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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Jisl, R. v [2004] EWCA Crim 696 (01 April 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2004/696.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Crim 696 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CENTRAL CRIMINAL COURT
HHJ DUNN AND A JURY
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE NELSON
and
MR JUSTICE MCCOMBE
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REGINA |
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- v - |
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JAN JISL |
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AND BETWEEN: |
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REGINA |
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- v - |
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GUNGOR TEKIN |
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AND BETWEEN: |
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REGINA - v – YUCEL KONAKLI |
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Mr P. Singer QC and Mr M. Rainsford appeared on behalf of Jisl
Sir John Nutting QC appeared on behalf of Konakli
Sir Derek Spencer QC and Mr J. Dodd appeared on behalf of the Crown
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Judge:
The cross-examination of Tekin
The general complaint
"Am I going to be allowed to translate, please, this last question? There seems to be some kind of cross-speaking between them.
The witness, direct: Yes, Sir Derek.
The interpreter: I am sorry Sir Derek; you were saying that Mr Sapsford [Tekin's leading counsel at trial] after cross-examining the officers, he did … what?
Q. He was suggesting that they were wrong in their evidence that you have used a phone box in Albert Road and another one in Seven Sisters Road.
A. No. I remember, because the way you put your question now – you can correct me, if I am wrong, but you were saying – correct me if I am wrong, but I think what Mr Sapsford was objecting to was that I was being placed in two different places at the same time. This is why I am laughing – because I did remember exactly where I was. I laughed, also, because it is impossibility for me to be in the same place, the same time, unless I have some kind of magical vehicle."
"A. I cannot remember exactly. I cannot remember exactly where Albert Road is. However, I will say again that there is almost no objection to any of your officers' observations. Does that clear it up for you?
Judge Dunn: Would you let your translator finish the sentence before you go on.
The witness, direct: Yes, my Lord; sorry.
A. However I would – the only time I would object is if one of your officers stands here and tells me that black is white, then I would object to that.
Sir Derek Spencer: Why did you not mention the second call when you were in the first box?
A. Which one are you talking about? As I said to you, I do not remember the Albert Road. But I am saying to you that I may have used it. I do not remember.
Q. I thought you were saying that you did remember it and you used it, and you accepted that the officers were accurate. What are you saying?
A. What I am saying is that I remember the events, and I am saying so to you that I do not object to any of your officers saying. You are being a little bit double-standard and a bit two-faced, at the moment, saying that because I accept that, you know, I have to be seen to – I have to accept that I made that phone call, and what was it about? You are being a bit pedantic. It's like you were trying to set up some kind of trap for me. I don't know."
"A. As I stated earlier, nobody has remembered this number making this call; and, to this day, I still don't remember. And it's nothing technical. Because it doesn't make sense technically, either – that I have the number for the motel, why should I phone Directory Enquiries?
Q. Because your story is invented. That is why.
A. I am sorry, Sir Derek, but you are saying, you are telling me that I am making stories up, where, in reality, as well as to do with numbers. These numbers are a reality. It doesn't make sense what you are saying. You may insist that what I am saying to you, what the conversations are, is a story that I invented; but you can't tell me that I have invented these. If you ask me, it's you who has got a story. You are making it up.
Q. Just go back to page 17 to 22.39. Mus had already rung 192 once that evening, at 22.39, had he not?
A. I'm not going to talk about this part. I'm not getting into this. I'm not going to get into this number where you are saying that Mus has phoned up Directory Enquiries. I'm not getting into that matter. Nothing to do with me. But what I am suggesting is that the other 192 that you have fitted in there is incorrect. That's what I am objecting to.
When I look at that list I feel like I am stupid; but I know that I am not stupid. I ask you, what reason – what sensible person, while you have the number, you have the address, would phone some kind of other authority or someone that can help you find ways? We have the number with us. You know fully well that, since the beginning of 1998, when we were served with these documents, we always objected to these and we always will."
"A. I wonder where you are arriving, this question? I would like to find out where you are arriving –
Mr Sapsford: He has not suggested that, in examination in chief. If there is a matter which my learned friend wishes to raise which attaches on that, then we will deal with it in the usual way.
Judge Dunn: You are not suggesting –
Sir Derek Spencer: My Lord, if people make statements about what the evidence is and what the witness says, there is no point in me asking questions about it, with respect.
(To the witness) Are you saying that Customs have done anything wrong to the bits of paper that were found in your waste bin?
A. If we are going to start any arguments regarding this, the last three and a half years, I have been giving instructions to my solicitors. We have notes too – regarding this matter in all these (inaudible) and I have certain proofs of my own. I am telling you, here and now, that on the advice of my solicitors –
Q. You need not –
A. I choose –
Q. Will you stop? You need not tell us anything your solicitor said, unless you wish to do so. Anything that passed between you and them about this case is confidential. You do not have to tell us – unless you wish to.
A. I am telling you something that I am happy to reveal to you now.
Q. Yes.
A. My barristers know the situation. My solicitor knows the situation.
Mr Sapsford: My Lord, may I raise a matter with your Lordship in the absence of the jury, please?"
"A. I am the person who wrote that note and the telephone number and everything. I don't deny that."
Specific complaints
"Q. I asked you the other day if your solicitors had been to see Mr Konakli."
When leading counsel stood up Sir Derek immediately withdrew his statement, in clear terms more than once. He did not return to it. Later in the cross-examination we cannot help noticing that Tekin himself very strongly asserted that he wanted Konakli to be called as a witness. Given that Konakli's evidence at the first trial was, to put it neutrally, inconsistent with Tekin's defence, we well understand the forensic reasons why Konakli was not called. However at the time when the questions were first asked by Sir Derek, the possibility that Konakli might be called was still open. Sir Derek wanted to know about the contact between Konakli and Tekin while they were in custody in the same prison, in order to lay the ground for further questioning of Konakli if he gave evidence. If we may say so, we understand the thought process, but the questions to which objection was, and is still taken, were not formulated in this way. However, when we assess the possible adverse impact of these questions in context, in our judgment they are trivial.
"Q. Is the truth that you realised overnight that you told an incredible whopping lie, and now you are wriggling out of it?"
The problem was then compounded by the interpreter interrupting, in effect asking for the question to be repeated, which it was.
"A. No. No. Not at all. I don't know how you can say that, when I am pointing it out to you nice and calmly, and show you that number and the name. OK. Let me just say that I stress again that I was not asked any questions in the last three and a half years about this number. My memory, yes, is not perfect, and I have made a mistake regarding this number."
"So you are disagreeing with the account given by Mus which I have just read out to you, are you?"
Undoubtedly, this form of cross-examination contravened the principle that it is impermissible to cross-examine one defendant on the basis of the record of interview or a statement of another defendant. When objection was first taken, the judge's immediate reaction was to approach the problem as if the cross-examination were confined to the facts. But on further objection, after hearing argument, he decided that the cross-examination should cease and it did so, although Sir Derek would have been prepared to argue that in the particular circumstances which had arisen, the normal rule prohibiting cross-examination in this form did not apply. That therefore was an end of the matter at trial.
Conclusion about specific complaints
Applications under ss 23 and 26 of the Criminal Justice Act 1988
"Towards the end of December 1997, I was very often trying to reach him by telephones. Sometimes I could, sometimes I could not: and this was making me uncomfortable. As I remember, I was asking him to promise delivery by the New Year's day. In those days I phoned him many times to get an answer, and he called me himself many times to convince me … I could not understand this situation that Tekin is in. There can be no reason for him to resort to doing such a job. I remember talking quite a lot with him during those times when we were trading – i.e. in November and December 1997. These discussions may have happened both during day and night: because Istanbul is a place where you live your life to the full i.e. 24 hours a day – especially during the weekends."
"… prepared to travel to London to give evidence in the case of Gungor Tekin. However due to the fact that I owe taxes in this country I am prevented to obtain a visa to leave Turkey. In these circumstances I will not be able to give evidence in Gungor Tekin's trial. I am sorry for not being able to assist any further."
Wayne Welsh
James Goodman
"Did you have any other information about Mr Tekin from other sources?"
One counsel objected on the basis that this was not the agreed question. The judge accepted that it was not, but said to the witness that he should answer it. And the answer was "Yes", and Mr Goodman continued that he had received the information before he had heard from Khan and Tarpaz, and that it bore out the information he subsequently received. In other words, Mr Goodman was countering the suggestions put to him on Tekin's behalf.
Public Interest Immunity
The Summing up
The General Complaint
"… if I may say so, parts of your Lordship's summing were delivered at rather more than dictation speed, and sometimes not very loudly."
Specific complaints
Witnesses from the Czech Republic
Dolejs' statements
Mrs Pearson
"Q: … when you received as you described it several phone calls from a foreign man asking for directions and asking whether his friends were at the Lodge what did you do, in other words, did you pass on the fact of those calls to the party or not?
A: I did, yes, I probably did, yes … I wouldn't just ignore something. If someone asked me to pass a message on then I would have done."
"Q: Do you remember if there had been a lot of phone calls in relation to Mr Jisl?
A: I cannot remember."
On this basis the judge's summary of the evidence appears to have been correct.
Observation evidence – Hudson and Lowe
Inferences
"If you are going to draw conclusions, inferences, from basic facts which you find to be established, the inference should be strong clear and compelling. Anything in the nature of guess work or speculation would not be a safe inference … Putting it the other way round, would it be an affront to common sense if you do not draw the inference, if you do not come to the conclusion based on the facts which you find to be established?"
Further criticism relating to observations at the scene
Conflict between Jisl and Tekin
Jisl's lies
Conclusion
Konakli's appeal against sentence
Case Management
"35. … The trial judge has always been responsible for managing the trial. That is one of his most important functions. To perform it he has to be alert to the needs of everyone involved in the case. That obviously includes, but it is not limited to, the interests of the defendant. It extends to the prosecution, the complainant, to every witness (whichever side is to call the witness), to the jury, or if the jury has not been sworn, to jurors in waiting. Finally, the judge should not overlook the community's interest that justice should be done without unnecessary delay. A fair balance has to be struck between all these interests.
…
37. … nowadays, as part of his responsibility for managing the trial, the judge is expected to control the timetable and to manage the available time. Time is not unlimited. No one should assume that trials can continue to take as long or use up as much time as either or both sides may wish, or think, or assert, they need. The entitlement to a fair trial is not inconsistent with proper judicial control over the use of time. At the risk of stating the obvious, every trial which takes longer than it reasonably should is wasteful of limited resources. It also results in delays to justice in cases still waiting to be tried, adding to the tension and distress of victims, defendants, particularly those in custody awaiting trial, and witnesses. Most important of all it does nothing to assist the jury to reach a true verdict on the evidence.
38. In principle, the trial judge should exercise firm control over the timetable, where necessary, making clear in advance and throughout the trial that the timetable will be subject to appropriate constraints. With such necessary even-handedness and flexibility as the interests of the justice require as the case unfolds, the judge is entitled to direct that the trial is expected to conclude by a specific date and to exercise his powers to see that it does."