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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Palmer, R. v [2016] EWCA Crim 2237 (06 December 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2016/2237.html Cite as: [2016] EWCA Crim 2237 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Derby Square Liverpool L2 1XA |
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B e f o r e :
(Lord Thomas of Cwmgiedd)
MR JUSTICE WILLIAM DAVIS
and
THE RECORDER OF MANCHESTER
(His Honour Judge Stockdale QC)
(Sitting as a Judge of the Court of Appeal Criminal Division)
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R E G I N A | ||
v | ||
TERRI-MARIE PALMER |
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Wordwave International Ltd (trading as DTI)
165 Fleet Street, London EC4
Telephone No: 020 7404 1400; Fax No: 020 7404 1424
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr F McEntee appeared on behalf of the Crown
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Crown Copyright ©
THE LORD CHIEF JUSTICE:
The factual background
The course of the trial
The way the issue as to the social media messages arose
(i) An exchange between the appellant and the deceased on 16 July 2015, less than a month before he died, in which the appellant said:
"Crying myself to sleep for the second time this week, and it's only Wednesday, thanks Damon, I'm so angry and hurt, I honestly want to rip Jack's face off and fucking stab you."
(ii) The exchange between the appellant and her best friend, Chelsea O'Brien on 28 July 2015, which read as follows:
"CHELSEA O'BRIEN: Who you gonna stab this time, calm down. LOL.
THE APPELLANT: Damon, fucking hate him, LOL.
CHELSEA O'BRIEN: What has he done, is he down.
THE APPELLANT: He came down at the weekend but gone now. I fucking CBA [can't be arsed] with him, who the fuck goes through their GF [girlfriend's] phone and roots through her bedroom and in her drawers when she's asleep!! Fucking pissed off, absolute weirdo."
(iii) The exchange with a woman called Kaisaha on 9 August, which included the appellant saying (as part of a longer message):
"I think I'm going to vom. If he tells me he's been fucking anyone I'm stabbing him."
The ruling by the judge
The direction to the jury
"There are a small number of messages which, if taken literally, include expressions of a wish or intention to 'stab' Damon. As you know, there is a disagreement about how you should interpret those messages. The Crown say that they are relevant to whether [the appellant] is telling the truth when she says she threw the knife and says she did not stab Mr Searson with it. They say that her use of the word 'stab' in those messages makes it more likely that what she did was just what and that her use of the word 'stab' helps you to be sure that this was not an accident, as she claimed. The defence, on the other hand, say that is complete nonsense and that the Crown are reading far too much into casual private message sent between close friends, which are just a figure of speech, to use [the appellant's] phrase, and that it is absurd to suppose that they were seriously meant.
You will recall that Miss Chelsea O'Brien agreed with that when asked questions about it by Mr Trafford for the defence, that her evidence was that such remarks were not seriously meant.
Members of the jury, you will have to decide what you make of those messages, taken in their proper context. The messages that included references to violence and stabbing and so forth were about three or four in number out of hundreds or thousands. You will decide what weight you give to them and whether they support the prosecution case and make it less likely that [the appellant] is telling the truth when she says that Mr Searson's wound was inflicted be accident, but I must warn you not to rely too heavily on those few messages. You must not allow them to overshadow the direct evidence of what happened at the scene. By the 'direct evidence' I mean the physical evidence of what happened; the position of the sofa, the position Mr Searson was found in, the knife, the green plastic Seven Up bottle and so forth. You cannot convict [the appellant] of murder wholly or mainly on the basis of what she said in those Facebook messages a few weeks and days before Mr Searson died."
We shall return at the end of this judgment to consider what the judge said as to the real issues in the case.
The submissions to us and our conclusion
The safety of the conviction