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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> BOB & Ors, R. v [2024] EWCA Crim 1494 (05 December 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2024/1494.html Cite as: [2024] WLR(D) 538, [2024] EWCA Crim 1494 |
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202402727 B2 202402728 B2 202402730 B2 |
ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT
Case Nos: T20217351, T20217334, U20240719, U20240135
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE BRIGHT
and
HER HONOUR JUDGE MORRIS, HONORARY RECORDER OF WINCHESTER
(sitting as a judge of the Court of Appeal Criminal Division)
____________________
THE CROWN |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) BOB (2) BYY (3) AEN (4) BEK |
Respondents |
____________________
Abigail Penny (assigned by the Registrar) for BOB
John Oliver (assigned by the Registrar) for BYY
S Evans (assigned by the Registrar) for AEN
Felix Keating (assigned by the Registrar) for BEK
Hearing date: 17 October 2024
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Edis, giving the judgment of the court to which all members contributed:-
Introduction
(a) it was wrong in law;
(b) it involved an error of law or principle; or
(c) it was a ruling which it was not reasonable for the judge to make.
The Law
"Independent dovetailing evidence may reduce the risk both of deliberate untruth and of innocent mistake……. The availability of good testing material (admissible under s.124) concerning the reliability of the witness may show that the evidence can properly be tested and assessed. So may independent supporting evidence."
124 Credibility
(1) This section applies if in criminal proceedings—
(a) a statement not made in oral evidence in the proceedings is admitted as evidence of a matter stated, and
(b) the maker of the statement does not give oral evidence in connection with the subject matter of the statement.
(2) In such a case—
(a) any evidence which (if he had given such evidence) would have been admissible as relevant to his credibility as a witness is so admissible in the proceedings;
(b) evidence may with the court's leave be given of any matter which (if he had given such evidence) could have been put to him in cross-examination as relevant to his credibility as a witness but of which evidence could not have been adduced by the cross-examining party;
(c) evidence tending to prove that he made (at whatever time) any other statement inconsistent with the statement admitted as evidence is admissible for the purpose of showing that he contradicted himself.
(3) If as a result of evidence admitted under this section an allegation is made against the maker of a statement, the court may permit a party to lead additional evidence of such description as the court may specify for the purposes of denying or answering the allegation.
(4) In the case of a statement in a document which is admitted as evidence under section 117 each person who, in order for the statement to be admissible, must have supplied or received the information concerned or created or received the document or part concerned is to be treated as the maker of the statement for the purposes of subsections (1) to (3) above.
"The statutory framework provided for hearsay evidence by the CJA 2003 can usefully be considered in these successive steps:
i) is there a specific statutory justification (or "gateway") permitting the admission of hearsay evidence (ss.116–118)?
ii) what material is there which can help to test or assess the hearsay (s.124)?
iii) is there a specific "interests of justice" test at the admissibility stage?
iv) if there is no other justification or gateway, should the evidence nevertheless be considered for admission on the grounds that admission is, despite the difficulties, in the interests of justice (s.114(1)(d))?
v) even if prima facie admissible, ought the evidence to be ruled inadmissible (s.78 of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 (PACE) and/or s.126 of the CJA 2003)?
vi) if the evidence is admitted, then should the case subsequently be stopped under s.125?"
"In our view, the judge will often not be able to make the decision as to whether the hearsay evidence be admitted unless he first considers, as well as the importance of the evidence and its apparent strengths and weaknesses, what material is available to help test and assess it. If it is the Crown which is seeking to adduce the evidence, and if the evidence is important to the case, the judge is entitled to expect that very full enquiries have been made as to the witness' credibility and all relevant material disclosed; that will not be confined simply to a check of the Police National Computer for convictions. If it is the defendant who is seeking to adduce the evidence, and the evidence is important to the case, the judge is entitled to expect that the defendant has supplied sufficient information about the witness to enable such proper checks to be made. Moreover, both counsel and the judge must keep the necessity for disclosure of s.124 material in mind throughout the trial and in the light of the way it develops."
"Overall, I have come to the view that their reliability, their reliability cannot be safely assessed and, and for that reason I am not persuaded, at step two, that I should admit the statements.
"If I'm wrong about my assessment of step two then for the similar reasons that I have already given I would refuse admission of the statements either under section 78 or under section 126 of the Criminal Justice Act 2003 at step five in the test."
"the evidence provided by the statement is so unconvincing that, considering its importance to the case against the defendant, his conviction of the offence would be unsafe"
Disclosure
Result
The Riat steps reformulated
"The statutory framework provided for hearsay evidence by the CJA 2003 can usefully be considered in these successive steps:
1. is the court satisfied that the prosecution has adduced all relevant evidence, and disclosed all relevant unused material to enable the court to assess the extent to which the hearsay evidence is demonstrably reliable and, if not, the extent to which it can be safely assessed and tested? If not, should the court simply refuse the application or do the interests of justice require directions for a proper disclosure process?
2. is there a specific statutory justification (or "gateway") permitting the admission of hearsay evidence (ss.116–118)?
3. what material is there which can help to test or assess the hearsay? This may be undermining evidence admitted under s.124, or other inconsistent evidence and it may also be independent dovetailing or supporting evidence. The court is required to make a judgment on the basis of all the evidence, having regard to the issues in the case and the importance of the hearsay to those issues.
4. is there a specific "interests of justice" test at the admissibility stage?
5. if there is no other justification or gateway, should the evidence nevertheless be considered for admission on the grounds that admission is, despite the difficulties, in the interests of justice (s.114(1)(d))?
6. even if admissible, ought the evidence to be ruled inadmissible (s.78 of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 (PACE) and/or s.126 of the CJA 2003)?
7. if the evidence is admitted, then should the case subsequently be stopped under s.125? This safeguard should be considered in all cases where it applies, at the initiative of the court if the parties do not raise it. It will generally be best determined at the conclusion of all the evidence. This is reinforced by the fact that this is the stage when the judge is likely to have drafted legal directions and to be consulting counsel about them. In a case of this kind, where the prosecution seeks to prove an important and disputed fact by relying on hearsay, the judge is required to give a careful and tailored direction to assist the jury in deciding whether they can safely rely on the hearsay or not. Its sufficiency will be relevant to the safety of any resulting conviction and it will be helpful for the judge to have regard to it when carrying out the assessment required by section 125.
The rest of this judgment, from here to the end, cannot be reported until the conclusion of the proceedings in the Crown Court
The case specific reasoning.