![]() |
[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 >> JD, R v [2008] EWCA Crim 2557 (24 October 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2008/2557.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Crim 2557, [2009] Crim LR 591 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE MACKAY
and
MRS JUSTICE DOBBS
____________________
R |
||
v |
||
JD |
____________________
Vera Baird QC and Amjad Nawaz on behalf of the Crown
Hearing date : Monday 4th August 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Latham :
"Something about rape, ladies and gentleman. Rape is unlike many other criminal offences. It's quite unlike other types of assault. If somebody came up to you in the pub and accused you of spilling drink on them, and then punched you on the nose, you would have no hesitation, I apprehend in complaining about that and going straight to the police and saying: "that chap just punched me on the nose I want him taken to court and prosecuted and punished." No difficulty about that. Equally, if your home had been burgled and you knew who it was who had done it, you wouldn't have any difficulty about ringing the police and complaining about the fact that you'd had your plasma screen television taken and the bedroom was trashed and you want the perpetrator caught and prosecuted.
But rape is not like those offences. It's much more complicated both in its effects and how it's dealt with by victims. For example, it's a common misunderstanding about forced sex within a relationship that in some way it doesn't really matter. I'm speaking now of course about the rape of a woman. I appreciate, as you know, that men can be raped, and there are many other types of sexual assault, but in relation to a woman who is raped, a woman may consent to sexual intercourse because she loves and trust her partner. It's consent to sexual engagement within a loving and tender atmosphere, and it can greatly enrich a relationship, and it's a joy for life for many people. It means a great deal to a woman that she consents to that sort of relationship. Therefore, when a man forces himself on a woman it's a massive breach of trust. It becomes for the woman brutal and degrading and humiliating and hugely upsetting, and very often men will misunderstand this, because they will say: Well I've had sex with this woman dozens and dozens of times, so why is it so bad on this occasion? It's the breach of trust. It's the invasion. It's the treatment of the woman in this manner of disregard that affects them so greatly.
Very often, women who are raped within relationships feel ashamed of what's happened. They themselves feel the shame. Although they have nothing to be ashamed about, because they are the victim, that's the reaction. They feel ashamed of what's happened. They are often too traumatised or embarrassed to tell anyone what's going on, and a very serious aspect of the offence in those circumstances is that a woman feels trapped. She is, after all, in her own home, very often simply too ashamed and embarrassed to tell anyone that the person that she has brought into her home to share her life, be with her children, is now raping her. She won't tell her neighbours, friends… even very close friends…children, still less the police, because of those factors which bring to bear.
So it's against that background that you may wish to consider the question: why D didn't complain about being raped when it started. You were asked that question by Mr. Jackson. He made it a significant point in his speech, didn't he? He said: ask yourselves, use your commonsense. Why, when all these police are in the house, is she not saying: "Oh, by the way, he's been raping me for some time now"? Bear in mind how you would feel if you were in her situation about suddenly saying "Oh, by the way, I've been raped". This is where you use your commonsense and your experience of life in determining that question, because it's frequently said when women don't complain about rape: "well it's not true, because if it had been true they would have been straight down to the police station hammering on the door, saying "I've been raped". But you may think it doesn't work like that particularly if it's rape by someone you have loved, as D says, still care about, to an extent, in your home, where your children are living.
You say to yourselves: why didn't she complain? Well, what she said to you was that when the police were in her house there were quite a lot of them. They were joking and wandering about, and she just didn't feel that she could speak to them. But when P.C. Stephenson came along; you may think what she was saying there was something of a kindred spirit. There was a sympathetic ear here. A young policeman, on his own, and she felt she had to say something. And why? You may conclude it was as a result of the ferocity of that final attack. If what she has told you is true, it was a ferocious rape. She said at one stage she was being smothered and thought that she might not survive. That's how bad she thought it was. The prosecution say that's why she looked like she did when she saw Adam in the house, and that's what made her tell the police what was going on, because in spite of her feelings for Mr JD, and all that happened in the past, she was thinking that enough was enough.
It's for you to consider those points. If you think I have views about this with which you don't agree, you are entitled to disregard those views. That is your privilege and prerogative."
"(1) This section applies if, on the trial of a person for a prescribed sexual offence, evidence is given when a question is asked of a witness that tends to suggest:
(a) an absence of complaint in respect of the commission of the alleged offence by the person on whom the offence is alleged to have been committed, or
(b) delay by that person in making any such complaint.
(2) In circumstances to which this section applies, the judge:
(a) must warn the jury that absence of complaint or delay in complaining does not necessarily indicate that the allegation that the offence was committed is false, and
(b) must inform the jury that there may be good reasons why a victim of a sexual assault may hesitate about the assault, and
(c) must not warn the jury that delay in complaining is relevant to the victim's credibility unless there is sufficient evidence to justify such a warning."
"Experience shows that people react differently to the trauma of a serious sexual assault. There is no one classic response. The defence say the reason that the complainant did not report this until her boyfriend returned from Dubai ten days after the incident is because she has made up a false story. That is a matter for you. You may think that some people may complain immediately to the first person they see, whilst others may feel shame and shock and not complain for some time. A late complaint does not necessarily mean it is a false complaint. That is a matter for you."