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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Spartley, R. v [2007] EWCA Crim 1789 (15 May 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2007/1789.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Crim 1789 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE KEITH
HIS HONOUR JUDGE LORAINE-SMITH
(Sitting as a Judge of the CACD)
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R E G I N A | ||
-v- | ||
MALCOLM SPARTLEY |
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MR J DAWES appeared on behalf of the CROWN
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Crown Copyright ©
"After the suspect had been told what he was suspected of and that he was not obliged to answer, he stated..."
And there follows a lengthy narrative by the appellant. In the course of it he told the police that in late May 1999 by agreement with a man called Sjaak he took a suitcase weighing some 35 kilograms and containing cannabis from Holland to Madrid and was paid 2,500 Dutch guilders for doing so. The judge on 24th August 2006 acceded to the Crown application and let this evidence in. On 4th September 2006, after the co-defendant had given evidence, a submission of no case to answer was made on behalf of this appellant and rejected by the judge. The grounds of appeal have been drafted in a somewhat diffuse fashion. We are inclined to agree with counsel for the Crown (skeleton argument 10th April 2007) that they may safely be reduced to three overall contentions and this approach is in conformity with the way in which Mr Kelly for the appellant has ordered his oral submissions before us today. The three propositions are these:
1. The Crown failed in its duty of disclosure in relation to material that related to the bad character of the appellant. 2. This lack of disclosure resulted in the appellant being unable properly to resist the Crown's application to adduce evidence of the bad character material.
3. The bad character evidence should have been ignored by the trial judge in considering the merits of the half-time submission on counts 2 and 3, and moreover, even taking the bad character evidence into account there was not sufficient evidence to go to the jury on those two counts.
"Malcolm Spartley tells you that he admitted his actions to the Dutch authorities, who treated him more as a witness than as a suspect, and he was never charged, and therefore it did not occur to him that he had ever been in trouble, and that is why he said he never had been. In any event, it is some seven years ago and that also was something that he put out of his mind. The drugs, he points out in relation to the cross-border aspect, were not in any event class A; they were of an entirely different nature. He was also frank with the police during his interviews about his own drug abuse, and, far from holding it against him when he was so frank, and indeed he was frank with the Dutch authorities, you should bear in mind this frankness in his favour when considering his denials of any involvement in the allegations set out against him."
Mr Kelly has submitted this morning -- this perhaps goes as much to the first of the three propositions as to the second -- that the introduction of the Dutch interview in some way imposed an illegitimate onus on the appellant which he should not have had to bear. We do not agree. The evidence was properly admitted. It would have been open to the defendant to investigate the file or cross-question the Dutch police officer. Any difficulties as to translation could surely have been overcome. It would have been open also to the defendant to give any evidence that he desired to put before the jury relating to the circumstances of the Dutch interview. That possibility does not constitute an acceptance of an illegitimate onus by the appellant. It merely points to the obvious commonsense possibility that the appellant may have wished to respond to admissible evidence in the case. In the particular circumstances here we do not consider that the prosecution were obliged to conduct further investigations.