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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> John-Baptiste, R (On the Application Of) v The Director of Public Prosecutions [2019] EWHC 1130 (Admin) (08 May 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2019/1130.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 1130 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
THE LORD CHIEF JUSTICE OF ENGLAND AND WALES
AND
MRS JUSTICE FARBEY
____________________
THE QUEEN on the application of TRACEY JOHN-BAPTISTE |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr J McGuinness QC (instructed by Crown Prosecution Service) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 4 April 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Lord Burnett of Maldon CJ:
Disclosure
"In my judgment disclosure orders are likely to remain exceptional in judicial review proceedings even in proportionality cases, and the courts should continue to guard against what appear to be merely "fishing expeditions" for adventitious further grounds of challenge."
The facts in outline
The sequence of decision making
"There must have been an unlawful act from [S] given the ferocity of the argument and the presence of the knife. It must have been intentionally performed, and a reasonable person would realise the inevitable risk of some harm coming to Jourdain."
He sought authority to charge S with manslaughter.
"Tom Little QC provided a 35 page advice, which considered all the witnesses and circumstantial evidence fully including the post mortem evidence; forensic results; the scene of crime evidence; medical and telephone records; and importantly, the police dealings with the suspect at the scene and during interviews at the police station, and bad character evidence. he presented a balanced view of both the strengths and weaknesses of the evidence. For example, Mr Little considered that the damage to the internal doors may well be indicative of the violent and aggressive pattern of behaviour of the suspect in the past yet, on the other hand, this was less likely to assist the prosecution case as the forensic evidence had not been able to establish that any of the damage occurred on 20/21 August.
I also noted that Mr Little helpfully set out the content of the text messages exchanged between the suspect and Jourdain. It was accepted that one interpretation of those texts could be that Jourdain was afraid of the suspect, another that she was afraid of losing him. In my review, I felt that there is room for arguing both of these versions … the point is that although there are other words and circumstantial evidence to show she was, on occasions, afraid of the suspect physically, there is also a version that could be put forward that Jourdain simply did not want to lose him despite knowing what had occurred in the past.
Mr Little carefully considered the options as to the cause of Jourdain's death, namely homicide including unlawful act manslaughter; accident or suicide. He concluded that a manslaughter charge would have to be put on the basis of an unlawful act and that act as most likely to be an imminent assault or a chase. He also considered false imprisonment but dismissed that possibility. There was a full analysis of the strands of circumstantial evidence available.
His view was that the judge at any trial would be required to give the jury a standard direction as the prosecution case would be heavily reliant on circumstantial evidence. I agree this direction would have to be given to the jury due to the lack of direct witness evidence in this case and the number of conflicting cases theories. The most telling part of the direction is a section which warns the jury that they should not engage in guess-work or speculation about matters that have not been proved by any evidence.
In summary, the view of Tom Little QC was that the various strands of circumstantial evidence, when taken together, were not sufficient to provide a reasonable prospect of conviction.
Louis Mably QC focussed on whether the fall was caused by an assault committed by the suspect without an intention that Jourdain should, in fact, fall from the balcony. In particular, he looked at three evidential matters on the basis that they may be inconsistent with an explanation of accident or suicide namely, the evidence of the neighbours especially hearing a woman screaming for help; the evidence that suggested Jourdain climbed through a bedroom to reach the balcony; and the knife found on the bed.
After summarising the evidence, he provided an overview and considered the question of escape from an assault and also whether the suspect intentionally or recklessly caused Jourdain to apprehend unlawful violence and in order to escape either jumped from the balcony or climbed onto the balcony and accidentally fell.
I agree that there is no direct evidence as to how Jourdain fell so we are driven back on what can be reasonably inferred from the neighbours together with surrounding circumstances and all the circumstantial evidence …
Mr Mably also highlights the legal requirement that a prosecutor should not only assess the evidence against the defendant but also the likely defences.
He considered whether the evidence could form the basis for a conclusion on the following questions:
- whether the argument between them involved an assault;
- how Jourdain ended up on the balcony;
- why she ended up on the balcony; and
- what the suspect was doing at the time.
He concluded that the evidence was not sufficiently detailed, certain or consistent to enable conclusions to be inferred to the criminal standard. He also looked at the circumstantial evidence and concluded that it was only at the level of mere speculation that an assault did in fact take place.
Mr Mably also asked reasonable questions about whether Jourdain climbed onto the wall and there again there are a number of reasonable theories that could be put forward that could include accident or suicide. Likewise, there are a number of reasonable theories about the screams that neighbours heard of a female saying 'somebody help me' - namely, she was about to be pushed; or she was being or about to be assaulted; or she was slipping or in danger of slipping.
Mr Mably concluded that all the available evidence raises a possibility – a suspicion – that by the suspect's actions he unlawfully caused Jourdain to fall by pushing her or causing her to endanger herself in an attempt to escape an assault. In other words, there are a number of questions and case theories but that there was not sufficient evidence to afford a realistic prospect of conviction as the same facts were equally consistent with an accident or possibly suicide.
Alex Bailin QC also considered the evidence with care. He too reviewed all the evidence in some detail including the scene/crime scene as well as the post mortem and forensic results. He set out the evidence from the text messages and statements from neighbours in particular. He looked carefully at the account given by the suspect to the police.
Put simply, he arrived at a different conclusion namely that the evidential threshold was met in relation to the offence of unlawful act manslaughter based on the evidence that Jourdain's death resulted from the unlawful and dangerous act of the suspect assaulting her (by threats of violence), Jourdain fleeing the suspect in response and consequently falling to her death whilst trying to escape him. Specifically, that the unlawful act was assaulting her (threats of violence)."
"It is accepted by everyone that there was an argument between the two for some time with loud shouting by both and at times crying from Jourdain. However, that is not enough in itself to infer a threat of violence. People do shout at each other when arguing, and clearly emotions were running high but … there is insufficient evidence to prove any unlawful act amounting to threats of use of violence on the part of this suspect which directly caused her to jump off the balcony to escape, or which caused her to fall accidentally while trying to escape an unlawful act.
Again I should emphasise that the entire case against the suspect would rest on the prosecution proving that such an unlawful act took place. I am sorry but despite all the efforts of the investigating officers … no such evidence is available.
I accept it is possible that Jourdain went onto the balcony during the argument, to get away from the suspect because he had just assaulted her or threatened her with immediate violence. However, it is equally plausible that she went out there in a state of high emotion, misjudged the situation and slipped/fell and screamed for help as she realised she was going to fall. That is, of course, speculation, but in my view no more so than the theory that the suspect threatened or assaulted her to the extent that she tried to escape and in doing so, jumped or fell off the balcony. The point is that there is not sufficient evidence to support or undermine any of the possibilities as to how she came to fall to the ground."
The legal test
"The primary decision to prosecute or not to prosecute is entrusted by Parliament to the Director as head of an independent, professional prosecuting service, answerable to the Attorney General in his role as guardian of the public interest, and to no one else. It makes no difference that the decision will ordinarily be taken by a senior member of the Crown Prosecution Service, as it was here, and not by the Director personally. In any borderline case the decision may be one of acute difficulty, since while a defendant whom the jury would be likely to convict should properly be brought to justice and tried, a defendant whom a jury would be likely to acquit should not be subjected to the trauma inherent in a criminal trial. … The Director and his officials (and senior Treasury Counsel when consulted) will bring to their task of deciding whether to prosecute an experience and expertise which most courts called upon to review their decision could not match. In most cases the decision will turn not on an analysis of the relevant legal principles but on the exercise of an informed judgment of how a case against a particular defendant, if brought, would be likely to fare in the context of a criminal trial before (in a serious case such as this) a jury. This exercise of judgment involves an assessment of the strength, by the end of the trial, of the evidence against the defendant and the likely defences. It will often be impossible to stigmatise a judgment on such matters as wrong even if one disagrees with it. So the courts will not easily find that a decision not to prosecute is bad in law, on which basis alone the court is entitled to interfere. At the same time the standard of review should not be set too high, since judicial review is the only means by which the citizen can seek redress against a decision not to prosecute and if the test were too exacting an effective remedy would be denied."
The claimant's case
- Miss John-Baptiste and S were in the flat alone together;
- What occurred was not an accident in the sense of Miss John-Baptiste toppling over the wall or railing. She must have climbed up before falling.
- Texts sent earlier in the evening could be interpreted as threatening violence;
- The ferocity of the argument between the two, including banging being heard by neighbours;
- Miss John-Baptiste's cry for help;
- The suggestion by one witness that S told a neighbour to call an ambulance but not the police;
- S's different accounts of what occurred;
- Bad character evidence, including intelligence that S was involved in a gang, the presence of the Stanley knife, imitation gun, body armour and baton in the flat and the hearsay evidence from Miss John Baptiste of a history of domestic violence.
- The unlikelihood of suicide being an explanation for what occurred.
Discussion
The Hon Mrs Justice Farbey