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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 >> Oriakhel, R. v [2018] EWCA Crim 2153 (17 July 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2018/2153.html Cite as: [2018] EWCA Crim 2153 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
The Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE SWEENEY
and
THE RECORDER OF PRESTON
(His Honour Judge Brown)
(Sitting as a Judge of the Court of Appeal Criminal Division
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R E G I N A | ||
- v - | ||
MORID KHAN ORIAKHEL |
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165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400; Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr R Merz appeared on behalf of the Crown
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE SIMON:
1. A mobile phone taken from Majid had the appellant's telephone number stored in it under the name "Gogo". (The appellant owned a pizza restaurant called Pizza Go-Go.)
2. A call had been made from the appellant's phone to Majid for one and a half minutes at 5.38pm on 25th March. This was at a time when cell-site data established that Majid had been in London. The appellant claimed in interview that he did not know Majid; but his phone number also tried to contact Majid at 10.49am on 26th March, by which time Majid had been arrested.
3. At 51 minutes past midnight (approximately 40 minutes after the BMW had been abandoned) a call was made from the appellant's mobile phone that connected to Tufan's voicemail (the calls were of three and two seconds duration). Although there was no evidence of the appellant receiving the call and the calls were not completed, the inference was that the appellant had become aware of what had happened in London either in person or via another telephone – hence his report to the police at 12.56 am.
4. The appellant also attempted to call Tufan (whom he claimed in interview he did not know) at 11.56am on 26th March and there were calls between their numbers at 1.48pm, 4.35pm and 5.40pm, as well as SMS messages and voicemails.
5. The prosecution also relied on the inferences to be drawn from the appellant's failure to give evidence. The appellant did not give evidence. He did, however, rely on his good character and evidence that supported that.
No one explained how you would do that, how you would steal the BMW without breaking in until [the appellant] signed off his defence statement about eight months after the night of the petrol pouring. In his defence statement dated November 2016, [the appellant] said that he had lost one set of keys to the BMW two weeks before he says his car went missing.
It is common ground between the prosecution and the defence that the judge was in error in referring to the contents of the Defence Statement. The error should have been immediately apparent and the judge should have been informed of his error.
The telephone number attributed to him is the one on which his BMW car was reported stolen and you have a transcript of that call. It is clear that he now admits that that was him making the call. That same number was listed in Mr Majid's contact section under 'Go-go'. There is no evidence that the BMW was broken into or hotwired.
(Nor was there any evidence to the contrary.)
It was not until his November 2016 defence statement that he said he had a set of keys for the car stolen two weeks before Good Friday. When he was arrested at Pizza Go-Go, he had a BMW with him. This is the stolen keys defence which you know about but which was not confirmed by [the appellant] either to the police at interview or in evidence to you.
You may want to ask yourselves some questions about the stolen keys defence. Why would Mr Majid steal the keys of a motor car owned by a man from his community? His telephone number is on the contact list of his mobile phone and why would he do that before he beats up his girlfriend and before she goes to the police, in other words, before there could be any plan to intimidate a witness living in London and why would Mr Majid take the risk of using a stolen car, a new white BMW, and driving it openly around Coventry, picking up friends, driving it to London and then using it again, giving it to the petrol pourers, so how does the stolen keys defence work, exactly?
[The appellant] has taken his chances in not giving evidence.
In our view, that observation undermined any direction that it was, of course, the appellant's right not to give evidence.
That was my error. [The appellant] has not relied on that defence at this trial. This case is not about possible defences that [the appellant] might have argued and I was wrong to suggest weaknesses in a defence that he does not rely on. It is right that you should hear about my mistake and that I should correct it swiftly. Remember, the prosecution bring this case and the prosecution must prove it so that you are sure. The [appellant] does not have to prove his own innocence.
The stolen keys defence I referred to is not now and has never been a part of [the appellant's] defence before the jury. If I had not made that mistake, I would have pointed out with much greater emphasis and comment the absence of any explanation for the new BMW having been stolen and driven away immediately, without any evidence of break-in damage or hotwiring.
That has not been done now as a consequence of my mistake. An objective bystander could well observe that [the appellant's] case now stands in a rather stronger position as a result of my error than it did before.
We note that the judge had in fact already raised with the jury that the car had been taken without evidence of either break-in or hotwiring.