Powers of magistrates’ court
6(1)This paragraph applies where—
(a)an offender appears or is brought before a youth court or other magistrates’ court under paragraph 5, and
(b)it is proved to the satisfaction of the court that the offender has breached a requirement of the youth rehabilitation order without reasonable excuse,
and must be read with paragraphs 8 to 11.
(2)The court may deal with the case under sub-paragraph (5).
(3)If the youth rehabilitation order was made by the Crown Court, the court may instead—
(a)commit the offender to custody, or
(b)release the offender on bail,
until the offender can be brought or appear before the Crown Court.
(4)Where a court deals with the offender’s case under sub-paragraph (3) it must send the Crown Court—
(a)a certificate signed by a justice of the peace certifying that the offender has breached the youth rehabilitation order in the respect specified in the certificate, and
(b)such other particulars of the case as may be desirable;
and a certificate purporting to be so signed is admissible as evidence of the failure before the Crown Court.
(5)Where the court deals with the case under this sub-paragraph, it may deal with the offender in respect of the breach in any one of the following ways—
(a)by ordering the offender to pay a fine of an amount not exceeding £2,500;
(b)by amending the terms of the youth rehabilitation order to add or substitute any requirement which it could include in a youth rehabilitation order if, applying the relevant assumptions, it were now making such an order in respect of the relevant offence;
(c)by re-sentencing the offender for the relevant offence.
(6)In this paragraph—
“relevant offence” means the offence in respect of which the youth rehabilitation order was made, and
the “relevant assumptions” are that—
(a)the court has just convicted the offender of the relevant offence, and
(b)the offender is the same age as when in fact convicted of that offence.
(7)Sub-paragraph (5)(b) is subject to paragraph 10.
(8)In dealing with the offender under sub-paragraph (5), the court must take into account the extent to which the offender has complied with the requirements of the youth rehabilitation order.
(9)Where the court—
(a)deals with the offender under sub-paragraph (5)(b), and
(b)does not act in the offender’s home local justice area,
it may exercise the power in paragraph 15 (amendment by reason of change of residence) as if it were the appropriate court for the purposes of that paragraph.
(10)Where the court deals with the offender under sub-paragraph (5)(c), it must revoke the youth rehabilitation order if it is still in force.
(11)An offender may appeal to the Crown Court against a sentence imposed under sub-paragraph (5)(c).