“…Variously referred to as ‘concurrence’, ‘concordance’, or ‘agreement’, as if evidencing one‐way causality, Reports are assumed to have influenced the sentence outcome they suggested (for example, Cole and Angus , p.302; Deane , p.93; Leifker and Sample ; Taylor, Clarke and McArt ). The co‐incidence of a recommendation and sentencing outcome is conflated with judges ‘agreeing with’ the recommendation, or elsewhere as ‘following’ the recommendation (Birkett , p.500). However, the fact that in a formal sense sentence follows a Report does not, in itself, evidence the desired influence (for example, Morgan and Haines ; Parker, Sumner and Jarvis , pp.142–65; Tata et al .…”