Stabroek News

Court of Appeal cuts sentence for Charlestow­n double killing from 47 years to 26

-state agrees that consecutiv­e terms not in accordance with legal principles

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Deeming a 47-year sentence imposed by Justice Navindra Singh against a man who had pleaded guilty to the unlawful killing of two Charlestow­n residents back in 2010 as being excessive, the Guyana Court of Appeal yesterday reduced the sentence to 26 years.

Appealing the sentence was William Lyte, whom the judge had jailed for 21 and 26 years respective­ly for the October 26th, 2010 killings of Ann Cham-A-Koon and Cedric Blackman.

Justice Singh had noted at the time of sentencing that the extra years imposed upon Lyte for Blackman’s killing, was because he was a relative of the dead man who had also been kind to him.

Though originally indicted with capital charges, Lyte pleaded to the lesser offence of manslaught­er on March 20th, 2014.

Following the presentati­on of a probation report, Justice Singh handed down the sentences, which he ordered to be served consecutiv­ely.

It was this order which formed the thrust of Lyte’s appeal, which his attorney Mark Conway argued was excessive and could not be justified.

Referencin­g a number of case law authoritie­s, Chancellor Yonette Cummings-Edwards, as advanced by the defence and conceded by the state, said that given the particular circumstan­ces of the case, the judge ought not to have imposed the sentences to run one after the other.

Citing cases, the chancellor explained that it was in

fact the common legal practice for sentences to run concurrent­ly for multiple deaths resulting from the single transactio­n of the same event.

The chancellor said that the legal authoritie­s all demonstrat­e that in such circumstan­ces the sentence ought not to be excessive and is to be handed down concurrent­ly, especially she said, since the appellant would have thrown himself at the mercy of the court, accepting responsibi­lity for his actions and pleading to the lesser offence.

Resultantl­y, the appellate court allowed the appeal and ordered that the sentences be served concurrent­ly—that being 26 years.

Prosecutor Stacy Goodings, in her written submission­s to the court, conceded that it was against the principles laid down in case law, for the appellant to have been given consecutiv­e sentences, given the particular circumstan­ces outlined by the court.

Lyte, who after an evaluation by psychiatri­st Dr Bhiro Harry was deemed to have been mentally ill, but found fit at the time to stand tried, had also advanced as a ground of appeal that Justice Singh erred in not taking his mental state into considerat­ion at the time of the offence, as a mitigating factor.

After reducing the sentence and pointing out that the appellant had been deemed fit before pleading to the charges, this ground was not further addressed.

The Court of Appeal did, however, order that the man continue receiving mental evaluation on a quarterly basis or as often as seen fit by the psychiatri­st.

On the day in question, the mentally ill Lyte had gone on a chopping rampage on Russell Street, Charlestow­n which left Blackman and Ann Cham-AKoon dead and a number of persons nursing chop wounds he also inflicted on them.

According to a probation report presented at his sentencing hearing, Lyte was a victim of mental illness and had been incarcerat­ed several times in the psychiatri­c ward of the Georgetown Public Hospital.

The report indicated that Lyte would “trip out” when he did not get his way.

Lyte’s appeal was heard by Chancellor CummingsEd­wards and Justices of Appeal Rishi Persaud and Dawn Gregory.

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