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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Tahir & Anor, R. v [2007] EWCA Crim 205 (24 January 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2007/205.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Crim 205 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE BURTON
THE RECORDER OF WINCHESTER
(Sitting as a Judge of the Court of Appeal Criminal Division)
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R E G I N A | ||
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AKSOY TAHIR AND JAMIE ADAMS |
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MISS A MULLIGAN appeared on behalf of ADAMS
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"Both of you, Tahir and Adams, are to be treated as having pleaded at the earliest opportunity. Nevertheless, there had to be a Newton hearing and the first question the court has to consider is to what extent does the fact that there had to be a Newton hearing result in there being a withholding in part of the reduction in the sentence which would otherwise be applicable having regard to your early guilty pleas?
On my findings, I have come to the conclusion that you dealt, as is evidenced by the exercise book, in an amount more than twice the amount admitted by you, Adams. On the other hand, it is rightly pointed out that the amount which I found is much less than the amount contended for by the Crown, even in its revised submission of 300 kilogrammes of skunk."
"My initial view was, as I indicated to Mr Warner, that the right approach was to regard the Newton hearing and its outcome as having the effect of reducing the credit to which you would otherwise have been entitled for your early plea of guilty, by one half. But he has persuaded me that that is too harsh an approach. I have come to the conclusion that there should be a reduction in the credit which you would otherwise receive, but the reduction should be to the extent of one third of the credit. So that instead of receiving 30 per cent credit you will receive 20 per cent credit for your plea of guilty. The Newton hearing has had the effect of reducing the credit for your plea of guilty to that extent."
"[He] was involved in a conspiracy to supply a class C drug namely cannabis from 24th February 2005 to 21st July 2005.
Prior to 21st July 2005 the defendant had been dealing in skunk cannabis. The drugs seized from Adams' car on 21st July 2005 was not the type of drug which he had hitherto dealt in. The defendant has no knowledge of the 22 kilos of cannabis found at Piper's address."
"The totality of the said drugs in respect of which Mr Tahir had knowledge and agreed to involve himself in are made up of the following:
(a) 51 kilogrammes of skunk (referred to in the notebook of Adams);
(b) 11 kilogrammes of cannabis resin (seized from Adams' vehicle)."
"The appellants were two of five people convicted of conspiracy to defraud the National Westminster Bank of £310,000. The prosecution relied on a document dictated by one defendant, as evidence of the conspiracy against all the defendants. The document showed the proposed division of the proceeds of the conspiracy among all five defendants. The document was admitted, although there was no evidence that the appellants had prepared the document or had been a party to its preparation and there was no link or connection between either of them and the document.
Held, dismissing the appeal, that (1) the document was admissible against each defendant, if it constituted an act or declaration by the other defendant in furtherance of the conspiracy and provided that there was some further evidence beyond the document itself to prove that they were parties to the conspiracy alleged against them; Blake, Donat and Windass [references given]. Since there was such further evidence of the conspiracy and although none of the other conspirators had anything to do with the preparation of the document, or had handled it, prima facie it was prepared in furtherance of the conspiracy and was therefore admissible."
"The only remaining question therefore was whether the document was prepared in furtherance of the conspiracy. We do not accept that it should only have been admitted if every other possible explanation for it had been excluded. We do not see Steward [1963] Crim LR 697 as supporting that proposition as advanced by Mr Bright. In our judgment, a realistic or reasonable inference that it was prepared in furtherance of the conspiracy would be sufficient for these purposes.
We have of course considered the document itself. The document appears to be not a record of distribution after the conspiracy, as in the case of Tye, but an indication of the intended or prospective distribution of the proceeds of the conspiracy when it had been fulfilled. It identifies the conspirators. It is therefore a rare and compelling example of written evidence of the existence of a conspiracy and of the identity of participants in it. Although none of the other conspirators had had anything to do with the preparation of the document, or handled it, prima facie it was prepared in furtherance of the conspiracy, therefore it was admissible."
"It is clear that the silvine book is a record of dealings by Adams, on his evidence, which was not challenged by Mr Gadsden, for the Crown. It is, to an extent, at any rate, also a running record, showing how payments were made for the drugs by Adams' customer."
"In addition to the figures representing 'cash expected', 'cash received', 'cash paid (to the suppliers)', there are numerous notes indicating the number of kilogrammes of skunk supplied to different customers, whose names normally appear in an abbreviated form."
"Now, so far as you, Tahir, are concerned, it is urged on your behalf that you are not affected by my findings in relation to the exercise book and that I should still sentence you on the basis of your plea that you were only involved in the conspiracy to the extent of dealing in those 51 kilogrammes clearly identified within the exercise book, plus the 11 kilogrammes in Adams' car and the 3 kilogrammes in Adams' garage."
We interpolate, precisely the same submission that is made before the this court.
"I see no basis at all for differentiating between your position and Adams' position in this regard. The exercise book refers on more than one occasion to the sums due or owed as 'we owe' or 'we pay' and there is no distinction or differentiation made anywhere in that exercise book between different transactions such as suggest that some were Adams' own responsibility and not equally yours.
In the prosecution case summary it was asserted by the Crown that the matter should be approached on the basis that you, Tahir, were the principal member of the conspiracy, with Adams being your trusted lieutenant. Mr Gadsden, on the Crown's behalf when I asked him what the evidence was to support that, acceded to my suggestion that it might be appropriate in the circumstances to treat each of you, Adams and Tahir, as equally involved."
"But you, Tahir, through your counsel, have suggested that you were involved in a much more minimal way altogether, that you were involved initially, it is suggested, as a kind of courier. But when I enquired whether you had driven the car it turned out that you cannot drive. Mr Moses on your behalf refined that part of the submission to suggest that you were, as is carefully worded in your basis of plea, simply involved in the distribution. But I am totally unconvinced by that suggestion, particularly bearing in mind your previous record, to which I shall refer in more detail later, as a convicted drugs dealer. I am quite satisfied that you were dealing in these drugs at least to the same extent as your co-conspirator Adams."