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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 >> Dawson, R. v [2023] EWCA Crim 1408 (09 November 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2023/1408.html Cite as: [2023] EWCA Crim 1408 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
The Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE SAINI
MRS JUSTICE STEYN DBE
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R E X | ||
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DARREN DAWSON |
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Tel No: 020 7404 1400; Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE MALES:
Introduction
The Facts
The Issues at the Trial
(1) The evidence of the victim, Ian Clementson. He described the force of the initial punch to his left temple and the subsequent punches by the attackers, one of which caused a fracture to his skull. He said that there were three attackers. Two of them were punching him and the third, the tallest of the three, tried to take his bag off his shoulder. He gave descriptions of all three attackers. The tallest was about six foot, slim with short dark hair and in his mid-30s. He described one of the other males as the youngest, around 25 years old, with short, light brown hair, five foot five or six inches tall and slim. The third male was five foot ten, with dark, cropped hair and slim. He was wearing a blue puffer coat. This man seemed to be the ringleader. The "tall guy" had handed his bag to the male in the blue puffer and the shorter male had wandered off. Mr Clementson confirmed that the three males shown on the CCTV near the cash machine were the three people involved.
(2) The evidence of identification of DC Curry. She was the officer who arrested the appellant. She viewed the CCTV footage three times and identified the male in the footage as the appellant.
(3) The CCTV footage from the cashpoint.
(4) The CCTV footage from Sheffield Street, where the appellant lived.
(5) The seizure of the distinctive clothing worn by the robber, namely a pair of blue jogging bottoms with a white stripe down the leg and a distinctive blue baseball cap with a logo on the front, both of which were seized from the appellant's address. This occurred some time after the robbery, when the appellant had been identified as a suspect. However, no puffer jacket was found at his address.
(6) The fact that the appellant had a tattoo on his neck, similar to that seen on the male in the CCTV footage of Sheffield Street.
(7) Evidence of the appellant's bad character as evidence of propensity.
(8) Adverse inferences from the appellant's failure to give evidence.
(1) The fact that no identification procedure took place in respect of the appellant. This was an agreed fact which formed part of the evidence before the jury.
(2) The fact that at an early stage of the investigation DC Belton had identified the man wearing the puffer jacket shown on the CCTV at the cash machine as a man called Nathan Norton. DC Belton made a witness statement in which he was firm in his identification of Nathan Norton.
(3) The blue puffer coat and red T-shirt worn by the lead robber were not found at the appellant's address.
The Application to Discharge the Jury
(1) The jury were able to see the CCTV footage of the man said to be the appellant at the cash machine. The judge described the footage as "of extremely good quality", and the jury were entitled to look at it repeatedly and to compare it with the appellant in the dock.
(2) The jury were able to rely on the evidence of DC Curry, who identified the appellant from the same footage, having arrested him and transported him to the police station, where she interviewed him.
(3) It was an inevitable conclusion that the man seen on Sheffield Street, where the appellant lived, was the same man, wearing identical clothing, who had escorted the victim to the cash machine.
(4) The man seen on Sheffield Street was seen repeatedly to enter and to leave the appellant's address, as well as the house next door, which belonged to his sister.
(5) Distinctive clothing, namely a cap and jogging bottoms with a blue stripe, was recovered from the appellant upon his arrest.
(6) The man seen on Sheffield Street could be seen to have a tattoo on the back of his neck, which was red in colour and the same shape as the tattoo on the back of the appellant's neck (an Arsenal Football Club badge).
(7) The appellant had not given evidence.
(8) The appellant had previous convictions involving similar behaviour on two occasions, both involving violence.
22. The judge concluded:
"… in view of the overwhelming mountain of evidence against the defendant, the significance of a negative identification parade by a man who was in shock, without his glasses and suffering from a fractured skull was neither here nor there and in my judgment, although of course I concede that disclosure of the negative identification parade should have taken place, whether the defence were involved or not before the trial or at the very least during the trial, its late disclosure after the jury reached their verdicts did not justify this jury being discharged."
The Submissions
Decision