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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> O' Shea v R. [2010] EWCA Crim 2879 (06 December 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2010/2879.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Crim 2879 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM COVENTRY CROWN COURT
HH JUDGE ECCLES
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE KING and
MR JUSTICE NICOL
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Anthony David O'SHEA |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE QUEEN |
Respondent |
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Miranda Moore QC and Philip Bown for the CPS
Hearing dates: 11th and 12th November 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Stanley Burnton:
Introduction
The scope of this appeal
The grounds of appeal
1. … Subsequent forensic examination of Landslide's computer records showed that the appellant was the victim of identity theft; that the computer records on which the prosecution relied were rife with fraud; that the specific subscriptions said to have been taken out by the appellant were contaminated with fraud.
2 The jury had been presented with a misleading and prejudicial account about the nature of Landslide and its website. They were told that Landslide advertised itself as a gateway to child pornography and that it denied access to anyone who did not specifically confirm that they wanted to view child pornography. This caused such prejudice to the appellant that he did not have a fair trial and his conviction is unsafe.
Fresh evidence: the applicable principles
"(1) For the purposes of an appeal under this Part of this Act the Court of Appeal may, if they think it necessary or expedient in the interests of justice –
…
(c) receive any evidence which was not adduced in the proceedings from which the appeal lies.
(2) The Court of Appeal shall, in considering whether to receive any evidence, have regard in particular to –
(a) whether the evidence appears to the Court to be capable of belief;
(b) whether it appears to the Court that the evidence may afford any ground for allowing the appeal;
(c) whether the evidence would have been admissible in the proceedings from which the appeal lies on an issue which is the subject of the appeal; and
(d) whether there is a reasonable explanation for the failure to adduce the evidence in those proceedings."
"33 The second observation we make relates to the expert evidence and relates to the importance of recognising that the criminal justice system does not allow two trials, first by a jury with one team of lawyers and secondly, possibly years later in the Court of Appeal, by a second who have managed to find an expert who would have said something different had that expert been called at the trial. The time to deploy expert assistance is at trial and not later. Of course there will be cases where the Court of Appeal will out of justice admit and rely upon evidence which might have been obtained at trial but was not, when that evidence falsifies and destroys the basis on which the earlier conviction was obtained. Justice may demand no less and many serious injustices by that means have been cured in the past, all the more so where scientific research and thought has developed. But that fresh evidence must have the impact which the statutory jurisdiction of this court dictates. It must be such as to undermine the safety of the verdict. It is not sufficient that it merely demonstrates that the original evidence from experts might have been assessed in a different way or a different conclusion on the expert evidence part of the case might have been reached unless it strikes at the fundamental basis upon which the verdict rested."
Landslide
"When you sign up for a KEYZ account, your credit card will be charged by Landslide Inc. The address you enter must match the billing address of your credit card."
Internet protocol addresses
The evidence against the appellant
The defence at trial
The appellant's contentions on this appeal
(i) There were numerous indication of fraud on the Landslide computers. An important indication was the high proportion of DNVs, i.e. apparent subscribers who having subscribed did not visit the website for which the subscription had been paid.
(ii) The context of one of the entries ascribed to the appellant, namely that dated 16 August 1999 and timed at 07.30 and given the user code ao169, which was adjacent to those of someone referred to as RG. The entries attributed to RG were, in the opinion of Mr Bates, indicative of having been made fraudulently. In his written submissions the appellant contends that "forensic examination shows clearly that [RG's] transactions are suspect".
(iii) The fact that the transactions recorded against the appellant's name had been entered from a computer with a Freeserve IP address was not conclusive of the fact that such a computer had been used to access the Landslide computer. It was possible to disguise the IP address of a computer, and indeed to assume the IP address of a Freeserve proxy server without accessing the Internet through one of the Freeserve servers.
(iv) He had found on the Landslide computer the customer database of a company named Levenger. That database had the information that could be used to make fraudulent subscriptions and debits to credit cards of customers. No reason was apparent why this database was on the Landslide computer, and it was submitted on behalf of the appellant that it must have been for fraudulent purposes.
(v) A transaction on the Landslide computer attributed to the appellant that had not been referred to at the trial. It included an America On Line email address, and had been given the code AO123. It was common ground that that address had been the appellant's at the apparent date of that transaction. The website visited was called Lolitalinks. Its webmaster was American.
(vi) One of the subscription sites that could be accessed through Landslide was Keyzsexyplace. In Mr Bates view, it was entirely fraudulent.
(vii) At the appellant's trial, the prosecution case was that there were not and could not have been fraudulent transactions on the Landslide computer. The judge summed up to the jury to this effect. The true picture was very different. Analysis of the subscribers who did not subsequently visit the website for which a subscription had been paid indicated that there was a large number indicative that the subscriptions were fraudulent. This analysis was referred to as DNVs ("Did Not Visit").
The prosecution evidence in reply
Should the appellant's application to adduce fresh evidence be allowed?
Does the evidence appear to the Court to be capable of belief?
"The [KeyZ] access logs cannot be used to trace a particular user's accesses across more than one session, however, as the allocation of IP addresses usually occurs dynamically, meaning that the same user can access the Internet using the same computer and the same Internet Service Provider, but may be allocated a different IP address (within the range of IP addresses owned by the ISP) on each occasion. …
Each of the IP addresses [recorded for the Anthony O'Shea subscriptions] are registered with the UK-based Energis (and were previously registered with Planet.net.uk) who provide Internet services to Freeserve (now Wanadoo)."
"Several different IP addresses have been recorded for 'Anthony O'Shea' …"
She set out the IP address recorded for each of the transactions in question, and continued:
"Each of those IP addresses are registered with the UK-based Energis … who provide Internet services to Freeserve.
Mr Fisher … correctly comments that the IP addresses in question were assigned to Freeserve …"
See too Mr Fisher's evidence at trial on 13 October 2005, page 5 of the transcript.
Does it appear to the Court that the evidence may afford any ground for allowing the appeal?
Was there is a reasonable explanation for the failure to adduce the evidence in those proceedings
"The defence were not given full and proper access to the computer material on which the prosecution was based."
"I have no idea why I was not called to give evidence at the O'Shea trial."
The other was as follows:
"I was not told why I was not called to give evidence.
I assumed that it was because I had told counsel that I was unable to assist with material I had not seen."
In our judgment, this is either no, or an inadequate, explanation.
(i) The appellant did not seek to appeal, and does not now seek to appeal, his conviction on the ground that any order of the trial judge relating to disclosure of Landslide material prevented him from fairly presenting his defence.
(ii) His grounds of appeal do not include any complaint as to the conduct of his trial counsel or solicitors. Before us, he was represented by different solicitors and counsel.
(iii) Mr Fisher did not testify that he had been hindered by restrictions placed on his access to Landslide material.
Conclusion