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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Wood v Director of Public Prosecutions [2008] EWHC 1056 (Admin) (14 May 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2008/1056.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 1056 (Admin) |
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DIVISIONAL
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE UNDERHILL
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Fraser Wood |
Appellant |
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v |
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Director of Public Prosecutions |
Respondent |
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Patrick Fields (solicitor advocate) ( instructed by CPS Hertfordshire) on behalf of The Director of Public Prosecutions
Hearing date: 28 April 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Latham :
"7. On approaching Yates Wine Bar a man fitting the
description of "Fraser" emerged from the premises.
8. Sergeant Cannon took hold of the appellant by the arm and asked,
"Are you Fraser?"
9. The appellant denied that he was Fraser whereupon PC Davies took hold of the appellant's other arm.
10. Some seconds later, others emerged from Yates Wine Bar and spoke to the appellant referring to him as "Fraser".
11. We accepted the un-contradicted evidence of Sergeant Cannon about his (the Officer's) state of mind at this time when he said in cross examination,
"I was looking for Fraser, who had been reported to me as having committed an offence of criminal damage by throwing an ashtray in another public house, and I had a vague description. I had not met him but I knew him by reputation. I could imagine which way it would go if we sought to arrest him. When he (the appellant) came out of the wine bar where he was - Yates Stevenage - I had a good idea it was him. I couldn't arrest him as I was not sure who he was. I took hold of his arm, and asked, "Are you Fraser?" in order to detain him to confirm who he was. Thereafter, a very short time after, others came out of Yates and talked to him, referring to him as "Fraser". It crystallised and gave me reasonable grounds to arrest him. As soon as I started to detain him, he became agitated…"
12. By the time that those others had emerged from the wine bar and had addressed the appellant as "Fraser", he, the appellant, was struggling with the Officers and trying to pull away. The appellant became increasingly violent and in the ensuing struggle the appellant assaulted both Constables Davies and Brown and was guilty of threatening behaviour.
13. Because of his behaviour the appellant could not and was not informed of the reasons for his arrest at that time but was told the reason as soon as was reasonably practicable thereafter
14. Constables Brown and Davies were assaulted whilst acting in the execution of their duty.
15. The appellant was guilty of threatening behaviour contrary to Section 4 of the Public Order Act, 1986."
"The reality of the situation is – although this is not, it seems to us, crucial on this point – that he was dealing with a man that he believed, from information he had, had hepatitis B; was violent; could be seen to be drunk; and who had in fact committed an arrestable offence, as well as the officer believing that he had.
This is not a question of semantics. It is our clear view that whatever the officer says about detaining him to confirm who he was, and, "--only when others referred to him as "Fraser", having put my arm on him to detain him, it crystallised and gave me reasonable grounds to arrest him".
In fact, if one asks the question whether the officer had reasonable grounds to suspect that an arrestable offence had been committed by the person standing in front of him, the answer is clearly that it had, and what the officer was doing was detaining him because he had reasonable grounds for suspicion. That suspicion crystallised in to…certainty at the point at which, first of all, it was confirmed in his mind that he was called Fraser because other people referred to him as "Fraser", and, secondly it confirmed in his mind that the person who he was detaining, who had denied being Fraser, was obviously lying and therefore behaving as if he had something to hide. In addition, he fitted the vague description of the person named Fraser that they were looking for.
We are therefore quite satisfied that what the officer was doing, as he was justified in law in doing, was seeking to arrest this man, and it is a question of semantics to say whether he was detaining him or arresting him. The fact is that he plainly had reasonable grounds to suspect the person in front of him as having committed an arrestable offence and was putting that into practice, even if he may have used unfortunate wording in cross-examination. We are satisfied that that was what he was trying to do. We are therefore satisfied that what he did, and what others following did, was lawful"
"So one comes back to the question in the end, in the ultimate analysis: was this officer entitled in law to take hold of the first boy by the arm – of course the same situation arises with the other officer in regard to the second boy a little later – justified in committing that technical assault by the exercise of any power which he as a police constable in the precise circumstances prevailing at that exact moment possessed?
I regret, really, that I feel myself compelled to say that the answer to that question must be in the negative. This officer might or might not in the particular circumstances have possessed a power to arrest these boys. I leave that question open, saying no more than I feel some doubt whether he would have had a power of arrest: but on the assumption that he had a power to arrest it is to my mind perfectly plain that neither of these officers purported to arrest either of these boys. What was done was not done as an integral step in the process of arresting, but was done in order to secure an opportunity, by detaining the boys from escape, to put to them or either of them the question that was regarded as the test question to satisfy the officers whether or not it would be right in the circumstances, and having regard to the answer obtained from that question, if any, to arrest them.
I regret to say that I think there was a technical assault by the police officers."
Mr Justice Underhill