![]() |
[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 >> Wells & Anor, R. v [2010] EWCA Crim 1564 (15 June 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2010/1564.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Crim 1564 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT
MRS JUSTICE NICOLA DAVIES DBE
____________________
R E G I N A | ||
v | ||
(1) MARK JOSEPH WELLS | ||
(2) RECEP OZER |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 0207 404 1424
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr J Carr appeared on behalf of the Second Appellant
Mr S Wilshire appeared on behalf of the Crown
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
"As a preliminary, you must be sure of the following two matters:
1. that there was a plan to steal cash belonging to the Yesiladas;
2. that the defendant in question was at some stage in the indicated period a party to that agreement. Neither Ozer nor Adamson disputes that, since both have pleaded guilty to count 2. In the case of Wells, however, that is in dispute."
"A conspiracy to commit theft could only be committed if the course of conduct to be pursued would necessarily involve the commission of the theft in accordance with the intention of the conspirators. In the instant case, as a conspiracy to steal was not a lesser form of a conspiracy to rob but a different agreement, the evidence of the conspiracy to rob had no relevance to a conspiracy to commit theft. Accordingly, as the appellant's case had been undermined by the trial judge allowing the evidence of the robbery to go before a jury and thus enable them to infer that the scheme had not been abandoned, whereas he should have directed them to ignore that evidence, the jury had been misdirected and the appeal would be allowed and the conviction quashed."
"It also follows that the evidence of the overt acts pursuant to the conspiracy to rob had no relevance to the conspiracy to steal, because they showed an intention by those who carried out the agreement to rob to do something other than follow the intentions of those who had started by agreeing to steal.
We note the court's finding in that case that the case of conspiracy to steal was not put as a lesser form of a conspiracy to rob, but as a different agreement.
"So I come then to Mr Ozer's account to you of what happened. He said to you, 'I was arrested for conspiracy to rob, but what I was a party to wasn't that. It was to steal ... We weren't looking to rob anyone. It wasn't left in the boot so we were waiting for the chance for the money to get left in the boot.'"
"[Ozer] accepted of course that Mr Ajibulu and Mr Webster had pleaded guilty to rob, but he said to you, 'My agreement was a conspiracy to steal and I know the difference', and he explained the difference.
And he said to you, 'I never agreed any force should be used. I mentioned no force being used when we spoke about this in the beginning. It was just going to be breaking into the car and grabbing the bag while nobody was there. When we first spoke about it we were all together. I said to them there ain't going to be a robbery, its going to be a theft and there's no violence to be used at all. I said that because I know if you get caught for robbery, there's a difference in sentence.'"
"We only made a conspiracy to steal. If Ajibulu and Webster then made some other agreement, we are not responsible for that."
"If, for example, you were to conclude that it is reasonably possible that Webster and Ajibulu privately agreed between only themselves that they would use force or threaten force to a person to effect the planned theft, in what might be termed an extension of their own of the original plan, to which a defendant on trial here was not a party and to which he had not agreed, then that defendant will not be guilty of the conspiracy to rob.
A defendant here can be convicted of conspiracy to rob only if the prosecution has made you sure that the defendant intended and had agreed with any of the others named in the count that force or threat of immediate force to a person would be used, if necessary, to steal the expected cash from Mrs Yesilada."
"Has the prosecution made us sure in the case of Mr Ozer and in the case of Mr Adamson, and in the case of Mr Wells, considered individually, that that individual was party to a conspiracy to rob, not merely to steal? And in Mr Wells' case, if we are not sure that he was a party to the conspiracy to rob alleged, has the prosecution at least made us sure that Mr Wells was party to a conspiracy to steal?"
"... you're not being asked, members of the jury, to find Mr Wells guilty on both these counts, because there's no point. So ... you consider count 1 in Mr Wells' case, it being as you follow a more serious charge. If you find Mr Wells guilty of count 1, there's no need in those circumstances for you to go on and return a verdict on count 2 at all."
"It does not prove that either Mr Ozer or Mr Adamson was a party to a conspiracy to rob as opposed to a conspiracy simply to steal, as each of them admits and contends. Nor does it prove that Mr Wells was a party to any criminal conspiracy, whether to rob or to steal. The questions for you in this trial remain, 'Has the prosecution made us sure in the case of Mr Ozer and in the case of Mr Wells, considerable individually, that that individual was party to a conspiracy to rob, not merely to steal? And in Mr Wells' case, if we were not sure that he was a party to the conspiracy to rob alleged, has the prosecution at least made us sure that Mr Wells was party to a conspiracy to steal?"
"... you must be sure of the following two matters. Number one, that there was a plan to steal, that is steal cash belonging to the Yesiladas. Now that, I anticipate in the light of what you've heard, isn't going to trouble you overmuch. Secondly, you must be sure that the defendant in question was at some stage in the indicted period a party to that agreement. And neither Mr Ozer nor Mr Adamson disputes that, and as you know both of them have pleaded guilty to count 2. In the case of Mr Wells, however, that is in dispute. To convict any defendant of conspiracy to rob as alleged in count 1, you have to go on to consider the following additional matter. Number three, are you sure that the defendant in question intended and had agreed that force or threat of immediate force to a person would be used if necessary to get the bag of cash Mrs Yesilada was expected to have with her when she arrived home."
"You thought, entirely erroneously, that on Friday evenings Mrs Yesilada was in the habit of bringing home with her from work a large sum of cash from the business."
"The intended robbery was carefully planned and involved detailed preparations over a significant period of time."
"They had no inkling of what was afoot but since of course they have learned not only of the police operation but of your activities. Their children were in the house at the time. Mrs Yesilada had to be, of course, for her own safety, kept by a police officer in her car until it was safe for her to proceed into her house."
"It has inevitably undermined the family's sense of security at home and has driven Mr and Mrs Yesilada to have to consider moving."
"As a matter of realities, none of you could have predicted accurately how your victim might react to being very severely frightened. Sometimes extreme fear causes a victim to fail to comply with criminal demands or not to do so quickly enough. In that situation who knows what might have happened when the adrenalin was pumping. I am satisfied that this robbery was to be effected by fear and by threats, but if it came to it some measure of brute force if that proved necessary. I think it right to say that there is nothing to suggest to me that any more force than absolutely necessary would have been used but it was, I find, within everyone's contemplation that that might occur."
"You were convicted by the jury of conspiracy to rob. Having heard the evidence in the trial I am clear that whether or not you were the original instigator of it, whether in other words it was your bright idea in the first place, you were certainly its prime mover, organising its preparation and taking the lead role, calling the shots throughout the weeks that this plot was in being. You are 21 now, you have appeared before the courts in the past on nine previous occasions for I think some 15 offences in the last five years but it is right to say nothing at all approaching this level of criminality."
"In our judgment it falls within a sentencing range of six to ten years (and maybe more for the ring leader). If that is applied as the range appropriate for this offence, it seems to us that for the purposes of determining the correct sentence for this offender account must be taken of the judge's assessment of him and his culpability in relation to this offence. The judge considered that the offender was vulnerable to being manipulated by more sophisticated offenders. It is therefore appropriate it seems to us to reflect that conclusion in what we consider to be the appropriate bracket for this offender, which would be six to eight years."