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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 >> Harty, R. v [2016] EWCA Crim 345 (12 February 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2016/345.html Cite as: [2016] EWCA Crim 345 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE WILLIAM DAVIS
THE RECORDER OF MANCHESTER
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE STOCKDALE QC)
(Sitting as a Judge of the CACD)
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R E G I N A | ||
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EDWARD HARTY |
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8th Floor, 165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7404 1424
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr B White appeared on behalf of the Crown
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Crown Copyright ©
i. "The case depends on visual identification. You must carefully examine the evidence. A witness convinced in his own mind may be wrong. A convincing witness or witnesses may be wrong. You must consider the quality of each of the identifications by the witnesses separately.
ii. However, as long as you are alive to the risk of mistaken identification, you are entitled to use one witness' evidence of identification, if you are sure that it is correct, as potential support for the other. So, in other words, you look at the evidence of identification: Are you sure about the evidence?
iii. Do you think that the person, although sounds convincing, may be mistaken? Are both witnesses mistaken? Because they can be. And so you look at all that very carefully and once you are attuned to the fact that there are factors to be looked at, if you are satisfied that A got it right then you can use that fact to support the identification made by B. All right?
iv. You must examine the surrounding circumstances of the evidence of identification, such as the duration of the period during which the witness or witnesses had the person she or he says was the defendant under observation. In particular, for how long was a witness able to see the person's face; the distance between the witness and the person observed; the lighting; whether the witness had ever seen the person who he or she says he was observing before and, if so, in what circumstances -- ie whether the witness had any reason to be able to recognise the defendant -- the length of time between the original observation -- ie the time of the incident -- and the identification by the witness of the defendant to the police, whether there is any significant difference between the description the witnesses gave to the police in the appearance of the defendant and the fact that the incident was unexpected, fast-moving, shocking.
v. All these factors you have to take on board. Okay? But it doesn't mean that you get frightened off. You take these as factors that you have to consider.
vi. The defence say, amongst other things, that the identification by both witnesses is wrongful. They point to the shortcomings in terms of the circumstances; timing, lighting and so forth. They point to the variations in the description.
vii. They say, as far as the female witness is concerned, she was shown a picture of the defendant by the neighbour who asked her, 'Is this your attacker?' and she said, 'Yes'. She went on to identify the defendant, having seen that, rather than identifying the real attacker. They say the value of the normal identification procedure is lost as a result.
viii. The defence say the male witness must have colluded with the female and seen the photograph as well and then went on to identify the defendant. The defence say, by implication, that both witnesses have lied when they say to you they did not collude, [the witness] saying that she did not show her husband the photographic image and when he says his wife had not shown him the image and he had not seen any image.
ix. Alternatively, they say the female may be telling the truth but the male has, on his own folly, gone to Facebook and looked up the defendant after hearing the name being given to the policeman. All right?
x. The prosecution say, amongst other things, that despite the caution that has to be exercised, this is a case where you can rely on the identification. Both witnesses are honest and reliable. The male witness has said, and you can believe him when he says, he never saw any Facebook photograph of the defendant and he identified the assailant.
xi. They say the female immediately recognised the attacker when the neighbour showed her the photograph and gave her the name of the defendant. She did not dwell on it, did not even download the photographic image.
xii. When she spoke to the police and gave the name and went to the Facebook page, the police printed the image and she followed the advice to not look at it again before the identification procedure. The witnesses have not colluded in any way at all. The descriptions, of course vary, as it is only human to do so.
xiii. Finally they say, 'What a coincidence that of all of the potential people that could have been picked out, both the witnesses picked out, in the procedure, the defendant who happens to be in the same area that they lived in'."
i. "You have heard that the defendant has previous convictions and the details of them. You have heard about them because the prosecution say this is a man who you cannot believe. He has a propensity to behave in a violent manner. He has attacked the character of the prosecution witnesses to say they have colluded about the Facebook photograph before going to the identification procedure and are lying about it to you.
ii. The defence say he has, in the past, committed offences and pleaded guilty whenever he was guilty. His previous robbery is from when he was 14 years of age and with others and now he is a reformed character. He has not committed this offence.
iii. What you make of his previous convictions is, ultimately, a matter for you. What you can't do is to say that because he has got previous convictions he must be guilty of this offence as well. You cannot put an overemphasis on his previous convictions. The previous convictions are a part of the evidence and if you think it helps you in your assessment of the case then you are entitled to use that as evidence."