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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 >> Hassan, R v [2018] EWCA Crim 498 (6 March 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2018/498.html Cite as: [2018] EWCA Crim 498 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
SIR BRIAN LEVESON
MRS JUSTICE CARR DBE
MRS JUSTICE YIP DBE
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R E G I N A | ||
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AHMED HASSAN | ||
INTERLOCUTORY APPEAL UNDER S.35(1) OF THE CRIMINAL PROCEDURE AND INVESTIGATIONS ACT 1996 |
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Miss A Morgan and Mr B Lloyd appeared on behalf of the Crown
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Crown Copyright ©
"3. The defendant will assert that his actions amounted to 'a hoax'. That is to say, he never intended to create and deploy a device which would cause serious injury to a person or serious damage to property. He did not intend to kill anyone or maliciously cause an explosion that would be likely to endanger life or cause serious injury to property.
4. The defendant used information found on the internet to create the device in question.
5. In creating a TATP, he [that is to say the applicant] deliberately used weaker strength hydrogen peroxide and dilute sulphuric acid in order that the TATP would not explode.
6. In addition, he made modifications to elements of the device designed to avoid generating the kind of pressure that would lead to an explosion. Thus, he did not place a lid on the blue jar and he made a hole within the Tupperware container and the foil surrounding it.
7. He did not intend that the knives and other metal items found in the device would injure people. He believed that they would not be expelled from the device."
"Huckerby was not raising a defence of duress; as such he did not seek to 'confess and avoid' participation in the crime. Nonetheless, the absence of a satisfactory explanation for his behaviour having been erected into a main plank of the prosecution case, the situation was analogous to a plea of duress, in the sense that the jury were invited by the prosecution to investigate the mind and motivation of the defendant and to conclude that he willingly followed the instruction of the robbers, as opposed to having his will overcome by fear."
"Mr Hassan's need for attachment and positive reinforcement to combat depressive and anxious cognitions and feelings leaves him vulnerable to overwhelming feelings of anxiety regarding his self-worth and self-esteem. This may be seen to have resulted in his acting as he did at the time of the index offence, where it might be suggested he felt overwhelming distress and had no effective means of highlighting this to others or of communicating his need for assistance. This impoverishment in capacity to communicate distress to others is in keeping with a presentation of Asperger's disorder. I would suggest that Mr Hassan was isolated and frightened at the time of the alleged offence and, lacking the ability to develop any appropriate problem solving strategies to seek help due to his high functioning Autism, he engaged in a behaviour that he believed would draw attention to his plight, without fully understanding or being able to consider the consequences of his actions."
With great respect to Dr Green that flies in the face of what is contended in the defence case statement.
"Mr Hassan is not capable, in my opinion, to clearly distinguish in his thinking that he could have caused harm. Indeed, his thinking is of such a concrete nature that he could believe that he had constructed a device that would draw attention but would do no harm at all. Such a style of thinking is entirely consistent with a diagnosis of Asperger's Disorder."
The doctor then moves back into advocacy mode by continuing:
"Mr Hassan appears shocked that he has caused psychological distress to people who were present, as well as to the broader community. It is the nature of an individual with an Autistic mind to not be able to understand 'the grey areas' as it were, not to be able to consider the actions upon a continuum of what might be risky, but instead to be caught in rigid and concrete thinking that is the defining characteristic of individuals with Asperger's Disorder. In short, it is my opinion that it is likely that Mr Hassan may not have forseen deaths of persons in the train nor the risks to such persons nor serious injury to them or property: he may well have been, as a result of the autistic functioning of his mind, specifically his Asperger's Disorder presentation, too single-mindedly focused on his task of making a scene to highlight the fact that he was experiencing a lack of support."
That again runs entirely counter to the assertion at paragraph 5 of the defence statement that the applicant deliberately used weaker strength hydrogen peroxide and dilute sulphuric acid in order that the TATP would not explode and indeed made other modifications to avoid generating the kind of pressure that would lead to an explosion. Again, Dr Green adduced the phrase "not capable to clearly distinguish that he could have caused harm" which is equivalent to his earlier phrase "not fully understand". For our part we do not see what the jury could make of this graded opinion.
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