Fr J Hackett
Well-Known Member
I think that the MCA Enforcement people may have been encouraged by the CPS to take a shot at a corporate manslaughter charge in order to try and get a conviction on the record to serve as a precedent and thereby to scare the living daylights out of merchant ship owners and managers. They tried and failed with the Herald of Free Enterprise and subsequently and they may well have thought that a sailing school would be a softer target than a lawyered up shipowner backed by his P&I Club.
I feel a good deal of sympathy for Mr Innes.
Edited to add - I should declare an interest - I work in commercial shipowning.
I don't disagree. Indeed I frequently refer to and cite aviation examples and I even dragged my colleagues off for a week at Gatwick Airport, to understand "cockpit resource management".
But I think you will find that corporate manslaughter convictions are rare in any field.
Here are some links:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/...of-corporate-manslaughter-five-key-cases.html
(note - the law changed in 2008)
http://blog.cps.gov.uk/2011/02/tuesday-15-february-afternoon-update.html
https://www.out-law.com/en/articles...-manslaughter-sentencing-under-new-guideline/
The conviction for corporate manslaughter will rely on two things: That Innes was the controlling mind in the business, of that there is no doubt. Secondly that his actions constituted gross negligence, that is the debatable point was it simple negligence an oversight or was it systematic of the way Innes ran the business. I take the view that he cut corners and sailed close to the wind in order to maximise revenue, that others may have done the same is no defence or excuse.