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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Jersey Unreported Judgments >> AG v Bulpin [2020] JRC 162 (11 August 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/je/cases/UR/2020/2020_162.html Cite as: [2020] JRC 162 |
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Indecent photographs - ruling - directions to the Jurats
Before : |
R. J. MacRae, Esq., Deputy Bailiff |
The Attorney General
-v-
Leslie Thomas Bulpin
R. C. P. Pedley Esq., Crown Advocate.
Advocate A. M. Harrison for the Defendant.
JUDGMENT
THE DEPUTY BAILIFF:
1. On 22nd July 2020 I gave a ruling in this case before directing the Jurats prior to their retirement to consider their verdict. I now give the reasons for that ruling.
2. On 19th May, 2019, police attended the Defendant's home address and seized his i-Phone from his bedroom. The Defendant provided the pin code to unlock the phone. It was examined by William Cloete, a digital forensic examiner employed by the States of Jersey Police. He identified twenty-two images that the Crown alleged to be indecent images of children. The Jurats found that thirteen of these images were indecent images of children under the age of sixteen. As indicated by the agreed facts, all the images identified by the Crown were recovered from the web caches associated with the Safari web browser. Images from websites are automatically placed into web caches when the user visits that website. The images were cached between 1st May 2019 and 19th May 2019.
3. As to the web cache, the relevant agreed facts say:-
"7. The Safari web browser comes pre-installed on Apple devices. When a user navigates to a web page many of the component parts of the web page (including the images) are downloaded to the user's device. This is done automatically by the Safari web browser.
8. Internet browsers use the cache to store web pages by automatically retaining a copy of the visited pages and then using that copy if the user revisits that page. If the date on the page is the same as the previously stored copy, the device uses the copy already stored rather than downloading it from the internet again.
9. The images are cached by the device in order to speed up loading if a user revisits the webpage. Files in the cache will remain there until the user deletes them, the files 'expire', or the folders reach a pre-determined maximum size.
10. Images cached in this way are not necessarily visible to the user on the screen of their device. It may be necessary for a user to scroll down to see the whole web page.
11. Image files saved in a web page cache would not be accessible to the user of the device without specialist software."
4. The twenty-two images were from the Xvideos pornographic website. They would have been obtained by internet searches carried out by the Defendant. The agreed evidence was that between 1st and 15th May 2020 the Defendant had carried out internet searches using the terms "little girls" (no fewer than three times), "teens masturbating" (the latter word spelt incorrectly), and "dirty little slags".
5. It was only in relation to the searches carried out on 5th May 2019 that Mr Cloete was able to link specific images identified in the cache to the searches carried out by the Defendant. He did this by re-creating the search as set out in his report. Mr Cloete could tell from URL data held on the Defendant's phone exactly what the Defendant had seen on that day.
6. In evidence he confirmed the content of any page that was searched for would be temporarily downloaded on to the phone memory into the cache. He said there was no hard and fast rule as to how long an image could be stored on the cache. Such data could be removed by erasing the search history or the remnants of pages might be left behind.
7. All of the images (eight in total) that Mr Cloete identified from the cache as those obtained by the Defendant from searches which took place just before 3 a.m. on 5th May 2019 were connected to videos. There was only evidence that the Defendant may have played one of the videos and may have only seen the images connected to the other videos for a period of seconds. One of the images that the Defendant would have seen is a category 3 image, reference 12120. Other video titles which were seen by the Defendant at this time with the image stored in the cache included two images which the Jurats found to be images of children under sixteen accompanying titles including "teen fucked and spanked" and "dasha jan nudes".
8. The Jurats were directed as follows:-
"12. The defendant faces one count of making indecent photographs of children, contrary to Article 2(1)(a) of the Protection of the Children (Jersey) Law 1994. It is agreed that the defendant downloaded the images in question on to his telephone. Images on a computer or a telephone are included within the meaning of 'photographs' for the purpose of the Law. There is no dispute that there were twenty-two images of children on the defendant's phone in this case but as a preliminary issue you need to be satisfied that they are images of children under the age of 16. In respect of the twenty-two photographs which the Crown particularise on the indictment as being indecent photographs of children under the age of sixteen you have already viewed those photographs and indicated that in relation to nine of the photographs you are not satisfied that the person shown are under the age of sixteen. You need to be satisfied that one or more of the remaining thirteen photographs which you have seen are indecent and feature a child under the age of sixteen years. This is disputed by the defence.
13. The Crown must prove three additional matters in order for the defendant to be found guilty of this offence.
(1) That the photographs were 'made'. As the images were found in the cache on the defendant's telephone that element of the offence is not in dispute.
(2) That the defendant made the photographs intentionally, i.e. that the defendant deliberately searched for the relevant images recovered from his phone. In this regard the Crown point to the search terms, particularly those used on 1st, 5th and 15th May 2019, such as 'little girls'; 'dirty little slags' and 'teens masturbating'. The defendant accepts that he made the photographs intentionally in that the search for images was a deliberate one, although he says that when he carried out the searches that caused the images to be downloaded to his telephone, he believed that all persons shown on the websites in question were required to be eighteen or over and he did not know that the websites contained indecent images of children.
(3) The defendant must have 'made' the image (in the way described) knowing that it was, or is likely to have been, an indecent image of a child. This is the central issue in the case. Did the defendant search for this material knowing that it was or likely to contain an indecent image of a child under sixteen? If a person views an image which is saved onto his phone having searched for a photograph of an attractive woman then he would have no reason to believe that a photograph would be anything other than that woman aged eighteen or over, and would not be guilty of an offence even if the photograph turned out to be an indecent photograph of a child. In this case the Crown says that the defendant, from the search terms which he used, knew that the images were or were likely to be indecent images of a child under sixteen. The defendant disputes this and further disputes that in fact the prosecution has proved that the images were of children under the age of sixteen. He relies on the fact that most of the pornographic images (over 2000) found on his telephone depicted adults. The real question for you is whether you are sure that when the defendant downloaded these images he knew that the images were or were likely to be indecent images of children under sixteen. If you are sure of this and to the other elements then you must convict. If you think the defendant's account in relation to either of these issues is or may be true then you must acquit."
9. Although not mentioned at the Plea and Directions hearing, or in the defence case statement, in his closing submissions to the Jurats defence counsel said that the Crown needed to prove a further matter which was not foreshadowed in the course of the trial, namely that the Jurats needed to be sure that the Defendant knew or believed that he was causing the images to be stored in the cache when he carried out the searches which he admitted carrying out.
10. In view of this assertion I heard argument at the end of the first day of the trial, after counsel had made their closing speeches, and prior to summing up the case to the Jurats on 22nd July 2020.
11. The defence argued that it was necessary for the Crown to prove that the Defendant knew of the existence of the cache and that the Crown had not done so. The Crown pointed to cases where defendants appear to have been convicted on the basis of indecent photographs being stored in the cache. That only took the Crown so far as none of those cases were contested and it was not clear from those authorities the extent to which the defendant knew of the cache. In AG v Rebelo [2019] JRC 215 the court observed at paragraph 4:-
12. Accordingly it is clearly mitigation that a defendant is unable to access images stored in the cache but that case does not really assist on whether or not the defendant must have knowledge of the cache in order to be convicted.
13. The Crown also said that the mischief of the offence was to prevent material being viewed and disseminated, that the images must have existed on the Defendant's screen in order to be found on the cache (which was undisputed) and the Crown did not need to prove that the images were actually viewed by the Defendant (which was not challenged), let alone prove the existence of the Defendant's knowledge of the cache.
14. The Crown accepted the need to prove mens rea (as set out at paragraph 13 of the summing up), and that was consistent with the authorities. The Crown said that they did not need to prove knowledge of storage in a specific location as that would cause difficulties as prior to examination of the device it might be difficult to determine where on a device the images were stored, which would lead to an uneasy situation where defendants with technical knowledge of the abilities of their device would be in a different position from defendants without such knowledge. The Crown said that had they had advance knowledge of the point they might have dealt with their expert evidence differently.
15. I was referred to Archbold and certain English authorities, as there did not appear to be any Jersey authority precisely on point. The relevant extract from Archbold reads:-
16. The relevant English legislation is for these purposes similar to the equivalent provisions of the Protection of Children (Jersey) Law 1994. This was an alleged offence under Article 2(1)(a) of a person making an indecent photograph of a child. It was agreed that a photograph includes a moving or still image or data that is capable of conversion into such an image pursuant to Article 1 of the law.
17. The decision of the English Court of Appeal in R v Smith and R v Jayson [2003] 1 Cr App R 13 was referred to at some length in the case of argument. In R v Jayson, the image was downloaded by the appellant from the internet on to his computer screen and was saved in a temporary cache as a result of an automatic function of the software. It was contended that the appellant did not have the necessary mens rea for the purpose of the offence of making an indecent image since the image had been stored in a temporary cache which gave rise to the inference that there was no intention subsequently to retrieve them.
18. The facts in relation to the case of Smith are different from the instant case and the paragraphs of the judgment are not helpful when read in the context of that appeal.
19. What the Court of Appeal said in the case of Jayson was this:-
20. The English Court of Appeal appears to have rejected the contention (at paragraph 31) that the mens rea requires that an offender must intend to store and intend to retrieve material subsequently. The required mens rea is that referred to in the last sentence of paragraph 34 "the mens rea is that the act of making should be a deliberate and intentional act with knowledge that the image made is, or is likely to be an indecent photograph or pseudo-photograph of a child". The authority is not on all fours with the facts in this case, as the Court of Appeal was dealing with a slightly different point where knowledge of the cache was not disputed. Nevertheless it appears from what is said at paragraphs 36 and 37 of the judgment that as a matter of English law, so long as the mens rea referred to above is proved the Crown does not need to prove any additional knowledge on the part of the defendant in respect of the mode of storage of the images.
21. I was also referred to the English Court of Appeal case of Harrison v Regina [2007] EWCA Crim 2 976. This was a rather different case as it involved (on appeal) a charge of possession, not making images, and did not involve the use of search terms. The key finding in that case (see paragraphs 11 to 13 of the judgment) is that there needs to be a mental element to the offences. In the event of automatic copying to the hard drive that is satisfied "if the defendant knows that the images viewed are automatically saved there. With opening an email attachment, at its lowest, the mental element is satisfied if the defendant knows that it contains, or is likely to contain illegal images" (paragraph 12).
22. With a making offence (paragraph 11) "what is necessary is 'a deliberate and intentional act, with knowledge that the image made is, or is likely to be, an indecent photograph of a child".
23. The overall tenor of the authorities appears to be that notwithstanding the absence of an indication in the statute to this effect, in order to secure a conviction in these cases there needs to be proof of a mens rea. That has been identified in the case of making offences where, on facts such as these, the mens rea is as identified at paragraph 13 of the summing up to the Jurats on the law. To require the mens rea to extend to additional proof of knowledge of the storage facility within the mobile phone, is unwarranted in principle and not consistent with authority.