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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Connolly v R. [2010] EWCA Crim 1150 (25 May 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2010/1150.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Crim 1150 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT MAIDSTONE
MR JUSTICE GOLDRING
T20067360
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE DAVID CLARKE
and
MR JUSTICE OPENSHAW
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Peter Connolly |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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The Crown |
Respondent |
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Mr M Austin-Smith QC for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 19 February & 12 May 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE HOOPER:
a) Evidence that he had confessed whilst in a car returning to London after the incident;
b) evidence from Beaney and Giblin that Connolly had a knife earlier that evening;
c) adverse inferences from his failure in interview to give the account which he was to give in evidence;
d) evidence that he had left the scene and gone on the run for two weeks;
e) evidence from which the jury could infer that he had deliberately got rid of the clothes he was wearing and the mobile phone he was carrying at the time of the attack (all of which could well have been bloodstained); and
f) evidence from which the jury could infer that he pretended that he had been wearing on the night other clothes which had similarities to the clothes he was wearing on the night.
Mr Arlidge, as I have said, does not suggest the CCTV should be excluded. He submits that Mr Austin-Smith should not be permitted to make the assertion regarding Mr Connolly, to do so would now be unfair. Such a suggestion has never before been made by the prosecution. An expert witness who was served was, in the end, not relied upon by the prosecution, never made such a suggestion. The image in question is not at all clear. It is not at all easy to discern a movement such as that suggested by Mr Austin-Smith. Had he known that such a suggestion was to be made, he would have instructed an expert to deal with it. It is now too late for we are at the end of the prosecution case.
With a little hesitation, I have concluded that it would not be right in the circumstance for Mr Austin-Smith now to make the point he wishes in respect of Mr Connolly. It is too late.
Mr Austin-Smith has reopened the point raised previously in respect of 'the man in black,' as we have referred to him, who can be seen on a careful viewing of the CCTV from inside Bar One. Mr Connolly was dressed in black.
Mr Austin-Smith has raised the point again for a number of reasons. First, he submits that things have changed since the ruling. Mr Beaney has given evidence, and been cross-examined. He has accepted that this was an incident involving only the five from Peckham and the five from Sheerness, or may be taken so to have accepted on one reading of his evidence. Two of those from Sheerness, the Duhig brothers, were on the other side of the street. That leaves the three defendants of those from Peckham, on that possible interpretation of his evidence. On one possible view of what Mr Beaney said, Mr Giblin can in effect been seen as the man, on the face of it, striking down to someone in the position of Mark Davis. Second, it is, submits Mr Austin-Smith, a possible interpretation of the CCTV in the light of Mr Beaney's evidence that at the time Mr Giblin was inflecting the last blows in the direction of Mark Davis, Mr Beaney, while nearby, was not physically joining in. At the time of the possible blows, the man in black, Mr Connolly, was running off.
Mr Connolly is about to give evidence.
Mr Austin-Smith submits that, in the light of what Mr Beaney has said, and a proper viewing of the CCTV evidence, the man in black cannot simply be ignored. On one view, the fact that Mr Beaney and the man are seen as they are on the CCTV might help them. In any event, this is evidence, submits Mr Austin-Smith, which the interests of justice require should be fully ventilated. The jury have the CCTV, it is in evidence; they might well ask about the man in black.
Mr Arlidge has not changed his stance. He submits that this evidence should be excluded to the extent of any observation or cross-examination regarding the man in black. Nothing has changed since the ruling. It is now too late. He will take the risk of the jury taking an adverse view of this evidence as far as his client is concerned.
I have to say that, having seen the CCTV as it was carefully gone through by Mr Austin-Smith in cross-examination of Mr Beaney, the position regarding it has become clearer. The figure in black can clearly be seen. I have already remarked on one possible view of the evidence that only the three people from Peckham were in the area of Bar One. I have already remarked upon one possible view of Mr Beaney's evidence, and his comments regarding Mr Giblin. It seems to me that this obviously intelligent jury is unlikely to miss the man in black on the CCTV. It is in evidence anyway. It is not satisfactory simply to leave it, and pretend, as it were, that the man in black is not there. It is, as it seems to me, in the interests of justice, viewing it in the round, that the nettle is grasped. That means that Mr Austin-Smith may be permitted to cross-examine upon the man in black. He may comment upon what can be seen. If, of course, he makes bad points, they will soon be apparent to this, as I say obviously intelligent jury.
You may also be helped by some footage from inside Bar One, looking out through the windows, in which activity on the outside can be seen. See JB p77 [RJB/35] in which you can seen the direction the camera is pointing. [PLAY CCTV FROM INSIDE BAR ONE]
In the following series of photographs JB p78-98 [RJB/59-79] an attempt has been made to clarify it for you by removing all foreground action inside Bar One and just leaving the important parts, namely what is happening outside. We may have to look at those in detail in the course of the trial.
In a further attempt to assist you, the footage from inside and outside have been matched so that you can see both at the same time. [PLAY COMPOSITE CCTV]
These taken together confirm that something is happening outside and the presence of people with clothing consistent with Giblin JB p84 [RJB/65], Connolly JB p88 [RJB/69] and Beaney JB p89 [RJB/70], but the prosecution do not suggest that this footage is sufficiently clear to make any positive identifications, let alone to be sure as to what the figures depicted are actually doing. But it may go some way to confirming the other evidence available to you.