![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Esat v Crown Prosecution Service [2007] EWCA Crim 2941 (04 December 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2007/2941.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Crim 2941 |
[New search] [Help]
COURT OF APPEAL
(CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM
The Crown Court at Woolwich
HHJ Dunn QC 9802984
Strand. London. WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
and
MR JUSTICE BURTON
Between:
____________________
OZER ALI ESAT |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
THE CROWN PROSECUTION SERVICE |
Respondent |
____________________
Hearing dates: 20 June 2007, 18 October 2007 and 20 November 2007
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE HOOPER:
10.... The appellant Esat Kaan was at the time resident in North Cyprus. He was connected, albeit distantly, to both Kuni and Kulunk. He had been sentenced in May 1986 to 7 years imprisonment but had absconded while on home leave in 1988. The jury were told of the conviction, but not the nature of the offence. The prosecution case was that the package of heroin within which the clear tape was found was one which had been packaged in Turkey, and that the only sensible inference from the presence of the tape was that he had been present at its packaging and involved in arranging the consignment. There was evidence to show that he had travelled to Turkey on a number of occasions in the early months of 1996 from North Cyprus which would have enabled him to have been involved in that arrangement. There was also evidence of frequent visits to this country despite the danger to him of arrest as an absconding prisoner. He came to this country on the 2nd April 1996, and was arrested when the forensic evidence was made available to the police. In interview he said that he had not been out of Cyprus at any time during the early months of 1996 because of the pregnancy of his wife. The prosecution allege that this was a relevant lie which the jury were entitled to take into account when deciding whether or not he was involved in the conspiracy.
29.... One of the conspirators, Mr Mustafa Zafir, had a cousin, Mr Yusuf Taser [or Tasher] Tasbey. Mr Tasbey had stayed at Mr Esat's flat in Brownlow Road after Mr Esat had left England (in order to clear it and return some items to Cyprus for Mr Esat). The fingermark finger mark on the package of drugs could have been left on some clear tape (like sellotape) which Mr Esat had left at the flat for normal domestic purposes. It was suggested that Mr Zafir could have taken the clear tape which had Mr Esat's fingermark finger mark on it and it had then been used when the drugs were re-packaged in the UK.
32. When giving evidence Mr Esat demonstrated how he
would detach a piece of clear tape from the reel using his teeth and how this could result in a single mark from his right forefinger being left on the end of the tape still on the reel.
piece 1 - blue,
piece 2 - red
piece 3 - green.
"The Court of Appeal can make its assessment of the fresh evidence it has heard, but save in a clear case it is at a disadvantage in seeking to relate that evidence to the rest of the evidence which the jury heard. For these reasons it will usually be wise for the Court of Appeal, in a case of any difficulty, to test their own provisional view by asking whether the evidence, if given at the trial, might reasonably have affected the decision of the jury to convict. If it might, the conviction must be thought to be unsafe."
16. The fresh evidence which we were asked to consider under s.23 of the Criminal Appeal Act 1968 consisted of reports from a fingerprint expert, Peter Swann, and reports and oral evidence from Pamela Hamer, a forensic scientist. It was submitted that this evidence, if accepted, threw doubt on the forensic evidence called, and accepted, at trial to the effect that the clear tape was a folded piece of tape containing one finger print of the appellant which was found inside the relevant package. The tape, it was said, in fact consisted of three separate strips of tape adhered together which contained two, not one of the appellant's fingerprints. More important was the evidence of Pamela Hamer which, it was submitted, suggested that the clear tape could have been on the outside of the package. It did not seem to us, and was not seriously argued on behalf of the appellant that the fact that the clear tape could have consisted of three strips containing two fingerprints was of itself of any great significance. The important question was not the detailed makeup of the clear tape, or of the existence of one or more than one fingerprint, but whether or not it could properly be inferred that the tape was within a package which had its origin in Turkey.
22. ... The real question was whether or not there was, above that layer, a second layer of tape. That question was not answered by Pamela Hamer's investigation. ...
23. ... Despite, therefore, the very careful and expert examination carried out by Pamela Hamer, to which we pay tribute, we do not consider that her findings or conclusions could have raised any doubts in the mind of the jury as to the evidence of Paul Swinge and Andrew Beange as to the provenance of the piece of clear tape.
In any event it cannot now be said that the Esat trial was 'fair' as required by Article 6 ECHR. It proceeded upon a Crown case of irresistible inference that Esat was involved in packaging in Turkey - based upon a 'fact' that cannot be established. A conviction resulting from an unfair trial cannot be 'safe'.
All the Crown can say now in terms of safety is 'well there were three fingerprints not one'. But now its 'overlap suggestion' has been conclusively refuted it cannot exclude the [Tasher] theory ie the possibility that those prints were put on the sellotape at a time prior to its use by others to seal the heroin package, which they may have done at the time when they removed the packages from the lorries, or during the 5 days or so when the packages remained in the cars at Wood Green, or in the diluting and re-packaging process which was going on at Fairbourne Road - all times at which Esat was out of the country. The possibility is now further confirmed by (a) Mr Lloyd's evidence today that the middle fingertip mark was beside the index finger mark on tape 1, as would be expected from Esat's demonstration and (b) Ms Hamer's evidence that there is now evidence to identify the turned down end of the tape as described by Mr Esat.
In sum there is nothing in what is now known about the tape and the fingerprint distribution to refute the [Tasher] defence. That defence was left to the jury at trial but was overborne by unchallenged prosecution evidence that ADB/10 was inside the packaging. That evidence was wrong and the alternative overlap theory has been conclusively refuted, so the Court cannot substitute its own opinion about the jury issue, especially where there is some new expert evidence from Hamer and Lloyd today to support it.