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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 >> Foran v R [2014] EWCA Crim 2047 (17 October 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2014/2047.html Cite as: [2014] EWCA Crim 2047 |
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ON APPEAL FROM
BIRMINGHAM CROWN COURT - HIS HONOUR JUDGE ROSS QC
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE DINGEMANS
and
MR JUSTICE WILLIAM DAVIS
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MARTIN PATRICK FORAN |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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REGINA |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr J Rees QC (instructed by Crown Prosecution Service) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 3 October 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Pitchford :
The CCRC Reference
Summary of evidence at trial
"We have given serious consideration as to whether there should have been leave to appeal to enable these applications to call further evidence to be considered. We do not think there are any grounds for granting leave to call that further evidence, bearing in mind our analysis that this was a confession case and that identification or non-identification, or positive evidence that it was not the man, in the circumstances of this case, would not take the matter sufficiently far beyond the state which was reached at the trial when evidence from these two men was read, to justify us giving leave for them to give evidence and re-considering the matters."
Thus, it is conceded by the respondent to the present appeal that the alleged confessions were central to the appellant's convictions.
The summing up
"Meet in the Vine Pub. Can show house in Small Heath (West Indian) with stolen gear. Col", which I suppose is there for coloured, "n.s. etc. Near Golden Hillock Road. House where robbery property goes to (can show) in Bardsley Green Road above police station – white bloke Richard Woolley. Wife knows jewellery trade and West Indian uses them. Uses his mothers as a safe house at …" I have difficulty in reading that bit members of the jury. "She owns second hand shop at Digbeth. Ricky looks after the coons in the robberies". Then there is a series of references to different people. One was, "West Indian, Errol, 5'8" bushy hair, dresses well, uses Vine and frequents Small Heath. White girlfriend". You heard evidence from another police officer, not Hancocks, that that is a description that fits Errol Campbell a man who has been so frequently mentioned in the course of these proceedings".
The judge continued with the following comment:
"The significance really of this document which goes on later to describe various places in Ireland is this: the defendant says it was not written in his presence. He denies having given any of this information to Hancocks. Therefore, you are left to ask yourself which of the two of them is giving anything like an accurate account of this particular interview? One of the questions the Crown asks you to ask yourselves is whether it is really conceivable that Detective Sergeant Hancocks just made this document up out of thin air or whether it can only have come into existence because it is a note of what the defendant at that time was telling him. If it was, does it or does it not, in part at least, relate to Errol Campbell and, on another part, does it or does it not relate to the defendant's movements in Ireland?"
"Members of the jury, yours is the task to determine where the truth lies in this case. Did Detective Sergeant Hancocks make that up or is that what he was told? Not necessarily word for word as he made a note of it afterwards, but is that the substance of what he was told? If it is, is that or is it not a reasonably accurate description of what happened in Mr Rice's shop? You bear in mind his evidence about it and Mr Holmes' evidence about it and, for that matter, the evidence of Mrs Rice of how she came to the shop and upset the whole business by knocking on the door. It is for you to decide … as to whether or not that evidence leads you to the conclusion that the identification made by Mr Holmes is, in fact, the correct identification."
"Once again, are Detective Sergeant Hancocks and Detective Chief Inspector Taylor telling you the truth? Not necessarily word for word because these are not notes made as the words are spoken, they are words made shortly afterwards, but have they told you the substance of what this man was saying at that time?"
"...at the defendant's request Detective Chief Inspector Taylor went and got Mrs Foran and brought her to the station and she was allowed to see him. Again members of the jury, it is a matter for you, but it is the defendant's version … that in the course of these successive interviews between himself and the police officers he was beaten up because he would not confess. It is then a question for you, the officers who have just given this man a beating fetch his wife to the police station and say that she can see him within a matter of hours of the beating having taken place. It is a matter for you whether you think that is an allegation that makes sense or not."
As to the visitors, Detective Sergeant Whelan and Detective Constable Bawden, later that evening, the judge reminded the jury that the appellant did not dispute that Whelan opened the conversation by saying, "I understand from that you have admitted responsibility for that job, is that right?" The judge added no further comment but we observe that the jury may well have concluded that it was hardly likely that Whelan would have used those words to the appellant unless Hancocks had in fact told him that the appellant had made the admission. If that was the jury's view, they might also have concluded that it was improbable Detective Sergeant Hancocks would so have informed the officer in charge of the case unless the admission had been made by the appellant.
The additional and fresh material
"Generally speaking, questions may be put to a witness as to any improper conduct of which he may be guilty, for the purposes of testing his credit." (Note: see now section 100 of the Criminal Justice Act 2003).
Usually, the questioner would be bound by an answer given to a question going only to credit, but where the evidence went as far as to establish bias, evidence might be called in rebuttal of any denial by the witness. Thus, evidence of systematic misconduct in the investigation of suspects or in the management of witnesses may be admissible. Lord Lane continued:
"So far as the matters advanced by Mr Hacking [counsel for the appellant] are concerned, the police officers could certainly be cross-examined as to any relevant criminal offences or disciplinary charges found proved against them. That leaves the following matters: should questions be permitted as to – (1) complaints by members of the public about the behaviour of the witness on other occasions not yet adjudicated upon by the Police Complaints Authority; (2) discreditable conduct by other officers in the same squad; (3) other cases in which the witness has given evidence which has resulted in acquittal of the defendant at the trial or the quashing of the conviction on appeal? This is an area where it is impossible and would be unwise to lay down hard and fast rules as to how the court should exercise its discretion. The objective must be to present the jury as far as possible with a fair, balanced picture of the witness' reliability, bearing in mind on the one hand the importance of eliciting facts which may show, if it be the case, that the police officer is not the truthful person he represents himself to be, but bearing in mind on the other hand the fact that a multiplicity of complaints may indicate no more than what was described before us as the "band-wagon" effect. We do not consider that it would have been proper to suggest to the officer in the present case that he had committed perjury of any other criminal offence by putting to him that he had been charged but not yet tried. Nor do we think that complaints to the Police Complaints Authority which have not been adjudicated on would properly be the subject to cross-examination. It would not be proper to direct questions to an officer about allegedly discreditable conduct of other officers, whether or not they happen to be serving in the same squad."
"Relevance, and therefore admissibility, is a matter of degree and has to be considered not by rule of thumb but against the background of each individual case. One of the considerations, we repeat, is the necessity of keeping the criminal process in proper bounds and avoiding the pursuit of side issues which are only of marginal relevance to the jury's decision. It will accordingly, as the judgment in Thorne made clear, be rare that the judge in his discretion will allow cross-examination about the activities of a witness in other cases and the outcome of those cases. The reason is that an acquittal, save in exceptional circumstances, by no means necessarily means that the jury has disbelieved the police officer who has given evidence at the defendant's submissions."
"Mr Aylett urged us that now enquiries had been completed and no charges had been brought, nor disciplinary action taken, involving either of the officers who gave evidence in the case of this appellant, we should take the view that there was no reason to regard her conviction as unsafe. Whilst there is much to be said for Mr Aylett's approach, the fact remains that in 1993 the degree of suspicion of the trustworthiness of the evidence of Constable Carroll, and those with whom he was working from day to day was such that the Crown considered convictions based upon that evidence could not safely be supported. Once the suspicion of perjury starts to infect the evidence and permeate cases in which the witnesses have been involved, and which are closely similar, the evidence on which such convictions are based becomes as questionable as it was in the cases in which the appeals have already been allowed."
Thus, the reach of discredit may have become institutional. Although there had been no adverse finding express or implied against Detective Constable Gillan, it was sufficient that the evidence of Constable Carroll was tainted by his discredited appearance in other cases. The appeal was allowed.
Detective Constable Davies
"We need go no further than to say that on the evidence now before us, Superintendent Reade deceived the court. We do not think we should go further than that, without having heard from Superintendent Reade and the other officers alleged to be part to the conspiracy."
Lloyd LJ's reference to deceit concerned the evidence given about the interviews with Richard McIllkenny and not, as far we can discern from the judgment, those with the appellant Hugh Callaghan.
"As with Walker, the case against Callaghan rests primarily on his written statement under caution. He confessed almost at once when seen by Detective Sergeant Hornby, Detective Constable Bryant and Detective Constable Davies at 2.55 pm on Saturday November 23. As with Walker, his statement under caution is in two colours of ink. Some of Callaghan's signatures are in black ink. Some in blue. Unlike the other appellants, Callaghan does not allege police brutality other than a single slap in the face. Part of what appears in his statement is, he said, true; part he made up for the benefit of the police, and part the police made up themselves. He signed the statement under caution, implicating Hunter in the bombing of the Mulberry Bush, because he felt threatened. On the Sunday, he was seen again, he told the police that Walker was a brigadier in the IRA, Hunter a captain and the others all lieutenants. This was not a police invention, since Callaghan admitted in evidence that he had given their ranks, but said that he had picked the ranks at random, and that they were not in fact members of the IRA."
"33. Laws LJ then concluded (at para 44) that DI Matthews and other officers could properly have been cross-examined on the matters to his discredit referred to above which had emerged (including the Herring case, which here does not appear to have been regarded as a case where DI Matthews evidence was disbelieved). The 1995 decision of this court in which little or no weight was given to the Herring case does not appear to have been cited in O'Toole & Murphy, but despite this, we consider that the same conclusion as in O'Toole & Murphy, must apply here, that is to say, that at the trial in the present case DI Matthews could properly have been cross-examined if those matters had been known, as to his involvement in (at least) the Herring, McIlkenny and O'Toole cases, all of which involved fabricated or allegedly fabricated confessions, sometimes in circumstances with similarities to the present case and which together suggest a disturbing pattern, against the background of his membership of the discredited West Midlands Serious Crime Squad, as well as his disciplinary record."
Detective Chief Inspector Taylor and Detective Sergeant Jennings
Discussion and conclusion