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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 >> Clarke, R v [2005] EWCA Crim 2514 (27 October 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2005/2514.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Crim 2514 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CENTRAL CRIMINAL COURT
HHJ STEPHENS AND A JURY
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(THE RT HON. SIR IGOR JUDGE)
THE HON. MR JUSTICE WILKIE
and
SIR CHARLES MANTELL
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R |
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- v - |
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Danny Clarke |
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AND BETWEEN |
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R |
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- v - |
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Lee Clarke |
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Mr M. Gledhill QC and Mr D. Bell for Lee Clarke
Mr W. Clegg QC and Miss E. King for the Crown
Hearing date: 19th October 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
President of the Queen's Bench Division:
"Glen said something to Lee and they both began to fight, pushing, hitting and head butting. Denise was shouting at them to stop. I saw Lee struggling to pull something out of the front of his waistband; at this point I was pulling at Lee's shoulder telling him to stop it. Lee then let go of Glen and I saw him with a hammer in his hand and saw that his trousers were ripped. Lee then let go of Glen and I saw him with a hammer in his hand and saw that his trousers were ripped and that he had a cut. I did not see my brother again either at the pub or in the car park."
"… I walked towards my car and opened the door to put Danielle in, and to get in, but Glen locked the car door shut so I couldn't get in. I was telling Glen to fuck off, and was still trying to get into the car. Then, Denise and Lee came out of the pub. All this time I still had the sword. Glen left where I was standing and walked towards Denise. I shouted at Denise "He's still not listening, he's still going on about it". I said this because it had been Denise who asked me to talk to him. Then Lee and Glen started fighting. Denise was shouting at Lee to stop it. I shouted at Lee to stop it. I jumped between them and pushed them apart, by grabbing Lee's shoulder, when I did so, the sword went into Glen … I never wanted any harm to come to Glen and I never had … any intention of fighting him."
This fatal injury was the result of an accident.
"1. I have been advised by my barristers, Tim Owen QC and Terry Boulter, that in the light of the expert report obtained from Dr Jerreat on the nature and likely causation of the fatal stab wound to Glen Sharpe, it is unlikely that any jury will accept as true my most recent instructions (set out in a proof dated 14th February 2003) to the effect that I inflicted the fatal stab wound to Glen Sharpe accidentally while making efforts to stop the assault on my brother, Lee, upon Glen.
2. I have also been advised that were I to give evidence in my own defence I would inevitably be cross-examined by Lee's barrister about a number of confessions which I have made (in accordance with my most recent instructions) to various individuals, including Dr Taylor, the Crown's psychiatrist.
3. In these circumstances I have been advised that my best hope of securing an acquittal on the charge of murder which I face (and which I deny) is for me simply to put the prosecution to proof as to my guilt as a secondary party to the crime, not to put my most recent instructions to Denise Draper as to how Glen came to receive a fatal injury and for me not to give evidence in my own defence should the judge reject a submission that I have no case to answer on the Crown's case.
4. I have been advised and accept that by adopting this course, my barrister will be unable to advance a positive case to any prosecution witness to the effect that I was not responsible for the fatal injury. I also understand that my barrister will be unable to challenge Lee or any witness called by Lee in the event that he/they give evidence which is consistent with my most recent instructions. It follows that Lee's defence to the effect that I, not he, caused the fatal injury will be unchallenged by my barrister.
5. I have been advised and accept that should I later decide that I do wish to give evidence in my own defence or in any way advance a positive case in accordance with my present instructions, my barristers would in all probability be in the position of being professionally embarrassed with the result that they would have to withdraw from further representing me (having obtained the permission of the Judge to such a course).
6. I have been advised and understand that the jury would be entitled to draw adverse inferences from my failure to give evidence in my own defence and that further adverse inferences might properly be drawn from my barrister's inability to challenge evidence from my brother, Lee, to the effect that I, not he, caused the fatal injury and/or evidence from other potential witnesses who may give evidence of confessions I have made to them about my responsibility for causing the fatal injury to Glen Sharpe.
7. Having been advised in the way set out in this statement, I have decided, after careful consideration over a number of days and of my own free will, to accept the advice I have been given. Accordingly, I do not intend to give evidence in my own defence and I give instructions to my barrister that he should not advance a positive case to any prosecution witness along the lines set out in my most recent instructions."
"4. I first met Mr Clarke in a conference at HMP Woodhill on 25th March 2003 (see Attendance Note). I vividly recall being informed by my instructing solicitor that shortly before I came to be instructed, Mr Clarke had dramatically changed his instructions on how Glen Sharpe came by his death. Instead of an acceptance of the clear description given by Denise Draper to the effect that it was Lee Clarke who stabbed Glen to death, Danny Clarke was now maintaining that it was he, not Lee, who stabbed Glen and that this had happened accidentally while making efforts to stop the assault by Lee upon Glen.
5. Plainly, this change of instructions created very great difficulties for the defence team. These difficulties dominated the 3 pre-trial conferences I attended at HMP Woodhill on 25/3/03, 4/4/03 and 14/4/03 and continued right through the trial itself.
6. The central difficulty was that although it is entirely possible to advance the defences of lack of intent/accident, diminished responsibility and provocation as alternatives for a jury to consider at the same time (see for example R v Thornton (No. 2) [1996] 1 WLR 1174) there is an obvious forensic problem in seeking to persuade a jury that accident is truly reconcilable with diminished/provocation. Where a defendant's clear and firm instructions are that he stabbed a man to death with a Samurai sword by accident, calling psychiatric evidence intended to show that in fact the defendant was diminished at the time (or provoked) inevitably undermines the accident defence. The decision to run diminished/provocation amounts in effect to going behind the defendant's instructions. This may be permissible but it is a very risky strategy.
7. Moreover, quite apart from the fact that Danny Clarke's claim that he, not Lee, stabbed Glen was utterly inconsistent with the evidence from the only eye witness to the killing, the forensic evidence indicated that the sword must have been driven into Glen Sharpe with some force. Indeed, as I recall, the sword almost passed from one side of Mr Sharpe's body and outside the other. Even allowing for movement in a struggle, the idea that Glen Sharpe met his death accidentally was unlikely, if not frankly absurd. In the light of the report of Dr Jerreat (defence pathologist) Danny Clarke therefore received very clear advice that a defence of accident was almost bound to fail before a jury with the almost inevitable result that both he and his brother Lee would be convicted of murder.
8. A continuing concern for the defence team was that Danny Clarke may have been persuaded to change his instructions as a result of pressure brought to bear upon him by his father and/or brother. Our fear was that while he was in a vulnerable emotional state in prison, and feeling guilty that his personal difficulties with his girlfriend and her brother had ultimately led to his brother's involvement in the killing, Danny Clarke had been persuaded that advancing the defence of accident was the best chance of securing not guilty verdicts for both him and Lee on the basis that the jury would be unsure who had in fact stabbed Glen to death. The psychological factors which may have brought about this state of affairs are discussed in Dr Farnham's report at para 142 of his 7/4/03 report.
9. Our concerns were raised on a number of occasions with Danny Clarke, but he steadfastly refused to accept that his final instructions were anything other than the full truth. Dr Farnham's psychiatric assessment in March/April 2003 was that although at an earlier stage of the remand period Danny Clarke had been incapable of giving instructions and was unfit to plead, he was by early April 2003 fit to plead and stand trial. We were accordingly in the position of having to prepare his defence in the light of his final version of events from which he could not be shaken.
10. Notwithstanding my view that accident was very difficult, if not impossible, to reconcile with diminished/provocation, I specifically asked Dr Farnham to consider provocation in addition to the issue of diminished responsibility and indeed provided him with copies of the decision of the House of Lords in Morgan Smith and the more recent decision of the Court of Appeal in R v Josephine Smith. My concern was that even though, on Danny Clarke's final account, that there was no provocative conduct which caused him to lose his self-control and kill Glen Sharpe, Dr Farnham should focus on those aspects of his personality which might constitute special characteristics for the purposes of the s. 3 defence – see paras 151-153 of Dr Farnham's final report.
11. In possession of Dr Farnham's 7th April report, it was ultimately necessary to advise Danny Clarke on how best to conduct his defence at the trial with a view to securing his acquittal. He received clear advice that the prosecution evidence against him was relatively weak in that there was little, if any, evidence to establish the Crown's case of a preconceived plan hatched by the Clarke brothers to lure Glen Sharpe into the car park where he would be killed, and no evidence from Denise Draper to suggest that he played any active role in the deadly attack. On the contrary, her evidence (given on oath at the dismissal application before Harrison J on 21st May 2002) tended to show that Danny Clarke twice exhorted his brother to stop the attack on Lee before the deadly blow was inflicted by Lee. This was very powerful evidence of Danny Clarke's refusal to assist or encourage his brother in the attack.
12. In these circumstances, I advised Danny Clarke that by far his best chance of securing an acquittal was for him not to challenge the Crown's evidence about the attack (i.e. not to put his instructions of "accident" to Denise Draper) and then make a submission of no case to answer at half-time. In the event that the submission failed, he was further advised that his best prospect of an acquittal by the jury would be for him not to give evidence on his own behalf but instead seek an acquittal on the basis that the jury could not be sure that the Crown's case of joint enterprise was made out in the light of the evidence as a whole, and especially Miss Draper's evidence.
13. This advice was given after a great deal of thought and discussion. I was particularly concerned about the ethics of not putting Mr Clarke's final, "accident" instructions to the prosecution's main witness because should Danny Clarke ultimately have decided that he did wish to give evidence in his defence it seemed to met hat I would be forced to withdraw from the case. In the event I sought advice from the Bar Council about the position I was in and discussed the case in detail with Anthony Leonard QC, a member of the Professional Conduct committee. He took the view that the course I had advised was entirely acceptable and ethical.
14. As a result, I prepared a written statement for Danny Clarke to consider and, if he accepted it, to sign. He did so following a conference at the Old Bailey on 7th May 2003. I annex the statement (which is, I hope, self-explanatory) hereto.
15. I trust that the above summary of the advice given explains why, in the end, the defences of diminished responsibility and/or provocation were not advanced on Danny Clarke's behalf. If I can be of any further assistance, I would of course be happy to answer any specific questions raised by Mr Clarke's current lawyers."
Fresh evidence – Lee Clarke
"It was likely that Danny had given Denise a clump once too often. Danny had no qualms about punching girls let alone slapping them, and he was violent to all his girlfriends that were typically of slight build."
Another theme describes occasions of specific violence. Mertens, for example, describes the day of the verdict at the Old Bailey when it is said that Danny [Lee] "fought the staff". Another incident in the same vein is given by Jamie Lee Clarke, in which he describes his father being stabbed by Danny Clarke with manicure scissors.