![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Crampton, R. v [2020] EWCA Crim 1334 (07 October 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2020/1334.html Cite as: [2020] EWCA Crim 1334 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM Nottingham Crown Court
HHJ Hurst
T20190324
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE SPENCER
and
HIS HONOUR JUDGE MENARY QC
____________________
Regina |
||
- v - |
||
Mark Anthony CRAMPTON |
____________________
Copies of this transcript are available from:
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7414 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Mark Watson (instructed by Crown Prosecution Service) for the Crown
Hearing date: Wednesday 7th October 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Green :
Introduction
The Facts
The Evidence at Trial
The Ruling on Failure to Conduct a VIPER identification / Breach of Code D / Section 78 PACE
The Grounds of Appeal
Analysis and Conclusion
"36. Whether the court hearing an application under s.78 is exercising a discretion or a judgement, is a matter of debate. However, it is not a matter that needs to be resolved in this case. If it is a discretion it is a broad discretion, and if it is a judgement it is the judgement which the Court of Appeal recognises is primarily a matter for the judge in the Crown Court. In either case, this Court is reluctant to interfere with such decisions in relation to these matters. For a discussion of the law, see for example, Blackstone Criminal Practice 2019 §F2.7."
"The danger of course with those identifications is that they did not take place under the controlled conditions of an identification procedure, which of course these days 99 times out of 100 is a VIPER procedure. But as the CPS makes clear on their website … Facebook identifications are increasingly common and are admissible in evidence and frankly if the position was the other way, then it would be a very strange state of affairs because it is the natural reaction of anybody seeking to identify the[y] suspect of having committed a crime against them or somebody else to look on Facebook in order to identify who they are. So, the courts will have to wrestle with Facebook identifications for a considerable time into the future."
"So in my judgment, an identification procedure should have taken place involving both [the complainant and her mother]. Of course the point is quite properly made by Mr Watson prosecuting that it would have been pointless, and this is highly likely to have been the consideration that underpinned the advice given to the officer in the case, to whom absolutely no criticism of any kind can attach. He took CPS advice and he took advice of the identification people … within the police force in deciding whether or not to conduct identification procedures, so he cannot be criticised in any way. But the advice of those people, both the CPS and those who conduct these procedures is: we cannot realistically have a sensible identification procedure unless we get together pictures of the suspect from 25 years ago and put them with pictures from other suspects from 25 years ago. That is certainly an issue which has arisen in my experience in other cases, and without being referred to it, I do not think that historical identifications are dealt with within the codes of practice; and if they are not, perhaps they should be. But of course what gives the lie to that argument … is that the prosecution did engage in an identification procedure with [M] using a contemporary picture of Mark Crampton and contemporary suspects. It was of course [the mother and the complainant], saying, "I recognised him despite it's 25 years ago. He'd lost his hair and he'd got older, but you could still see his facial expression was the same".
"The other argument relied upon by the Crown [is] there is no point having an identification procedure when people have looked at Facebook because they will simply pick out on the procedure the person they had recently seen on Facebook, so it is evidentially of no value. It may well be that would often be the case in the trial, but as the specimen compendium direction on identification makes clear that where there should have been an identification procedure, that should be pointed out to the jury because of course the defendant suspect has lost an important safeguard, not least that the jury are entitled to hear what it was he said when he was making his identifications -- or in this case she -- but also he has lost the opportunity of the witness either picking out nobody or picking out a volunteer."
"What is important, it seems to me, these Facebook identifications took place before the police were even involved. Is it the case, I question rhetorically, wherever that has taken place that essentially the previous identifications on social media by the witnesses should always be excluded. In my judgment, that could not possibly be right and the mere fact there has not been a correcting identification procedure afterwards does not in any way undermine those original Facebook identifications."
"I then propose this reductio ad absurdum argument in the facts of this case: what if the only evidence the prosecution had was the evidence from [the complainant] that, "I was between 4 and 6, it was 25 years ago. There's been no identification procedure, I've seen him on Facebook but I've only found him on Facebook because [JG] told me [that is to say hearsay, which I do think it is hearsay] that his name was Mark Crampton, would there be a case to answer, would the prosecution proceed?
It may well be in those circumstances they would not, but that does not in my judgment lead me to conclude that therefore the [victim's] evidence should be excluded, because although that evidence may on its face appear to be somewhat weak, it is then fortified and corroborated in this case by the point of the address behind the Clinton Arms, by the identification by M in the VIPER procedure that he did engage in, and by the Facebook identifications."
"As a matter of principle, in the administration of justice when there is trial by jury, the constitutional primacy and public responsibility for the verdict rests not with the judge, nor indeed with this Court, but with the jury. If therefore there is a case to answer and, after proper directions, the jury has convicted, it is not open to the Court to set aside the verdict on the basis of some collective, subjective judicial hunch that the conviction is or may be unsafe. Where it arises for consideration at all, the application of the "lurking doubt" concept requires reasoned analysis of the evidence or the trial process, or both, which leads to the inexorable conclusion that the conviction is unsafe. It can therefore only be in the most exceptional circumstances that a conviction will be quashed on this ground alone, and even more exceptional if the attention of the Court is confined to a re-examination of the material before the jury."