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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Costanzo & Anor, R. v [2021] EWCA Crim 615 (21 April 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2021/615.html Cite as: [2021] EWCA Crim 615 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE LAVENDER
THE RECORDER OF NEWCASTLE
HIS HONOUR JUDGE SLOAN QC
(Sitting as a Judge of the CACD)
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REGINA | ||
- v - | ||
LORENZO COSTANZO FERDINANDO ORLANDO |
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Lower Ground, 18-22 Furnival Street, London EC4A 1JS
Tel No: 020 7404 1400; Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MISS A HUNTER QC AND MISS H STANGOE appeared on behalf of the Crown.
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Crown Copyright ©
LADY JUSTICE CARR: The provisions of the Sexual Offences (Amendment) Act 1992 apply to this offence. Under those provisions where a sexual offence has been committed against a person, no matter relating to that person shall, during that person's lifetime, be included in any publication if it is likely to lead members of the public to identify that person as the victim of that offence. This prohibition applies unless waived or lifted in accordance with section 3 of the Act.
Introduction
The facts
The trial process
"Can I remind you it is very, very important that you do not speak to anyone, Mr Mendoza or anyone like that who is going to be a witness in the case, about anything that has been said, any question you have been asked, any answer that you have given. And also, very regrettable that we cannot finish you in one day because also what it means is in the morning, other than maybe, 'Good Morning', neither Miss Hunter or Miss Stangoe nor the officers in the case can discuss things with you in any way... So, you must not as it were approach them and ask for any information, but as I say also tremendously important you do not discuss anything with Mr Mendoza. All right?"
"Can I just clarify?"
"A. That there was no proof that that actually happened, because I know for a fact that I wouldn't have gone through with that.
Q. You wouldn't have gone through with what?
A. With everything that they have said that happened in that room.
Q. Can I just ask you to explain what you mean by that?
A. I've never been in a threesome before. I've, I've never had sex in a club before, I've never been with two guys before, that's just not something I — that I do.
Q. So that's what you wanted to clarify?
A. That's, that's the picture that they're painting but that's not true. That couldn't have happened..."
"[After the first day of X's evidence] I didn't sleep that night knowing that I had just let them walk all over me and was now questioning myself as a person. I knew what they had suggested was not the woman that I am and I would have never willingly let any of that happen to me. The second day of cross-examination came and although I knew better what to expect it was still very overwhelming. I became upset and broke down halfway as I wanted my voice to be heard and was not being given a fair chance to tell my truth. I was not that person they suggested I was. I did not give consent to those two men and I am not that kind of person."
Ruling on section 41 applications
"It does nothing to explain or rebut X's remarks about having a history of kissing randomers, but on the other hand, the introduction of this evidence would run the real risk of a juror thinking that, because a person consented to sex on a particular occasion with a particular person in a particular set of circumstances, they are therefore more likely to consent to having sex with another person or persons on a different occasion in different circumstances."
" ... the fact that a young woman may have sex with a young man who is a friend of hers and also a previous sexual partner at his house one week and a week later have sex with a different male friend at her house can have no conceivable bearing or evidential value in explaining or rebutting an assertion by her that she is not in the habit of engaging in threesomes with two young men previously unknown to her in a nightclub and if that is excluded there is no chance of a jury being led to any unsafe conclusion."
Grounds of appeal on behalf of both applicants
"The Judge's refusal to admit evidence of the complainant's previous sexual behaviour, beyond that which he allowed, was plainly correct."
Fresh grounds not considered by the Single Judge
Ground 1. Once X and the prosecution had deployed her sexual history to argue that she had not consented, the Judge should have admitted evidence and allowed her to be cross-examined on the topic under section 41(5). This is not a new but a refined version of the previous grounds of appeal. No reliance is placed on section 41(3) although, as we have noted, that was very much the focus at trial. Mr Bennathan refers to the twin myths underlying the "rape shield provisions" in the Act: see R v A (No.2) [2002] 1 AC 45. He submits that section 41 sets the law firmly against using the past sexual habits and tendencies of complainants to correct the "long history of prejudice and misogyny that had infected rape trials". The Act however, he submits, allows the prosecution to deploy sexual history at will. He submits that once it does so, fairness, Article 6 and section 41(5) must permit the defence to explore the same theme with far more freedom than the Act otherwise allows. He points to the fact that section 41(5) goes beyond mere rebuttal evidence but also extends to explanation. Thus it is submitted that the events at trial show that the line that normally keeps the complainant's sexual history from a jury was crossed. Section 41(5) imposes a far lower and less stringent exclusionary rule once, as in this case he submits, the prosecution relies on a complainant's previous sexual history. Here, the evidence in question was deployed repeatedly both in response to the submission of no case to answer, for example, in speeches to the jury and in the judge's summing-up itself. It is said that in this case X's lack of memory, together with her visible conduct on the CCTV is such that, absent the repeated and partial deployment of her sexual history by the prosecution, the evidence of any lack of consent or evidence to disprove the applicants' belief in her consent was scant. Rhetorically, Mr Bennathan asks, if the prosecution can go there, how can it be fair that the defence are not allowed to do so? The defence was prevented either from adducing the evidence or asking questions and section 41(5) should be read down so as to ensure a fair trial;
Ground 2. On this ground it is said that a major change in X's stance on consent is now undermined by information that the defence only received after the verdicts, namely that her partner (who had been in the public gallery at the time) had been profoundly upset after her testimony on the first day. The applicants rely on X's subsequent victim impact statement. There it can be seen that the reaction of her partner overnight to what she had accepted in cross-examination on day one of her evidence was to be "deeply affected" and "very upset" such that she "found [herself] trying to support him through this". We note at this stage that X went on in her statement to say:
"As I was not finished giving evidence I was not able to discuss the particulars of the trial."
This is a new ground. As indicated, it is said that X's allegedly "profound change" in her position overnight is material. The "likely" reason for it is said to be the impact of her boyfriend's upset and reaction to her evidence the day before. The trial system, it is said, depends on juries being trusted to assess and weigh clashing accounts and contradictory evidence, but that cannot happen where, as in R v Shaw [2002] EWCA Crim 3004, a witness changes his or her account for reasons that are concealed. The jury should have been told of a plausible reason for X's change in stance;
Ground 3. It is said there was a failure to list a DNA report of Ruth Bartram dated 9 August 2018 ("the DNA report") on the schedule of unused material. This is said to have been another "profound" error. That report states that DNA from at least two, possibly more males was detected in intimate swabs taken from X and concludes that it could be explicable by the sexual activity with Mr Mendoza and the applicants. The report also states that DNA detected in the inside of the gusset of X's knickers showed the presence of DNA of at least four, possibly more, males. It is submitted that this report has the potential to cast doubt on X's admitted but excluded sexual history which ought, further to Ground 1, to have been before the jury. For example, an obvious explanation for the findings from the gusset would be that X had had sexual contact with four or more males, thus suggesting sexual activity beyond that admitted by X. A further report from a James Clery dated 5 February 2021 is produced and said to illustrate the sort of evidence that "could have been mustered by the defence at trial had the prosecution complied with its disclosure obligations." If the underlying records for the findings from the DNA swabs were provided, it might be possible to eliminate the applicants and to ascribe a number that might take the number of "possibly more" above three. The applicants seek to adduce both reports as fresh evidence. This is again a new ground.
Grounds of opposition
Discussion and analysis
Ground 1
"41 Restriction on evidence or questions about complainant's sexual history
(1) If at a trial a person is charged with a sexual offence, then, except with the leave of the court—
(a) no evidence may be adduced, and
(b) no question may be asked in cross-examination."
"... it is an issue of consent and the sexual behaviour of the complainant to which the evidence or question relates is alleged to have been, in any respect, so similar —
to any sexual behaviour of the complainant which (according to evidence adduced or to be adduced by or on behalf of the accused) took place as part of the event which is the subject matter of the charge against the accused, or
to any other sexual behaviour of the complainant which (according to such evidence) took place at or about the same time as that event
that the similarity cannot reasonably be explained as a coincidence."
"(4) For the purposes of subsection (3) no evidence or question shall be regarded as relating to a relevant issue in the case if it appears to the court to be reasonable to assume that the purpose (or main purpose) for which it would be adduced or asked is to establish or elicit material for impugning the credibility of the complainant as a witness."
"(5) This subsection applies if the evidence or question—
(a) relates to any evidence adduced by the prosecution about any sexual behaviour of the complainant; and
(b) in the opinion of the court, would go no further than is necessary to enable the evidence adduced by the prosecution to be rebutted or explained by or on behalf of the accused."
Conclusion