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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Stewart v R [2016] EWCA Crim 447 (19 April 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2016/447.html Cite as: [2016] EWCA Crim 447 |
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201500844 C2 |
ON APPEAL FROM THE CENTRAL CRIMINAL COURT
MS RECORDER HENSON
T20147013/ T20147462
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE WARBY
and
THE RECORDER OF MAIDSTONE
(Sitting as Judge of the Court of Appeal, Criminal Division)
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GARFIELD RICARDO STEWART |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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REGINA |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Kenneth Millett (instructed by The Crown) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 2 December 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Sharp
Introduction
Grounds of appeal against conviction
Summary of the facts
The Recorder's ruling on bad character
"References in this Chapter to evidence of a person's "bad character" are to evidence of, or a disposition towards, misconduct on his part, other than evidence which
(a) has to do with the alleged facts of the offence with which the defendant is charged, or
(b) is evidence of misconduct in connection with the investigation or prosecution of that offence."
"(1) In criminal proceedings evidence of the defendant's bad character is admissible if, but only if
(c) it is important explanatory evidence,
(d) it is relevant to an important matter in issue between the defendant and prosecution.
(3) The court must not admit evidence under subsection 1(d) if, on an application by the defendant to exclude it, it appears to the court that the admission of the evidence would have such an adverse effect on the fairness of the proceedings that the court ought not to admit it."
(4) On an application to exclude evidence under subsection (3) the court must have regard, in particular, to the length of time between the matters to which that evidence relates and the matters which form the subject matter of the offence charged."
The evidence in more detail
Discussion
"12. In our judgment, the evidence of the three incidents was evidence that was alleged to do with the evidence of the murder in question. The words of the statute are straightforward, and clearly apply to evidence of incidents alleged to have created the motive for the index offence. Indeed, where the evidence is reasonably relied upon for motive, it would be irrational to introduce a temporal requirement. Take these examples. A man is wounded in a shooting. He is hospitalised for six months. On discharge, he is alleged to have shot the man who is alleged to have been his attacker. In another case, the reprisal is the day after the first attack. In the second case, the evidence of the first attack is not bad character for the purposes of s.98, in the first it is.
13. In our judgment, the judge's decision was clearly right, and we pay tribute to his clear and cogent ruling. Incidents (1) and (3) gave rise to the alleged motive for the murder that was the subject of the indictment. Incident [(2)] [ ] was part of the pattern: as was put by Mr Price, part of a series of "tit for tat" incidents. Each of them had to do with the others, as had the index offence. They were not merely relevant: they were intrinsic to the prosecution's case.
14 We add that, given these four incidents took place within a period of three months, if there were a temporal requirement in s.98(a), we would have held it to be satisfied."
"The circumstances described in Sule are markedly similar to the present case, and the reasoning in our view is entirely apposite. We consider that the shooting of Arslan on 31 July 2009 and the evidence of the attempted murders of Coban and Demir on 30 September 2009 [Arslan was convicted of those offences] was admissible because it was relevant to the facts of the present case. Although the prosecution could prove the charges without introducing this material, it fell within section 98(a) because this evidence of misconduct was directly relevant to it. These events were closely, indeed inextricably, linked to the facts of the present murder. As described above, what otherwise might have been viewed as a random or inexplicable shooting, was on the prosecution case a vital part of the ongoing feud between two Turkish drug gangs in North London the Tottenham Turks and the Hackney Turks and most particularly the series of tit-for-tat stabbings and shootings in the Autumn of 2009. We agree with Stanley Burnton LJ that section 98(a) includes no necessary temporal qualification, and it applies to evidence of incidents whenever they occurred so long as they are to do with the alleged facts of the offence with which the defendant is charged. That will involve a highly fact-specific question."
Sentence
"Whatever the rightness of that observation made at that time, it simply does not reflect the attitude required to be taken by the courts now. Even in the last 12 years things have moved on considerably given the prevalence of and concerns about the carrying and use of firearms, as indeed Lord Judge has made so clear. We do not think that that particular case should any more be cited or relied upon as authority for any general proposition that a range of seven to eight years still is appropriate for offending of this particular kind. Thus, in Attorney General's Reference No.6 of 2011 (R. v Rollings) [2012] 2 Cr. App. R. (S.) 67, a starting point of 11 years was taken by the Court of Appeal on a Reference as appropriate as being "the very least possible sentence" on the particular facts of that case, where the offender was in possession of a gun loaded with live and expanding ammunition. There was considerable emphasis before us today on a decision of another constitution of this court in the case of R. v Sugulle [2013] 2 Cr. App. R. (S.) 61 (p.389). There a starting point of 15 years, reduced to 10 years to allow for an early plea, was held to be appropriate where the accused, who had no previous convictions for any relevant firearms offences, was found in possession of a loaded gun, which gun had been used in a previous shooting relating to gangs some four days earlier.
It may however be noted that in Sugulle there had been no findings as to any particular gangland context in which the accused was found to be in possession of the loaded gun. We further note that in Sugulle it was made clear that the previous decision in the Attorney General's Reference, Rollings case should not itself be taken as a rigid guidelines case as to the appropriate sentencing range for offending of this kind. "