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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Hunnisett v R. [2010] EWCA Crim 514 (19 March 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2010/514.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Crim 514 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM The Crown Court at Lewes
Moses J
T20010437
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE WALKER
and
MR JUSTICE NICOL
____________________
Christopher Andrew Hunnisett |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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The Crown |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr D Martin-Sperry for the Respondent
Hearing date: 16 March 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE HOOPER:
The Reverend would telephone him on his mobile phone to tell him 'Dinner's ready, when are you coming home?'; 'I've had a fall and need you to come home immediately'; 'I don't feel well and need you to come home now', 'The dog needs to go out and I don't feel well, come home now', 'Where are you? I need you to pick up some shopping'. I was invariably in the same room as Chris when those calls came through and I could hear every word. Chris always left to return home immediately, and he always portrayed anxiety following such phone calls.
...
I became very concerned about the Reverend's demands on Chris's time and the increasingly heavy responsibility being placed on his young shoulders. My feeling of foreboding was compounded when Chris telephoned me fairly late in the evening on one occasion to tell me he was at the Conquest Hospital A&E Department with the Reverend, who had, fallen and blacked out after phoning him to come home. Chris had been enjoying an evening meal with my husband and me when the Reverend called him to say he did not feel well and demanded that Chris '...come home now'.
I noticed a marked change in Chris's health, general well-being and attitude during the period between his 16th and 17th birthdays and I initially attributed much of that change to simply growing up. But I also noted that his visits were less frequent, he became less outgoing, more withdrawn with passing months, less inclined to speak about the Reverend, very secretive, and, most striking, his usual effervescent good humour totally dissolved. He looked strained, constantly stressed or distressed, and he very often appeared to be extremely pale and unwell with a hacking cough and a general look of being physically run-down.
I had the distinctly uneasy feeling that the Reverend had been 'grooming' Chris with presents such as sailing holidays, the purchase of their own boat, a new computer, etc. The Reverend purchased the sailing boat and it was Chris's side of the 'partnership' to sail and maintain the vessel. When I put this to Chris, he told me not to worry about him and that everything was alright. But, I felt that my fears were grounded on the fact that, for the first time in our friendship, Chris could not maintain eye contact with me when I asked him if the Reverend had behaved inappropriately.
I can state with 100% certainty that Chris has never lied to me, and he did not lie to me when I gently questioned him about the Reverend's behaviour, he merely sidestepped my enquiries and I withdrew.
Late one afternoon, approximately one week before the Reverend's demise, Chris called in to say he urgently needed to speak with me in private. We agreed a time later that evening, when my husband and son would be watching a jointly favoured television programme, and Chris returned. He looked exhausted, absolutely broken and dissolved into tears when I expressed my concerns for his health and about the changes in him. During the following hour, it was as though a dam had burst. Chris confided to me the countless occasions during the previous year, or more, that the Reverend Glazebrook had made lewd advances and had repeatedly attempted to force Chris into a sexual relationship with him. Chris stated to me that he was unable to sleep in his own bedroom unless he barricaded the door with furniture, there were no lockable doors in the house. On many occasions, Chris could only avoid the Reverend by sneaking indoors and 'sleeping rough' in the cellar of the house. That accounted for his hacking cough, general tiredness and poor health, and the visible strain, stress and distress.
Chris further explained that every time he rejected the Reverend's unwanted advances, they would argue and the Reverend would write a letter (addressed either to his daughter or to Chris's parents) stating that Chris had bullied him. Invariably, the following day, the Reverend would apologise to Chris for his inappropriate behaviour, destroy the letter and ply Chris with more 'apology' gifts and promises. The situation would improve for a short period until the Reverend made further unsavoury and unwanted advances.
From 2005, Mr Hunnisett would appear to have been more open regarding the index offence and this internal consistency may suggest that this [the most recent] is the correct version. This is a matter for the Courts to decide.
I would not see the gradual disclosure of the history of alleged sexual abuse as being abnormal and it is possible that the abuse went further than Mr Hunnisett is presently able to admit to.
... given his personality traits, in my view he would have found it unusually difficult to describe what may have been the "the whole narrative" leading up to and including the offence, that is, his sexual relationship with the victim and alleged sexual abuse prior to the killing.