Case Details
Reference
01XH1112426
Court
Uxbridge Magistrates' Court - Courtroom 01
Magistrate
Mr Ahmed JP , Mr Rothery JP , Ms Trinkl JP , District Judge (MC) Verghis
Hearing Date
27 May 2026
Time
10am
Hearing Type
Mention
Court Type
Magistrates
Prosecutor
Case Details
Offence Details: | Assault a person thereby occasioning them actual bodily harm Affray Use threatening / abusive words / behaviour likely to cause harassment, alarm or distress Possess an offensive weapon in a public place
Notice: This profile is programmatically generated using statistical name metrics from the UK ONS Census and international records. It represents demographic likelihoods and should not be used as absolute factual personal records.
Gender Probability
Female
Likely Age
~28 years old
Predicted Nationality / Origin
British/Irish (GB)
UK Offence & Sentencing Guidelines
Common assault is committed when a person intentionally or recklessly causes another to apprehend immediate, unlawful violence. Battery is the actual application of unlawful force. No physical injury needs to occur.
Sentencing: Usually dealt with in the Magistrates' Court. Maximum penalty is 6 months imprisonment, a community order, or a fine. If racially or religiously aggravated, it can be sent to the Crown Court with higher maximum penalties.ABH (Section 47 of the Offences Against the Person Act 1861) involves an assault that causes some hurt or injury to the victim (e.g., bruising, cuts, minor fractures) that is more than transient or trifling.
Sentencing: Triable either way. In the Magistrates' Court, the maximum is 6 months custody. In the Crown Court, it carries a maximum of 5 years imprisonment.Engaging in a course of conduct (on at least two occasions) that causes alarm, distress, or fear of violence to another person, knowing or ought to know it amounts to harassment.
Sentencing: Summary harassment carries up to 6 months imprisonment and/or a fine. If the harassment causes fear of violence, or is racially or religiously motivated, it is triable either way and carries a maximum of 5 to 14 years imprisonment.Behaviours that cause, or are likely to cause, fear, alarm, distress, or disorder in public spaces. Includes affray, violent disorder, and threatening behaviour (Public Order Act 1986).
Sentencing: Low-level public order offences (Section 5) result in fines. Serious offences like affray (Section 3) carry up to 3 years imprisonment. Violent disorder (Section 2) carries up to 5 years.
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