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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 >> Bech, R. v [2018] EWCA Crim 448 (15 February 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2018/448.html Cite as: [2018] EWCA Crim 448 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE SWEENEY
HIS HONOUR JUDGE BURBIDGE QC
(Sitting as a Judge of the CACD)
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R E G I N A | ||
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JORDAN ANTHONY BECH |
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WordWave International Ltd trading as DTI,
165 Street London EC4A 2DY,
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831
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Crown Copyright ©
(i) On 13 April 2015 a three door Audi S3 motor vehicle was driven dangerously on a road in Formby, Merseyside;
(ii) In consequence of that dangerous driving the Audi crashed into a Honda Jazz motor vehicle causing serious injury to the driver of that vehicle, Francis Williamson;
(iii) As a result of the crash the driver's air bag of the Audi was deployed and the driver's door was jammed shut;
(iv) An eyewitness saw three white males exiting from the passenger door and making good their escape;
(v) When police officers attended some 15 minutes later the front passenger seat in the Audi had been pushed forward, consistent with allowing exit from the back seats via the front passenger door.
"a. The reference profile from Jordan Bech was analysed. The sample taken from the airbag (DH/1) was analysed.
b. No presumptive tests for the presence of saliva were carried out on the driver's airbag. If the airbag deploys after a crash then the driver would come into contact with it. Testing the airbag for the possible presence of saliva may assist in addressing the type of contact that has taken place.
c. The central area of the airbag was sampled for DNA testing, on the basis that this is where the driver of the car would contact it in the event of deployment. The sample recovered was invisible to the naked eye. No samples were taken from the other areas of this airbag.
d. DNA from at least three other unidentified people was present in the result from the airbag.
e. The major DNA contribution obtained from the airbag is 1 billion times more likely if the DNA came from Jordan Bech rather than from an unknown unrelated person.
f. The statistical calculation provided addresses only the possible donors of the DNA and does not consider the mechanism, either direct (such as physical contact with the airbag) or indirect (such as the airbag coming into contact with DNA already on the driver's seat or airborne such saliva being deposited by talking), by which any DNA was deposited nor the time at which it may have been deposited. Nor do these calculations assist in attributing DNA to a body fluid.
g. One view for the findings is that Jordan Bech was the driver of the Audi when it crashed. This is based on the finding that stronger DNA components at the ten sites within the mixture matched those of Jordan Bech, compared to the DNA from other people present in the centre of the airbag.
h. If Jordan Bech was the last person to leave the car, and if he did so by through the gap between the two front seats then he may have been the last person to touch it. If this occurred then he would be expected to deposit some DNA and may also wipe off some of the existing DNA.
i. If the passenger seat had been tilted forward and if he left the car by exiting past the back of the seat, rather than between the front seats then clearly the deployed driver's airbag is much less accessible. So although it is still possible that he came into contact with the driver's airbag and transferred his DNA to it during his exit.
j. There is no experimental data to assist in interpreting this DNA result, no information about the presence of saliva and no information about the other contributors to the mixed DNA result. So it is difficult to scientifically assess the probabilities for these alternatives."
"In our view the fact that DNA was on an article left at the scene of a crime can be sufficient without more to raise a case to answer where the match probability is 1:1 billion or similar. Whether it is will depend on the facts of the particular case. Relevant factors will include the following matters.
Is there any evidence of some other explanation for the presence of the defendant's DNA on the item other than involvement in the crime? If a defendant in interview gives an apparently plausible account of the presence of his DNA profile, that might indicate that the prosecution had not raised a case to answer. On the other hand, the total absence of any explanation would leave the evidence of the defendant's DNA unexplained."
"The fundamental scenario is this: the defendant's DNA was found on the centre of the airbag. There is therefore a clear inference that he was therefore in the car at the time of the crash due to the very fact the DNA was on the airbag deployed in the crash. The jury are more than entitled to place that evidence in the context of the rest of the evidence in the case. The driver's door was jammed shut, and the front seat was pushed forward. So anyone in the back seat would most likely climb to the side of the car rather than the centre, and therefore away from the airbag. That will be a matter for the jury to consider. There are also entitled to consider that there is no evidence from the defendant to account for finding of his DNA, at least not at this stage, I make clear, because it may well be, Mr Lewis, you wish to take instructions. I remind myself of course the provisions in R v Galbraith, and I conclude that a reasonable jury properly directed could properly convict on the evidence."
WordWave International Ltd trading as DTI hereby certify that the above is an accurate and complete record of the proceedings or part thereof.
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