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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 >> Samuels, R. v [2023] EWCA Crim 1103 (27 July 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2023/1103.html Cite as: [2023] EWCA Crim 1103 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE HOLROYDE
MR JUSTICE GOOSE
SIR ROBIN SPENCER
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REX |
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- v - |
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MARVIN SAMUELS |
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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)
MR DUNCAN ATKINSON KC appeared on behalf of the Crown
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Crown Copyright ©
THE VICE PRESIDENT:
"Dr Taylor and Dr Kahtan accept the existence over many years, and certainly since early adolescence, of an antisocial personality disorder in the defendant but, in their opinion, his symptoms go beyond that pre-existing disorder. They give, therefore, a dual diagnosis of paranoid personality disorder, not in law a mental illness, plus a more recently developing psychotic illness, probably schizophrenia, which is, for these purposes, a mental illness. Both said that, in their opinion, that mental illness is highly unlikely to have arisen only after the defendant's arrest but was an existing condition on 29 September."
"While Dr Murray's confident working diagnoses of paranoid schizophrenia and some degree of cognitive impairment may be reasonable ones, any potential psychotic symptoms at the time of the index offences operated in the context of an established antisocial personality disorder (characterised by elevated aggressivity, irritability and impulsivity), voluntary skunk cannabis misuse (which may have caused or amplified any emergent psychotic symptoms) and an argument in the context of a highly volatile relationship which had previously been characterised by violence. I do not consider that Dr Murray's attempted exclusion of important other diagnostic constructs (antisocial personality disorder and significant voluntary skunk cannabis misuse) is merited. The cluster of mental state abnormalities which Mr Samuels has described with varying degrees of consistency as operating at the material time (paranoia; potential auditory hallucinations) did not in my view substantially impair his ability to form a rational judgement and to exercise self-control at the time of the murder, and I do not accept that the partial defence of diminished responsibility should have obtained at the time of the 2013 trial."
"(1) A person ('D') who kills or is a party to the killing of another is not to be convicted of murder if D was suffering from an abnormality of mental functioning which—
(a) arose from a recognised medical condition
(b) substantially impaired D's ability to do one or more of the things mentioned in subsection (1A), and
(c)provides an explanation for D's acts and omissions in doing or being a party to the killing.
(1A) Those things are—
(a) to understand the nature of D's conduct;
(b) to form a rational judgment;
(c) to exercise self-control.
(1B) For the purposes of subsection (1)(c), an abnormality of mental functioning provides an explanation for D's conduct if it causes, or is a significant contributory factor in causing, D to carry out that conduct.
(2) On a charge of murder, it shall be for the defence to prove that the person charged is by virtue of this section not liable to be convicted of murder.
(3) A person who but for this section would be liable, whether as principal or as accessory, to be convicted of murder shall be liable instead to be convicted of manslaughter."
"(1) For the purposes of an appeal ... under this Part of this Act the Court of Appeal may, if they think it necessary or expedient in the interests of justice—
...
(a) receive any evidence which was not adduced in the proceedings from which the appeal lies.
...
(2) The Court of Appeal shall, in considering whether to receive any evidence, have regard in particular to—
(a) whether the evidence appears to the Court to be capable of belief;
(b) whether it appears to the Court that the evidence may afford any ground for allowing the appeal;
(c) whether the evidence would have been admissible in the proceedings from which the appeal lies on an issue which is the subject of the appeal; and
(d) whether there is a reasonable explanation for the failure to adduce the evidence in those proceedings."
"Where expert evidence has been given and apparently rejected by the jury, it could only be in the rarest of circumstances that the court would permit a repetition, or near repetition of evidence of the same effect by some other expert to provide the basis for a successful appeal. If it were otherwise the trial process would represent no more, or not very much more than what we shall colloquially describe as a 'dry run' for one or more of the experts on the basis that, if the evidence failed to attract the jury at trial, an application could be made for the issue to be revisited in this court. That is not the purpose of the court's jurisdiction to receive evidence on appeal."