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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Cooper, R. v [2018] EWCA Crim 1454 (15 June 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2018/1454.html Cite as: [2018] EWCA Crim 1454 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
The Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE GOOSE
and
HIS HONOUR JUDGE MAYO QC
(Sitting as a Judge of the Court of Appeal Criminal Division)
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R E G I N A | ||
- v - | ||
RYAN ALFRED WILLIAM COOPER |
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Wordwave International Ltd trading as Epiq
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Telephone No: 020 7404 1400; Fax No 020 7404 1424
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr A A Houston appeared on behalf of the Crown
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE IRWIN:
"It is obviously your task to work out what you think actually happened, but the issues raised include these. Was there a movement by Mr Stacey with his body or his hands before the punch? Was there some defensive movement of the [appellant's] hands or one hand? Did the [appellant] throw one punch or two? How forceful was the blow that knocked Mr Stacey down? What was in the [appellant's] mind when he went to return to the scene after Mr Stacey went down? Was it aggression or may it have been concern?"
Ground 1: The Use of Cocaine
"The effects depend upon how cocaine is taken, according to the evidence. The stimulant effects are reported to begin within seconds when smoked and typically last for 15 to 30 minutes; when snorted the effects typically last for 30 to 60 minutes, and the well-known stimulant effects of cocaine are recorded. It is said that a person under the influence of a stimulant effect may exhibit an increase in risk-taking behaviour, and clinical symptoms may include dilated pupils.
On the evidence in this case, cocaine was snorted, if it was, at some time before eleven in the evening and the critical events took place shortly before four in the morning. So the stimulant effects of snorting could not have been present, on the evidence, at that time. There was evidence, clinical evidence, however, that cocaine may have been smoked, and the time at which that happened, if it did, is uncertain. So there is a possibility that there could have been some stimulant effects from that. But the prosecution has wisely decided to draw back from describing the event as 'cocaine fuelled' in its opening.
The important, or more important, aspect of the evidence seems to me to be what it says about the come-down effects, which may last for a long period of time according to the evidence. They include: exhaustion, fatigue, disorientation and depression, and sleep deprivation which can lead to agitation and irritability … That seems to me to be evidence which can properly be placed before the jury as part of the overall picture. How the evidence will turn out, it cannot safely be predicted at this stage but it seems to me that that has real evidential value and that its evidential value is not [out]weighed by its prejudicial effect. Such prejudicial effect, as it may have, can adequately be catered for by appropriate directions …"
"17. … The question is whether this [appellant] can have a fair trial on this charge, in the circumstances of this particular case. I am satisfied that he can, and that it would be wrong to discharge the jury.
18. There is clear evidence from the [appellant's] own words that he took cocaine that night and lied to the police about his use of cocaine when questioned about it. It would be open to the jury to conclude that he lied for a reason that has a bearing on his guilt of the charge of manslaughter. That is a legitimate element of the Crown's case. It is open to the [appellant] to answer it evidentially by providing an innocent explanation for his falsehood (and by the time I write these reasons he has done so). I can and will sum up on that issue in such a way as to make clear to the jury how the lie might be relevant to their task.
19. The prosecution's evidential case on the impact of cocaine has fallen some way short of what was suggested when I ruled before the case was opened. The jury are likely to conclude that the evidence about cocaine has fallen short of what was suggested in the prosecution opening. It may well be that when I come to sum up I will have to direct the jury that the ingestion of a single dose of cocaine at around 10pm could not have had any effect on the [appellant's] conduct at 3.50am. On the evidence, he certainly could not have experienced any stimulant effect from such a dose at that time. The overall effect of Dr Darkins' evidence would seem to be that such a dose could not have caused any of the 'downside' effects he described. There is at present no evidence of any other ingestion of cocaine. If that is the kind of direction I give, I will expect the jury to follow it and to discard any notion that the [appellant] was or may have been under the influence of cocaine at the time of the fatal blow. On a matter which requires expertise, it is not open to a jury to reach a factual conclusion that is contrary to the only expert evidence this is before them."
"10.1 It is important to be clear about the relevance of the evidence about cocaine. It is certainly relevant to a topic that I will come to: whether [the appellant] told lies to the police. But I must tell you that it has no other relevance. It is not relevant to the issues you have to decide about [the appellant's] behaviour or state of mind at the time he struck the fatal blow.
10.2 The only reliable evidence you have that [the appellant] took cocaine at all is his own statements about the matter, and the toxicology analysis showing the presence of metabolites in his urine many hours later. [The appellant] said that he took cocaine with his friends before they went out. He said it was a tiny amount. But however much it was, the expert evidence is clear: it could not have had any continuing stimulant effect at 3.50am, when he struck [Gary Stacey]. And there is no evidence that [the appellant] took any cocaine later on that night. So any stimulant effect at the key moment is ruled out.
10.3 Nor is there any evidence that you could rely on that [the appellant] was or might have been suffering from 'comedown' effects at that time. Dr Darkins' evidence is that there would be no such effects from a single dose. It is not open to you to reach a different conclusion. This is an expert matter, and he is the expert. To disagree with him on this point would be to speculate or guess."
"The [appellant's] lie about Cocaine
18.2 [The appellant] admits that he lied to the police about cocaine. That may affect your view of his reliability as a witness. But some lies are told in an attempt to cover up guilt. The prosecution suggest that this is what happened here. It is said that [the appellant] not only knew he had taken cocaine, he feared that if that was known it might incriminate him in relation to his assault on [Gary Stacey]. So he lied. That is how the prosecution put it.
18.3 If you were sure that [the appellant] told this lie in an attempt to cover up guilt of an unlawful assault on [Gary Stacey], that he thought he might have been affected by his use of cocaine, then you could take the lie into account as evidence which lends some support to the prosecution's case.
18.4 But not all lies are evidence that a person is guilty of the offence charged. There can be reasons for telling lies which are innocent, in the sense that they do not imply guilt of the offence charged. People may lie, for instance, because they are embarrassed or ashamed of something which has nothing to do with the crime they are accused of committing. Here [the appellant] says the reason for the lie was nothing to do with a fear of incriminating himself. His explanation is that he did not want his parents to find out he had used cocaine in their house.
18.5 If you believe that was or may have been the reason, or that there was or may have been some other reason that was innocent in the sense that I have described, then that is the end of the prosecution point."
Ground 2: The Text Messages
"THE APPELLANT: … but honestly if we break up and you do the same I'm gonna lose it.
…
THE APPELLANT: Not with you but with everyone. I won't give a fuck about any girl ever and I'll be so aggressive and fight anyone out like after I broke up with Kat.
…
MISS HUTCHINGS: But I won't do it to you.
…
MISS HUTCHINGS: I'm sorry it started like that.
THE APPELLANT: I'm not saying if we break up you can never get with someone but I'm saying if I see it and if it's to annoy me, I'll lose it."
"… the … evidence … seemed to me to be in the form of admissions of a readiness or a propensity on the part of this [appellant] to use random aggression if dumped by his girlfriend …
… this material seems to me to be a matter that should properly be before the jury. What the [appellant] says is that he has been, in the past, aggressive after he broke up with Kat and that he would be aggressive towards others if he and Miss Hutchings broke up. Those messages were sent in June 2015, although that was many months before the incident in question … It represents the [appellant's] own account of what he was likely to do in certain events. The Crown's case is that he did engage in aggression towards a complete stranger for no good reason within days after breaking up with Miss Hutchings. It may be that on a true analysis the evidence is relative to motive and that, as such, it is not bad character evidence within the meaning of section 98 at all, but it is not necessary to enter into that because, in my judgment, it is clearly relevant to the issue of whether the [appellant] punched and, thereby, killed Mr Stacey in reasonable and lawful self-defence or not. It is capable of establishing that he had a propensity towards aggression and violence towards others, provoked by his own anger over a relationship breakdown rather than anything that the other person had done.
… Its probative value is markedly greater than its likely prejudicial impact. …"
"14.1 I am referring of course to what [the appellant] himself said in the text messages he sent to his then girlfriend, Maria Hutchings, in June 2015. He wrote that if they broke up he would 'lose it' and 'be so aggressive and fight anyone out like after I broke up with Kat'. The suggestion is that this is just what [the appellant] was doing when he struck Gary Stacey on 14th February 2016, not long after Maria Hutchings had broken up with him.
14.2 It is important to be clear about how to treat this kind of evidence and how it is potentially relevant. Before going down the line suggested by the prosecution you would need to bear in mind that people can brag or exaggerate. You would need to consider what [the appellant] himself said about the texts: that these were just examples of things said in the heat of an argument, and the evidence he and Kat both gave that their relationship ended amicably.
14.3 If you conclude that this is or may be the true position, you should ignore the texts to Maria Hutchings. And you would need to bear in mind that the texts of June 2015 were sent some time before the events with which you are concerned.
14.4 If, on the other hand, you are sure that the prosecution is right about the texts then you could conclude that they show an intention to be violent if dumped by Maria.
14.5 If you did reach that conclusion, you would still need to guard against attaching too much weight [to] this kind of evidence. The question for you is, after all, what actually happened that night. It would be wrong to find that [the appellant] launched an unprovoked attack on Gary Stacey just because he said he would 'lose it' if Maria broke up with him."
"This was not out of panic, as you have claimed. Nor was it because you feared attack by the other group … as you have also claimed. You ran away because you knew you had done something wrong and indefensible, and that you may have caused serious harm by doing it. That is why it took you eleven hours to call the police and hand yourself in. This is the behaviour of someone who knows he is guilty and is hoping against hope that he will not be held to account."