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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Townsend & Anor, R v [2020] EWCA Crim 1343 (19 October 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2020/1343.html Cite as: [2020] EWCA Crim 1343, [2021] 1 Cr App R 14 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT SOUTHAMPTON
HIS HONOUR JUDGE ROWLAND
T20197031
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE ROBIN KNOWLES
and
HIS HONOUR JUDGE AUBREY QC
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RICHARD TOWNSEND & MARK ANDREW METCALFE |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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R |
Respondent |
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Michael Phillips for the Appellant Metcalfe
Andrew Houston for the Respondent
Hearing date: 15 October 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Bean:
Grounds of Appeal - Counts 1-15
"68. P respond to what they call a broad suggestion TS has lied about the recording. They do not accept he has lied or that there is anything untoward about this issue. They point to the fact that TS was given very limited information in his second interview about the recording. The information about classic cars was not fed to him. Importantly, in his third interview TS gave information about what was on the recording that he could only have known if he had watched it. He said it showed someone walking around a classic car show and panning across cars in a field.
69. P submit it is not surprising that TS came to the conclusion it was him in the recording. It took place in the same room as he alleged and the activity was striking similar in the sense it shows a young male with the duvet pulled up. P invite a safe inference to be drawn that TS saw the recording after 7.8.05 at a time when he visited the Ds. There is evidence that he continued to visit Ds until the summer before he went to college.
70. In my judgment the high point of the Ds' objection is lower than they assert. I cannot find there is the inescapable conclusion that TS has lied about the recording. At its height there is evidence that TS has made a genuine but understandable mistake about his being in the recording. Equally it is safe to draw an inference that TS was wrong about when he said he viewed it. This is understandable given the lapse of time. There is, however, cogent evidence that he had watched the recording at a point in the past. If Ds wish to pursue a suggestion TS was shown it at a time before his fourth interview, then they can explore that with the investigators. Equally, the jury can assess TS's reaction in his fourth interview when he was shown the start of the recording.
71. I reject the submission that TS has told lies in relation to the recording or that he is so unreliable on the issue that this the hearsay in relation to it falls foul of the Riat test. Consequently, there is no need for me to consider any knock-on effect for the rest of TS's account. The defence are in a position to put before the jury the chronology relating to the recording. They are able to cross-examine the investigators.
"Having now heard all the evidence in the case, save for minor sweepings, I am not driven to the inescapable conclusion that TS has lied about the sex tape. In my judgment there were opportunities for TS to have seen the tape after it was made. His reaction to viewing it in his fourth interview was stark. There are myriad supporting areas of evidence which satisfy the Riat test. Given that conclusion, the primary defence submission fails. If I am wrong about that conclusion the secondary prosecution submission is that relating to retrospective tainting. Even if TS has lied about the sex tape does that mean everything he has said before that lie has to be disbelieved? The answer to that question is no. The sex tape is an important issue in this trial but it is not determinative. The test is that set out in section125. Is the hearsay so unconvincing that I ought to stop this case now? The answer is no."
Grounds of appeal – Count 16 and 17
"We can see no basis for concluding that in the absence of paediatric or other expert evidence the jury is prevented from concluding that [an] indecent photograph depicts a boy or a girl under the age of 16.
The judge directed the jury that in deciding whether it was proved that the photographs were of a child:
"You can do no more than use your own experience, your judgment and your critical faculties in deciding this issue. It is simply an issue of fact for you, the jury, to decide what you have seen with your own eyes…"
In our judgment this direction is not open to question. In any event such expert evidence tendered by either side would be inadmissible. The purpose of expert evidence is to assist the court with information which is outside the normal experience and knowledge of the judge or jury. Perhaps the only certainty which applies to the problem in this case is that each individual reaches puberty in his or her own time. For each, the process is unique and the jury is as well placed as an expert to assess any argument addressed to the question whether the prosecution has established, as it must before there can be a conviction, that the person depicted in the photograph is under 16 years old."
Sentence