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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Bowden v R [2004] EWCA Crim 106 (29 January 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2004/106.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Crim 106 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT MANCHESTER
His Honour Judge LEVER
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE McCOMBE
and
THE RECORDER OF MIDDLESBROUGH
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BRIAN THOMAS BOWDEN |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Regina |
Respondent |
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Mr Graham Wood QC and Mr P Taylor for the Respondent
Hearing date: 18 December 2003
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE THOMAS :
On 9 July 2002 the appellant was convicted at Manchester Crown Court, Minshull Street before his H.H Judge Lever and a jury of attempted robbery and having a firearm with intent. He was sentenced to 18 years imprisonment which comprised a custodial term of 16 years and an extension period of 2 years concurrent on each count. He appeals by leave of a single Judge.
The facts of the attempted robbery
a) The balaclava
One month after the attempted robbery the police searched the appellant's home. They recovered a balaclava from a drawer. Scientific evidence was obtained through forensic examination of the following three items on the balaclava:
i) the appellant's saliva.
ii) three fragments of glass which had an identical refractive index with each other and an identical refractive index with the outer sheet of the security screen which had been smashed. The three fragments also had an identical chemical composition to the screen at the post office. The glass was ordinary glass used in about one in ninety or one in a hundred windows. The inner glass had a different refractive index; no fragments of that were found, but the experts were agreed that the sheet most likely to come into contact with the robber's clothing was the outer sheet of the security screen. It was common ground amongst the experts that studies had shown that many people had fragments of glass in their turn ups, pockets and elsewhere on their clothing which they picked up from walking where there was broken glass.
iii) particles of barium and aluminium consistent with these particles having come either from fireworks or from gunshot residue. Cartridges found at the Post Office contained residues of aluminium, lead, barium and antimony or three or two of these elements. Although it was usual to have cartridges with aluminium in the United States, it was less common in the UK. No antimony was discovered; if it had been that would have been conclusive that the residue had come from a gunshot; the absence of antimony made the residues of aluminium and barium consistent with it either being derived from fireworks or from gunshot residue. It was the appellant's evidence that the reside must have come from a late 5 November fireworks party which had been held after his son had discovered fireworks in a cubby hole.
The appellant accepted that the balaclava was his; there was a substantial amount of descriptive evidence in relation to the balaclava worn by the participants in the robbery from those who had witnessed the robbery. It was fully summarised by the Judge in the course of his clear and careful summing up.
b) A diary entry in relation to the Polo
The third of the cars which we have mentioned was a Volkswagen Polo; it had been falsely re-plated with the number N 886 FNO. It had been stolen at the same time as the BMW and the Montego estate car and there was evidence that it was used in the robbery as a getaway car; whether it was so used, was of course a question for the jury. The importance of the car was that the false registration number was found in a 2000 diary which had belonged to the appellant. However, the entry was neither in the appellant's handwriting nor that of his father. Nor was the diary at the appellant's home; it was at his parents' home though there was evidence that he visited his parents' home on a daily basis.
c) The rope from the Fiat Punto
Of the cars to which we have referred, the Montego estate car, was blown up as a decoy before the robbery; the Fiat Punto was, according to a prosecution witness, used in connection with the blowing up of the Montego. It was a question for the jury whether the Fiat Punto was connected in this way with the robbery, but if it was, the importance of it was that the owner had left in it a tow rope with green insulating tape, but it was missing. A piece of tow rope of identical composition was found in the boot in a bag in a Rover motor car which the appellant's father had bought in April 2001, after the robbery. The only factor which linked the rope with the appellant was that he travelled from time to time as a passenger in his father's Rover motor car.
There was some other evidence against the appellant, but it is not necessary to summarise it for the purposes of the appeal. He also adduced his defence of alibi, but again it is not necessary to summarise that evidence.
The grounds of appeal
The admission of evidence of the diary entry and the rope
The diary entry
The Rope
The relevance of the previous trial
"Mr Worsley in his opening speech to you before he called his client to give evidence said that he hoped that you wouldn't take the view "like father, like son" Well, members of the jury, I am going to be firmer than that. In this country we have no concept of guilt by association. It is nonsense to say that because the father has in the past been an armed robber that in anyway makes it more likely that the son has committed this robbery. That would be pure prejudice and had no place in an English court. … "
The questions in relation to the balaclava asked by the Judge of the defence expert.
i) The finding of glass on the balaclava was consistent with it having come from the Post Office, but that there were other possible explanations; the finding of the glass on the appellant was moderate evidence that the wearer had been present at the Post Office.
ii) If the balaclava had only had barium and aluminium on it and no glass, that would have been towards the bottom end of the scale of evidential support – limited to moderate evidence that the wearer had been present at the Post Office.
iii) If the evidence of the barium and aluminium residue was taken together with the glass, one would be moving up from the moderate to moderately strong.
"You have told us about particulates; the barium and the aluminium. You told us about the glass that was found. Can you answer this yes or no. Can you as an expert say that the presence of the particulates, barium, aluminium and the fragments of glass make you scientifically certain that the mask was worn at the scene of the robbery"
Mr Walker answered
"Definitely not"