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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Coghlan v Chief Constable of Cheshire Police & Ors [2018] EWHC 34 (QB) (17 January 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2018/34.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 34 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
B e f o r e :
SITTING AS A DEPUTY HIGH COURT JUDGE
____________________
ARRAN CHARLTON COGHLAN |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) CHIEF CONSTABLE OF CHESHIRE POLICE (2) CHIEF CONSTABLE OF GREATER MANCHESTER POLICE (3) DIRECTOR GENERAL OF THE NATIONAL CRIME AGENCY |
Defendants |
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Mr Jeremy Johnson QC and Miss Georgina Wolfe (instructed by Cheshire Constabulary Legal Services) for the First Defendant
Miss Fiona Barton QC (instructed by Greater Manchester Police Legal Services) for the Second Defendant
Mr Russell Fortt (instructed by Weightmans LLP) for the Third Defendant
Hearing dates: 18 & 19 December 2017
Judgment sent out in draft: 5 January 2018
Judgment handed down: 17 January 2018
____________________
HTML VERSION OF JUDGMENT HANDED DOWN: 17 JANUARY 2018
HTML VERSION OF JUDGMENT
Crown Copyright ©
MR EDWARD PEPPERALL QC:
3.1 Arran Coghlan had twice before been charged with murder. First, he had been tried for the July 1994 shooting of Chris Little. He was subsequently tried for the September 1999 kidnapping and brutal murder of David Barnshaw. He was acquitted by the jury in the first case and the indictment was stayed by Penry-Davey J in the second case. At the time of the February 2010 incident, Mr Coghlan was the subject of covert surveillance initiated because of his suspected involvement in conspiracy to murder, the supply of Class A drugs and firearms offences. Such investigation was given the codename "Operation Confection."
3.2 While there is no clear evidence before me, it appears that Stephen Akinyemi was suspected of involvement in serious organised crime, including murder. Specifically, he was suspected of involvement in the January 2008 stabbing of Mr Coghlan. At the time of his death, Mr Akinyemi was also suspected of the recent knifepoint rape of a woman.
6.1 First, a forensic scientist reported on 2 March 2010 that both men's blood was found on the knife:
(a) Mr Coghlan's blood was found on the blade, such finding being consistent with his having been stabbed by the knife.
(b) There was also a fine mist of Mr Akinyemi's blood that was probably deposited on the knife when he was shot. Importantly, the mist of Mr Akinyemi's blood was overlaid on top of Mr Coghlan's blood.
These findings indicated that it was likely that Mr Coghlan had been stabbed before Mr Akinyemi was shot.
6.2 Secondly, a forensic scientist reported that Mr Akinyemi's non-blood DNA was found on a bullet casing, thereby indicating that he had probably loaded the gun. This supported Mr Coghlan's claim that the gun was brought to the scene by Mr Akinyemi.
6.3 Thirdly, medical evidence concluded on 2 April 2010 that Mr Coghlan's injuries were consistent with self-defence.
6.4 Fourthly, on 22 July 2010 further scientific evidence found that flakes of paint on the knife matched samples of paint taken from Mr Akinyemi's house but not samples from Mr Coghlan's home. Such finding suggested that Mr Akinyemi had brought the knife to the scene.
7.1 Mr Akinyemi was in dispute with a Phillip Atkinson. Mr Akinyemi was upset that the other man was also known by the nickname Aki and that Mr Atkinson had used the resulting confusion to avoid trouble in his business dealings by those who respected, or perhaps - I venture to add - feared, Mr Akinyemi.
7.2 Mr Coghlan was on friendly terms with both men and sought to mediate in their dispute. He sought to broker a deal under which Mr Atkinson would, or would appear to, change his name. In any event, Mr Atkinson was planning to leave the area.
7.3 Mr Akinyemi insisted on a face-to-face meeting with Mr Atkinson to seal the agreement. The meeting was arranged for Mr Coghlan's home on 9 February 2010.
7.4 That day, Akinyemi and Coghlan met at Mr Coghlan's office and travelled together in Mr Coghlan's car to his home. Unknown to Mr Coghlan, the other man was carrying the handgun and knife and was wearing body armour. He was also wearing gloves with the trigger finger removed that are, the coroner heard, popular with those involved with guns in gang culture.
7.5 Once at Mr Coghlan's home, Mr Akinyemi became agitated and insisted that Mr Coghlan call Mr Atkinson. Coghlan texted Atkinson telling him not to answer his mobile. He then called him. Despite the text, Mr Atkinson not only answered the call but, when Mr Coghlan pretended that there was no answer, he phoned Mr Coghlan back.
7.6 Mr Akinyemi asked to use the bathroom. He called for Mr Coghlan who he then confronted with the gun. Mr Akinyemi punched Mr Coghlan, breaking and dislodging his glasses and thereby putting Coghlan at some disadvantage.
7.7 A violent struggle ensued, in the course of which Mr Coghlan fought for control of the handgun. Meanwhile, the ambidextrous Akinyemi pulled out the lock knife and started stabbing Coghlan.
7.8 Fighting for his life, Mr Coghlan either obtained control, or at least restrained Mr Akinyemi's use, of the gun. Four shots were fired. Two bullets lodged harmlessly in Mr Akinyemi's body armour, a third hit the wall while a fourth passed through Mr Akinyemi's brain.
THE PLEADED CLAIMS
CAUSES OF ACTION
"Declaratory finding that the Claimant was maliciously prosecuted in the criminal case code named Operation Aspic, a case in which no evidence was eventually offered against the Claimant but which he spent 5¾ months on remand for. In addition the Claimant will seek a declaration that the Defendants are guilty of misfeasance in public office."
"The Claimant will be pursuing another malicious prosecution case relating to a failed prosecution in Operation Confection which is intrinsically linked to this claim (and which the Claimant spent 9 months on remand for) but has a limitation date of 9 June 2017. The Claimant will be seeking damages in this claim, and will seek to consolidate this claim to that."
19.1 First, as Mr Johnson QC, leading counsel for Cheshire Police, demonstrated, any claim for false imprisonment necessarily ended upon the court's remanding Mr Coghlan in custody: Austin v Dowling (1870) LR 5 CP 534, at 540; Zenati v Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis [2015] QB 758, at [50]-[53].
19.2 Secondly, since Mr Coghlan was first remanded by the Magistrates' Court on 15 February 2010, the claim for false imprisonment was already statute barred by the time that the court received the claim form. Accordingly, even if the case could otherwise be brought within r.17.4 of the Civil Procedure Rules 1998 and section 35 of the Limitation Act 1980, such provisions could not be relied on in this case.
THE AMENDED PARTICULARS OF CLAIM
"Further, the Second Defendant, in conjunction with the Third Defendant, had jointly commenced a targeted surveillance operation into both the Claimant and Stephen Akinyemi during the early part of the year 2008 pursuant to an investigation codenamed Operation Confection."
(For completeness, in the course of submissions, Mr Heywood QC withdrew the suggestion that Mr Akinyemi had been a target of Operation Confection.)
"As a result of the Second and Third Defendants' integral role in matters relating to: (i) surveillance; (ii) the provision of information / disclosure; (iii) co-operation with and assistance provide (sic) to the First Defendant; and (iv) co-operation and assistance provided directly to the Crown Prosecution Service, the Claimant avers that the Defendants acted individually and collectively to prosecute him."
"(a) The Defendants, or each of them, were actuated by malice; instituting proceedings against the Claimant as a result of an indirect or improper motive arising out of the past, unsuccessful, attempts that had been made to secure the conviction of the Claimant as further set out at paragraph 2 of these Particulars of Claim."
"(c) The over-arching motive of the Defendants, and each of them, was to secure the conviction of the Claimant, who they perceived (wrongly) to be a violent gangland boss, at any cost."
"(a) … the Claimant had lured Stephen Akinyemi to his home and had there carried out an 'execution' by shooting Stephen Akinyemi in the head before staging the crime scene, including causing himself injuries via knife wounds in order to suggest self-defence; or
(b) … the Claimant … was attacked by Stephen Akinyemi and had acted in self-defence."
31.1 He relied, first, on the defendants' alleged prior knowledge that Mr Akinyemi was going to attend at Mr Coghlan's home, that Coghlan was seeking to mediate a dispute between Akinyemi and Atkinson and that Akinyemi was a violent man with access to weapons and a suspect in serious criminal investigations, including for murder and rape.
31.2 He also relied on Cheshire Police's acceptance that it could not seek to rely on the previous failed prosecutions against Mr Coghlan for murder.
31.3 He then referred to the circumstances of the case, including that Mr Akinyemi was likely to have been armed, that he was wearing body armour and gloves said to be typical of those worn by gunmen in gang culture, that Mr Akinyemi was found with a knife in his hand and that Mr Coghlan was badly injured.
"… a point was reached at an early stage of the prosecution such that the Defendants knew, or ought upon proper investigation and analysis to have known, that there was no longer reasonable and probable cause to continue to detain and prosecute the Claimant. That point was reached as a result of the findings of forensic examinations carried out shortly after the Claimant's detention that significantly or substantially undermined the case theory on which the prosecution was pursued."
35.1 by 2 March 2010, the defendants were aware of the results of the forensic analysis of the blood found on the knife;
35.2 by 29 March 2010, they were aware, or should have been aware, that a bullet cartridge recovered from the scene held Mr Akinyemi's non-blood DNA and no match for Mr Coghlan, thereby indicating that Mr Akinyemi had loaded, and probably owned, the gun; and
35.3 by 2 April 2010, they were aware, or should have been aware, that medical evidence concluded that Mr Coghlan's injuries were consistent with self-defence.
"20. … The Defendants unlawfully caused the Claimant's excessive detention by their failures to cause the prosecution to be dropped at an earlier stage following receipt of the evidence set out at paragraphs 15-18 hereinabove which rendered the prosecution case untenable.
21. Further or alternatively, the Defendants failed to take such enquiries as were reasonably expedient to confirm the true position, or failed to heed the information that had been presented to them within a reasonable period of time thus resulting in the Claimant's prolonged incarceration.
22. Further … there were no reasonable grounds not to authorise the Claimant's release on bail, or to oppose his request for bail following charge."
THE TORT OF MALICIOUS PROSECUTION
38.1 He was prosecuted by the relevant defendant.
38.2 The prosecution was determined in his favour.
38.3 The prosecution was without reasonable and probable cause.
38.4 The prosecution was malicious.
38.5 He suffered actionable damage.
"The mere fact that an individual has given information to the police which leads to their bringing a prosecution does not make that individual the prosecutor."
"Where an individual falsely and maliciously gives a police officer information indicating that some person is guilty of a criminal offence and states that he is willing to give evidence in court of the matters in question, it is properly to be inferred that he desires and intends that the person he names should be prosecuted. Where the circumstances are such that the facts relating to the alleged offence can be within the knowledge only of the complainant, as was the position here, then it becomes virtually impossible for the police officer to exercise any independent discretion or judgment, and if a prosecution is instituted by the police officer the proper view of the matter is that the prosecution has been procured by the complainant."
"In the circumstances of this particular case, therefore, I find that the defendant was indeed actively instrumental in setting the law in motion against the plaintiff. To hold otherwise would, I consider, be an affront to a proper sense of justice. She wanted the plaintiff to be arrested and dealt with from the start, and that is what she achieved in causing DC Haynes to obtain the warrant from the magistrate. She was, as I say, the only person who could testify about the alleged indecent exposure. I therefore find that the defendant is to be regarded as a prosecutor in setting the law in motion against the plaintiff."
"In my judgment it is properly arguable that it was virtually impossible for the police officers to exercise an independent judgment and that the prosecution was procured by Mr Walters."
"I am convinced that without Mr Walters' schedule, the police would not have started to make sense of this case. This was not a case of a man reporting his suspicions to the police and leaving it to them. He led them to the extent of providing the very figures which were inserted into the charge. There is no evidence before the court, nor has it ever been asserted in the defence, that any exercise to check the detail of Mr Walters' figures or working was ever carried out by the police or anyone else connected with the prosecution."
"I take the test to be that indicated by Lord Keith in Martin v Watson …, namely that an action for malicious prosecution may lie against one who was in substance the person responsible for the prosecution, even though not technically the prosecutor. Such substantial responsibility for the prosecution is not confined to cases where the alleged prosecutor is the only one who knows whether or not the offence has been committed, though that is likely to be the most common instance. It may also exist where, as a matter of practicality, his assertion as to the facts is unlikely to be audited or tested to destruction by others before the prosecution is launched."
47.1 Where a police officer has reasonable grounds for suspecting that an offence has been committed, he may arrest without warrant anyone whom he has reasonable grounds to suspect of being guilty of such offence in order to allow a prompt and effective investigation: s.24 of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984.
47.2 Having been arrested, if the custody officer determines that there is sufficient evidence to charge the suspect then the officer may either release him on bail or keep him in police detention to enable the DPP to make a charging decision: s.37(7).
47.3 It is the DPP (or rather a Crown Prosecutor acting on her behalf) who decides whether there is sufficient evidence to charge the suspect with an offence and, if so, with which offence: ss.37B(2)-(3).
"[3] … even if AB had gone straight to the police and made it clear that she wanted Mr H prosecuted, the independent intervention first of the police and then of the CPS would, in the absence of proof that the prosecution was in reality her doing and not theirs, have made the latter the prosecutor."
"[47] Even if she had gone directly to the authorities, the professional responsibility for the case assumed first by the police and then by the CPS would prima facie have made the latter for all legal purposes the prosecutor. It would have been necessary to establish that she had deliberately manipulated them into taking a course which they would not otherwise have taken if, pursuant to Martin v Watson, she was to be regarded in law as the prosecutor."
"In my judgment, provided the CPS makes an independent decision to prosecute, and its process is not overborne or perverted in some way by the complainant, the complainant is protected."
"… I think [Blake J] was right to hold that this was not a case in which the prosecuting authorities were deprived of the ability to exercise independent judgment. Unfortunately, cases of this kind, in which the complainant's word is pitted against that of the accused, are not uncommon, especially if there has been any significant lapse of time between the events in question and the investigation. However, that does not normally prevent the authorities from assessing the credibility of the complainant by reference to the inherent plausibility of the account and such circumstantial evidence as may be available. As to this, I entirely agree with the observations made by Sedley LJ in para. 47 of his judgment. In my view the court should be very cautious before reaching the conclusion that the authorities were unable (or even, as Mr Warby emphasised, virtually unable) to exercise independent judgment."
"Like Moore-Bick LJ, I would anticipate that cases in which an action for malicious prosecution would lie following a decision by the CPS to prosecute would be rare."
"The CPS received statements alleging assault from five prison officers who were eyewitnesses to an incident in the prison. Arguably, it was virtually, in practical terms, impossible for the CPS to exercise independent discretion in the face of such evidence."
"To my mind it is not plain that the circumstances of the present case were such as to enable (the CPS lawyer) to exercise an independent judgment on 19 December 2002 when she advised that Mr Scott should be prosecuted for assault and affray. She had little option but to accept the account given by the prison officers."
"Each of the four cases was a simple one. In three of them, the basis of the prosecution was the word of one person. In one, it was the word of five colleagues, working in a closed environment. In none of them was it possible for the charging police officer or the CPS or both to exercise a judgment independent of the word of the person or persons making the allegation."
"In a simple case it may be possible to determine the issue quite easily by asking these questions.
(1) Did A desire and intend that B should be prosecuted?
(2) If so, were the facts so peculiarly within A's knowledge that it was virtually impossible for the professional prosecutor to exercise any independent discretion or judgment?
(3) Has A procured the institution of proceedings by the professional prosecutor, either by furnishing information which he knew to be false, or by withholding information which he knew to be true, or both?"
"In the more complex case it is likely to be more difficult to apply these tests, but I would adopt the approach suggested by Richardson J in Commercial Union Assurance Co. of NZ Ltd v Lamont [1989] 3 NZLR 187, 199 when he said that the tests should be the same when the police had conducted an investigation and decided to prosecute, but that they should be cautiously applied. The reason, of course, is, as he also took into account, that prosecuting authorities are trained and accustomed to consider the evidence placed before them with an appropriately critical eye. Crown Prosecutors, for instance, have to be satisfied that there is enough evidence to provide a realistic prospect of conviction, and paragraph 5 of the current Code for Crown Prosecutors describes in clear terms the tests they have to apply before they can allow themselves to be so satisfied."
"In this case, a vast amount of information and evidence was presented to the CPS for Sampson (the CPS lawyer) and Treasury Counsel to consider. With one significant exception – the case of Fillery – that material did not consist only or determinatively of the evidence of one flawed witness, Eaton. Eaton's evidence was important to the case as a whole. It had been contaminated by the actions of Cook which Cook deliberately withheld from the CPS and Treasury Counsel. However, I have no doubt that Sampson, advised by Treasury Counsel, reached the decision to charge three of the claimants with murder and Fillery with doing an act tending and intended to pervert the course of justice in the exercise of independent judgment on the basis of all of the material of which he was then aware. His information was necessarily incomplete, because of the actions of Cook. Nevertheless, for Cook to be treated as the prosecutor, the law requires to be stated in a manner not established by existing authority. For the claimants to succeed on this issue, the law must be that an investigator who, by his deliberate conduct in relation to an important element of a case, prevents the independent decision-maker from reaching a fully informed decision, is to be treated for that reason alone as the prosecutor. There is a difference between making it 'in practical terms virtually impossible for the CPS to exercise independent discretion' and making the exercise of that discretion more difficult, because of the deliberate concealment of an important fact. In my judgment, the latter lies the wrong side of the line for determining whether or not someone other than the CPS is to be treated as the prosecutor for the purpose of the tort of malicious prosecution. Applying the principles derived from the authorities, Cook's conduct did not make it virtually impossible in practical terms for the CPS, advised by Treasury Counsel, to exercise their independent discretion."
"49. In advancing the claimant's case Mr Thomas contended that the police remained liable in tort for the prosecution. Having launched the prosecution they had a duty to inform the CPS of matters such as the implication of the images being found in temporary internet folders because that undermined the prosecution case. No authority on the point was cited. A standard treatise opines that when the CPS are involved, if the police are still to be regarded as prosecutor proof of the absence of reasonable and probable cause may be exceptionally difficult when the evidence has been reviewed by CPS lawyers. Effectively, it continues, the claimant will normally need to establish that the information supplied to the CPS was a tissue of lies: Clerk & Lindsell on Torts, 19th Ed, 2006, 993.
50. In my view Mr Thomas is correct in his submissions. The police may still be regarded as prosecuting an offence for the purposes of tort liability even if, after charge, they transfer the prosecution to an independent prosecutor, or even if it is the prosecutor who lays the charges. That is because the independent prosecutor is reliant on the police for the collection of the evidence which grounds the charge. If the police fail to forward evidence to the independent prosecutor then he or she may well charge incorrectly, or may continue with a prosecution which has subsequently become baseless. None of this turns on whether what the police have told the independent prosecutor is a tissue of lies; the police are potentially liable for failure to forward information if this is instrumental in a prosecution. The crucial issue is whether the conduct of the police, in terms of what they have done or failed to do in relation to the independent prosecutor, satisfies the components of the tort."
"On one reading of what Cranston J said the police may be treated as a prosecutor if they fail to forward information to the CPS if it is instrumental in the prosecution. I doubt that Cranston J intended that that should be taken as his definitive analysis of the first element of the tort of malicious prosecution. If he did, I respectfully disagree with him, for the following reasons. First, no authority on the point was cited to him by either side. If the authorities cited above had been cited to him, he would surely have expressed himself more cautiously and confined his remark to situations in which the determinative facts were known only to the police – as was, in fact the case, as McKay J found (on the re-trial in Clifford). Secondly, it cannot be that the police become a prosecutor of a case when the charge has been laid by, or on the decision of, the CPS, merely because after charge they fail to forward some non-trivial information to the CPS relevant to the prosecution. I accept that a prosecutor who continues a prosecution after he knows that it has become baseless may be liable for the tort of malicious prosecution from that point on; and that it is arguable that a police officer, responsible for the investigation which has given rise to the charge, may be treated as a prosecutor if he deliberately suppresses information which would reveal to the CPS that the prosecution had become baseless. If and when such a situation arises, it would fall for decision. On the true facts in Clifford it did not. It does not arise in this case, because, despite the deliberate suppression by Cook of facts relevant to Eaton's evidence, that did not render the prosecution against any claimant other than Fillery baseless."
THE DEFENDANTS' APPLICATIONS
67.1 Mr Coghlan explains the collapse of the Barnshaw murder case. He exhibits to his statement the ruling of Penry-Davey J given on 16 June 2003 when the judge stayed the indictment against him. The judge found an appalling and sustained failure to give proper disclosure in that case and made serious findings against senior officers within Greater Manchester Police. Specifically, the judge found that one Detective Inspector had either not told him the truth or had been grossly negligent in failing to ensure that critical information was passed on to the investigation team while a second Detective Inspector had lied to the court. Further he found that a Detective Chief Inspector had removed evidence and lied about his own conduct.
67.2 Mr Coghlan then explains that he had been stabbed on 1 January 2008 after an incident in Cobden's wine bar. He claims not to have known who had stabbed him, but says that CCTV disclosed in the inquest later showed that his assailant had been a friend of Mr Akinyemi. He complains that Greater Manchester Police did not arrest or charge Akinyemi either for this assault or a litany of other offences, including the knifepoint rape of a woman days before Mr Akinyemi's death.
67.3 Mr Coghlan also complains about a case in which he had been prosecuted for assaulting two police officers. He says that the officers approached him in plain clothes and, given that he had justifiable fears for his own safety, he feared that he was in imminent danger. He says that Greater Manchester Police manipulated evidence and that the assault case had been contaminated by the involvement of a key officer from the failed Barnshaw prosecution.
67.4 Mr Coghlan also gives evidence as to the collapse of the drugs case arising out of Operation Confection. Again, he identifies serious failings of disclosure. He describes the prosecution of his partner, Claire Burgoyne, for alleged offences of conspiring to pervert the course of justice. Yet again, the case collapsed because of failures to give proper disclosure.
"I am satisfied that it is appropriate to apply the Threshold Test because there is at least a reasonable suspicion on the available evidence that Coghlan has committed the offence of murder and that there is a realistic likelihood of further evidence being obtained within a reasonable time in order to meet the Full Code Test and that the public interest test is satisfied on a charge involving the death of another person. I am satisfied that although the police investigation is still at an early stage Cheshire Constabulary are undertaking their enquiries in a diligent and expeditious manner. In this case Coghlan would be kept in custody to appear at court by virtue of (statutory provisions restricting the availability of bail in murder cases)."
"1. there is insufficient evidence currently available to apply the evidential stage of the Full Code Test; and
2. there are reasonable grounds for believing that further evidence will become available within a reasonable period; and
3. the seriousness or the circumstances of the case justifies the making of an immediate charging decision; and
4. there are continuing substantial grounds to object to bail in accordance with the Bail Act 1976 and in all the circumstances of the case it is proper to do so."
72.1 First, the prosecutor must be satisfied that there is "at least a reasonable suspicion that the person to be charged has committed the offence." In determining this issue, the prosecutor must consider relevant admissible evidence in the case. [See paras 5.5-5.6 of the Code.]
72.2 Secondly, the prosecutor must be satisfied that there are "reasonable grounds for believing that the continuing investigation will provide further evidence, within a reasonable period of time, so that all the evidence together is capable of establishing a realistic prospect of conviction in accordance with the Full Code Test." [See paras 5.8-5.10 of the Code.]
"Both Coghlan and Akinyemi are known to each other and there has (sic) been incidents between the men, AKINYEMI was arrested in (sic) after an incident during early hours of 1.1.2008 at the Cobden's nightclub, Stockport when a number of males involved in verbal altercation with Coghlan who was stabbed with a knife receiving 9 stab wounds and a broken wrist. Akinyemi never charged."
"I have considered the accounts provided by Coghlan to the police officers and paramedic staff at scene and to other officers during his detention and in the prepared statement. It is apparent that upon any consideration of the circumstances as outlined by Coghlan he would suggest that he was the subject of a sustained and brutal attack with Akinyemi intending to kill him. However, paramedic Ferns was not concerned about the neck injury which had stopped bleeding and did not cause her too much concern. A small wound to the hand did not require treatment and a minor injury to the abdomen described as a tiny penetration wound to the sternum. Therefore, the initial medical assessment of Coghlan does not appear consistent with the violent attack described by him.
Conversely, Akinyemi has been shot a number of times with 2 bullets lodging in his bullet-proof jacket and one shot killing him via a head wound. A further bullet was also discharged. The scene examination indicates that the shots, and especially the lethal shot, must have been discharged in the bathroom because of the consequential damage to tiling and the blood distribution.
Claire Lowrie concludes that there was nothing in the blood distribution in the bathroom or elsewhere in the areas of the house which were examined to indicate that Arran COGHLAN had been involved in a violent struggle whilst bleeding freely.
The police theory in respect of the injuries sustained by Coghlan are (sic) that there is a potential for them to have been self-inflicted post the killing of Akinyemi.
Coghlan has never indicated that he was in possession of the firearm during the struggle and would suggest that he was repeatedly stabbed during the struggle by Akinyemi who was also in possession of the gun. I have already commented upon the disparity of the injuries sustained by the respective men involved in this incident.
Coghlan has never explained how, if Akinyemi was in possession of the gun, did the gun ultimately end up downstairs when it is clear that the shots were fired upstairs in the bathroom.
I have concluded that on the evidence presently available to me that I am satisfied that there is sufficient evidence to charge Coghlan applying the Threshold Test and it is in the public interest to proceed to charge at this time."
"Look it is simple. How many times do you need to get stabbed before you retaliate?"
"Do you have an answer for me Inspector? How many times is it? In the arm or in the neck?"
ARGUMENTS
DISCUSSION
"The law in relation to the question whether a defendant in a civil action is rightly to be regarded as 'the prosecutor' in criminal proceedings which have failed is in danger of becoming a little over-complicated. It is usually impossible to decide any issue about the bad faith elements of malicious prosecution in summary proceedings (whether on a strike-out application or an application for summary judgment). But it may well be appropriate summarily to decide the more modest question whether the circumstances of the case are such as to enable the professional prosecutor (usually the CPS) to exercise an independent judgment in the matter. If it is plain that the circumstances are such as to enable the prosecutor to exercise an independent judgment, then a claim for malicious prosecution should not usually go to trial."
STRIKE OUT: NO REASONABLE GROUNDS
91.1 conducted surveillance in respect of Mr Coghlan and/or Mr Akinyemi;
91.2 provided information and disclosure to Cheshire Police and/or the CPS; and
91.3 co-operated with and provided assistance to the investigation,
it would not follow that either defendant would in law be regarded as having prosecuted Mr Coghlan.
SUMMARY JUDGMENT
"The court may give summary judgment against a claimant … on the whole of a claim or on a particular issue if–
(a) it considers that … that claimant has no real prospect of succeeding on the claim or issue; … and
(b) there is no other compelling reason why the case or issue should be disposed of at a trial."
9-13 February 2010
101.1 Mr Davies plainly knew that there was a history between Akinyemi and Coghlan since he recorded the fact together with Mr Akinyemi's suspected involvement in the January 2008 stabbing of Mr Coghlan.
101.2 Mr Davies considered the actual convictions of both Akinyemi and Coghlan, and not material as to the far more serious but unproven suspicions against both men.
101.3 Liaison with Greater Manchester Police and the NCA as to any relevant evidence from Operation Confection was important, but the core focus of the charging decision was rightly upon the evidence of the witnesses who attended this shooting, Cheshire Police's own investigation of the crime scene, Mr Coghlan's injuries and his account to police.
101.4 It is in any event clear from the Claimant's own pleaded case that the CPS was receiving intelligence from Operation Confection directly from the Greater Manchester Police and the NCA by at least 3 March 2010.
13 February to 29 July 2010
109.1 First, the circumstances of Mr Akinyemi's death and the surveillance conducted by both the police and the NCA have already been thoroughly considered in a public forum by the coroner.
109.2 Secondly, one must be careful not to hold the past proven defaults of the Manchester force or the NCA against Cheshire Police.
109.3 Thirdly, the focus upon Cheshire Police's investigation into the death of Mr Akinyemi rather than upon the history of other failed prosecutions and surveillance was, in my judgment, appropriate.
OTHER GROUNDS FOR STRIKE-OUT
111.1 as an abuse for failing properly to plead the claim in malicious prosecution and for seeking damages by the Amended Particulars of Claim despite the claim form stating that the claim had no value and seeking only declaratory relief; and
111.2 for breach of r.16.4 in failing properly to plead the grounds on which Mr Coghlan seeks aggravated and exemplary damages.
OUTCOME
113.1 I strike out the Amended Particulars of Claim against the Second and Third Defendants pursuant to r.3.4(2)(a) for failing to disclose reasonable grounds for bringing the claim against such defendants.
113.2 Further, the Claimant has no real prospect of succeeding upon his claim against any of the defendants and there is no other compelling reason why the case should be disposed of at trial.