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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 >> West, R. v [2007] EWCA Crim 801 (20 March 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2007/801.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Crim 801 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
The Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE OPENSHAW
and
SIR RICHARD CURTIS
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R E G I N A | ||
- v - | ||
PAUL RICKY WEST |
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Wordwave International Ltd (a Merrill Communications Company)
190 Fleet Street, London EC4
Telephone 020-7421 4040
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE SCOTT BAKER: I will ask Mr Justice Openshaw to give the judgment of the court.
MR JUSTICE OPENSHAW:
"1. The defendant met a male person known as G whilst working in the construction industry in Birmingham and whilst socialising with mutual friends in the Jamaican community.
2. The defendant agreed to sell a motorbike to G for the sum of £500 and was paid £150 by G. He then left the Birmingham area. The defendant subsequently saw him in McDonald's food outlet in Birmingham in November 2005 and G agreed to repay the monies. However he advised the defendant he would have to go to Cardiff to get those monies and offered to find the defendant employment if he accompanied him to Cardiff.
3. The defendant upon arriving in Cardiff was told that he could live at 2 Inchmarnock Street, Splott, Cardiff [one of the houses which the police had under observation] and he was told at the time that the only work available for him was supplying controlled drugs. G offered him the return of £350 and in addition stated he would provide for him whist he remained in Cardiff and also offer further work if he wished to remain in Cardiff.
4. The defendant will maintain that he intended to remain in Cardiff for no more than one week during which time he was assured of the return of his monies and at that point he would return to the Birmingham area where he lived at the time with his girlfriend and had a number of friends and family.
5. The defendant accepts that between 21 November 2005 and the date of his arrest he supplied heroin and cocaine on a number of occasions. The defendant also accepts that he became aware that G was using other persons to supply controlled drugs but at no time did he come to know any of these persons, nor did he meet them to the best of his knowledge."
"We understand that His Honour Judge Morris has invited the Crown Prosecution Service to agree the basis of plea as quickly as possible and look forward to hearing from you in that regard."
Reading this letter, and unwisely accepting it as more or less a direction to agree that basis of plea, a member of the CPS staff is said to have agreed to it without asking counsel who had been retained to prosecute all the cases arising out of this operation. That was unfortunate. When in due course prosecution counsel saw the basis of plea, he immediately realised that it was in fact unacceptable since it claimed for the appellant only a minor role, whereas it was the case for the prosecution that he had been one of the organisers. Therefore when the matter came back for sentence on 21 July, the prosecution sought to persuade the judge to hold a Newton hearing. Although we have no transcript of this exchange, we are told that the judge decided not to do so. He said that he could come to his own conclusion on the material before him, and that is precisely what he did.
"The evidence in this case reveals that .... you were recruited from elsewhere in this country to come to Cardiff to manage a drugs distribution operation from two premises in Cardiff. You were recruited to live there and I am satisfied upon the available evidence that your part in the distribution exercise was effectively to control those two houses as stockholding warehouses for heroin and cocaine. I accept straightaway that you were not the main organisers of this distribution chain, and you may very well not know those who may never be brought to book, who were behind the setting up of this whole operation. I accept again that you were but employees, but you were employees in a position when you could, from time to time, direct others as runners or delivery boys, following the receipt of telephone orders, which task you also carried out from time to time yourself, when the need arose. You did so our of purely commercial motives, for easy money in hand, with no questions asked and without any tax implications or liabilities."
It seems to us that the judge had decisively rejected the basis of plea and in so doing we think he was in error. He should have held a Newton hearing. The appellant should have been invited to give evidence. If he accepted that invitation, he could then have been cross-examined upon the improbable assertions which he made and the judge then could have drawn such inferences as he thought fit. Since none of this was done, it seems to use that he should have sentenced the appellant on the basis of the plea entered.
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