of which he had not been?convicted. He submitted that the judge should have sentenced using the sentencing category for possession, and then taken account of the aggravating factors. The judge should not have sentenced the applicant on the basis that he produced the images. Mr?Sullivan relied on R v Marshall [2023] EWCA Crim 1640 as showing that the judge's approach was wrong. It was also submitted that that wrong approach had infected the decision of the judge not to suspend the sentence that was imposed.
- Mr?Myatt, on behalf of the prosecution, submitted that it was accepted at trial that Mr?Johnston had taken the photographs, indeed that was the basis on which C had been cross-examined and he had been cross-examined on the basis that that was the worst that had been done by Mr?Johnston to C. Reference was made to R v Jaycock [2024] EWCA Crim 954; [2024] 4 WLR 65. It was therefore not wrong to sentence Mr?Johnston on the basis of producing the photographs. In the?alternative, the sentence was entirely defensible because this was seriously aggravating offending of possessing photographs.
- Relevant principles of law
- It is a fundamental principle of?the criminal law that a defendant may not be sentenced for a criminal offence where that defendant has neither pleaded guilty to that offence nor been convicted of that offence. A person cannot be sentenced for actions which were not criminal at the time that they were committed.
- Section 230 of the Sentencing Act 2020, provides so far as is relevant:
- > "Subsection (2) applies where a person is convicted of an offence which is punishable with a custodial sentence...
- > (2) The court must not pass a custodial sentence unless it is of the opinion that?
- > (a)the offence, or
- > (b)the combination of the offence and one or more offences associated with it was so serious that neither a fine alone nor a community sentence can be justified for the offence...
- > (6) In forming its opinion for the purposes of subsection (2), the court must take into account all the information that is available to it about the circumstances of the offence, or of it and the associated or offence or offences, including any aggravating or mitigating factors."
- In R v Canavan & Ors [1998] 1 WLR 604, some appeals heard together by this Court because they raised a common question. The question was whether it was legitimate to pass an increased sentence to take into account other offences which: had not been admitted; nor asked to be taken into consideration; and were not the subject of charges in the indictment. It was held that a defendant is not to be sentenced for an?offence unless it has been proved against him by admission or verdict or he has admitted it and asked the court to take it into consideration when passing sentence. In the course of the judgment, Lord?Bingham considered section 3(3) of the Criminal Justice?Act 1991 which were in material terms identical to the provisions of section 230 of the Sentencing Act which we have just read. Lord?Bingham said: ""This subsection enables the court to take full account of any factors which aggravate or mitigate the offence or offences for which the offender falls to be sentenced, and account may be taken of acts done in the course of committing that offence or offences even where such acts might have been separately charged." He went on to say: "We cannot however read section 3(3) as entitling the court to base its opinion on the commission of offences not forming part?of the offence or offences for which the offender is to be sentenced and not themselves the subject of prosecution."
- In Marshall in 2023, a sentence of 30 months' imprisonment for three counts of making an indecent photograph of children contrary to the Protection of Children Act 1978 s.1(1)(a) was quashed as the judge had sentenced on the basis that the case fell within the category of distribution in the sentencing guideline, not possession. The defendant had pleaded guilty to making indecent images of children by downloading them and he was not charged with, and did not plead guilty to, the separate offence of distribution. When being interviewed for the pre-sentence report the defendant accepted that the photographs were of children that he knew, although he did not give clear evidence about how they had been taken and, so far as is relevant, he accepted sending them on to persons he knew. There was no amendment to the indictment to reflect separate offending of distribution. The judge intervened in the course of the prosecution opening of facts and pointed out that within the pre-sentence report the defendant admitted sending the indecent images to others on the internet. The judge therefore sentenced the defendant on the basis of the category for distribution and not the category for possessing the photos. The Court allowed an appeal against sentence and the defendants were sentenced on the basis of the offence to which he had pleaded guilty.
- In Jaycock, a defendant had superimposed pictures of children's faces onto downloaded images of adult women engaged in sexual activity. The defendant pleaded guilty to offences of making indecent photographs and pseudo photographs of a child contrary to section 1(1)(a) of the Protection of Children Act 1978. The guideline had different starting points for possession and production. The defendant was sentenced on the basis that he had produced the pseudo photographs as opposed to possessing them, and he appealed against sentence. The Court noted that section 1(1)(a) of the 1978 Act did not create separate offences of possession or production. The Court held that for the purposes of categorisation of the offending in the sentencing exercise, the sentencing guideline provided that the category of production offences was not limited to the taking or making of the original image. The court held that the simple downloading of an image, notwithstanding that it might technically be said to amount to an act of production of a photograph, should be treated for sentencing purposes as being in the category of possession offences. The appeal against sentence was, however, dismissed on the basis that the appellant's actions were substantially more serious than that of an offender who had merely downloaded for his own use an image produced by someone else. This justified the application of a more severe sentencing category under the offence specific guidelines. It was held where conduct amounted in effect to the creation of a new indecent image the offence under section 1(1)(a) could properly and generally should be treated as a production offence. In that case the Court found that it was clear that the defendant had produced and not merely possessed the indecent images since it was he who had digitally manipulated the existing images to produce a new image.
- The disposal of this appeal
- In this case, although the judge was entitled to be sure that Mr?Johnston had produced the indecent images by photographing C, the act of taking the photographs was not a criminal act at the time that it occurred, whatever other offences might have been charged. In our judgment the judge's sentencing of Mr Johnston for the production of images, was more than taking account of the relevant background, as Mr?Myatt had submitted on behalf of?the prosecution was permissible. It was crossing a line to sentence the appellant for producing the photographs at a time when to do so was not a criminal offence. This is because sentencing Mr Johnston for producing the photographs is more than taking "into account all the information that is available to it about the circumstances of the offence ? including any aggravating or mitigating factors" (using the wording of section 230(6) of the Sentencing Act), it is sentencing him for something that was not criminal at the time. Mr?Johnston's criminal actions were in possessing those criminal images after it became a criminal offence. It might be noted that Mr?Johnston would not have been in this position if he had kept his original promise to C to get rid of the photographs when C had left school. Mr?Johnston had committed the offence of possessing the photographs for the purposes of?the 1988 Act, and he had held them on a criminal basis for about 38 years.
- There were a number of aggravating factors under the guidelines: the period over which the images were possessed; the abuse of trust which continued with possessing the photographs when he had promised to destroy them; the fact that the child was known to the offender; and the fact that the child was depicted intoxicated in the photographs. Those were all matters which were part of the acts in committing the offence which was possession. The offence which Mr?Johnston pleaded guilty to was possession of images and not production of images.
- It is therefore necessary to revisit the sentence. The relevant part of the sentencing guideline for possession provides that the starting point for possession is a high-level community order with a range of medium-level community order to 26 weeks' custody. The number of aggravating factors (images of a child known to Mr?Johnston; the child was depicted intoxicated; the possession had persisted for at least 38 years and was in breach of the promise to delete them when the child had left school) means that this offending would be right at the top of the range (26 weeks), and we consider that it is in the interests of justice, having regard to the number of aggravating factors, to go beyond the category range. We have regard to what was said by Mr?Sullivan on behalf of Mr?Johnston about having sensible regard to category ranges for offences of distribution and production. In our judgment, the appropriate sentence after a trial would have been one of 1 year, before taking account of mitigation.
- We then turn to mitigating factors and discount for plea. In our judgment, having regard to the mitigation and the credit available for this plea, it is appropriate to reduce the sentence of 12 months to one of 9 months.
- As this sentence is less than 2 years, we have to consider whether to suspend the sentence. Relevant factors indicating that it may be appropriate to suspend a custodial sentence are: a realistic prospect of rehabilitation in the community; the offender does not possess a high risk of reoffending or harm; and strong personal mitigation. There is a prospect of rehabilitation, Mr Johnston did not present a high risk of reoffending or harm, and there was strong personal mitigation in his age and health. We are told that he has mobility problems which make prison difficult. Factors indicating that it may not be appropriate to suspend a custodial sentence are that the offender presents a risk to any person - that does not apply; there is history of poor compliance with court orders and is unlikely to comply in the future?- that does not?apply. There is a further factor which is that the seriousness of the offence means that appropriate punishment can only be achieved by immediate custody.
- In the particular circumstances of this case, given that Mr?Johnston possessed these photographs after promising to destroy them, and the period of time over which he possessed these photographs, in our judgment, this was an?offence where it was so serious that appropriate punishment could only be achieved by immediate custody. We will therefore allow the appeal to the extent that we replace the sentence of 51 weeks' imprisonment with a sentence of 9 months' imprisonment.
- We are grateful to both Mr?Sullivan and Mr Myatt for the excellence of their written and oral submissions.
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