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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 >> JS v Regina [2008] EWCA Crim 2788 (26 November 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2008/2788.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Crim 2788 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM Norwich Crown Court
His Honour Judge Downes
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE CRANSTON
and
SIR CHRISTOPHER HOLLAND
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JS |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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REGINA |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr L Cox (instructed by The Crown Prosecution Service) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 27th-28th October 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Christopher Holland :
INTRODUCTION
INDICTMENT
Count 1: between the 16th November 1979 and the 7th November 1980 indecent assault contrary to S. 14 Sexual Offences Act 1956, she then being under the age of 13 years, namely 7 years old.
Count 2: a like offence between the 6th November 1981 and the 7th November 1983, she then being between 9-11 years old.
Count 3: a like offence between the 6th November 1979 and the 7th November 1984 "on an occasion other than in Counts 1 and 2", she then being between 7-12 years old.
Count 4: between the 6th November 1984 and the 7th November 1986, rape contrary to S. 1 (1) Sexual Offences Act 1956, she then being under the age of 16.
Count 5: a like offence between the 6th November 1985 and the 7th November 1987 "on an occasion other than in Count 4", she then being under the age of 16.
Count 6: a like offence between the 6th November 1986 and the 7th November 1988 "on an occasion other than Counts 4 and 5", she then being under the age of 16.
The Crown advanced these Counts as "specimen" but by the end of the evidence each such became based upon an incident spoken to by TB .
Count 7: between the 11th June 1969 and the 12th June 1970 indecent assault, she being under the age of 13 years, namely 7 years old.
Count 8: a like offence between the 11th June 1969 and the 12th June 1975 "other than on the occasion in Count 7", she then being between 7-12 years old.
Count 9: a like offence between the 11th June 1969 and the 12th June 1975 "other than on the occasion in Count 7", she then being between 7-12 years old.
Count 10: a like offence during the same period "other than on an occasion in Count 7, 8 and 9".
Count 11: a like offence between the 11th June 1969 and the 12th June 1976 "other than on an occasion in Counts 7,8,9 and 10", she then being between 7-14 years old.
Count 12: a like offence between the 11th June 1980 and the 12th June 1981, she then being over the age of 16.
Again, the Crown advanced these Counts as "specimen", save for Count 12. Again, the evidence served to base each such on a specific incident.
Count 13: between the 19th June 1969 and the 20th June 1970 indecent assault, she then being under the age of 13 years, namely 9 years old.
Count 14: a like offence between the 19th June 1969 and the 21st June 1974 "other than on an occasion in Count 13", she then being between 9-11 years.
Count 15: a like offence between the 19th June and the 20th June 1974 "other than on an occasion in Counts 14 and 15", she then being between 11-12 years.
Count 16: between the 20th June 1975 and the 19th June 1976, rape, she then being under the age of 16 years.
Counts 13, 14 and 15 were advanced as specimen but were similarly tied by the evidence to incidents spoken to by S.
TB: 6th November 1979 to 7th November 1988.
Michelle: 11th June 1969 to 12th June 1976
and then 11th June 1980 12th June 1981
S: 19th June 1969 to 19th June 1976.
The jury was therefore concerned with offences allegedly committed between 37 and 18 years earlier.
THE COMPLAINANTS AND THEIR CIRCUMSTANCES
THE PROSECUTION CASE
Count 1. The Appellant had gone to the upstairs toilet. Her foster mother had asked her to take a toilet roll up to him. When she arrived at the toilet and opened the door the Appellant was urinating. He grabbed her, put his hand down her trousers, penetrated her with a finger and masturbated to ejaculation. She was aged 7. He threatened to kill her if she said anything.
Count 2. She had been told to sweep the stairs. As she was doing so he came up to her, held her down, lifted her skirt, penetrated her with his finger and masturbated to ejaculation.
Count 3. Her foster mother was out at the market and her foster father had fallen asleep. The Appellant took advantage of the situation to order her up to the toilet. There followed a similar offence with two finger penetration.
Count 4. Her foster father was doing some haircutting in the garden. She went upstairs to the airing cupboard to obtain a protective sheet. The Appellant followed her, put her down on the floor and pulled her trousers down. He then had unprotected sexual intercourse to ejaculation. He left her to clean herself whilst he took down the required sheet. She was aged 13.
Count 5. Another rape in the toilet in the course of which the doorbell sounded. This panicked the Appellant who broke off.
Count 6. The last act of rape with circumstances that were similar save that the Appellant held her throat forcefully and was generally rougher. She was aged 15. Subsequent events have some importance in the context of this appeal we deal with them separately, later in this judgment.
Count 7. An offence committed at the earlier address, B Road, at which access to the toilet was by way of the garden. When aged about 7 she was in the garden when the Appellant came and put his hand down her top and into her knickers.
Count 8. A similar offence made more significant to the complainant because it involved holding her by the throat and pushing her against a wall.
Counts 9 and 10. Two offences committed at Felixstowe in the course of a family holiday. Each involved putting a hand down the top of her swimming costume.
Count 12. When she was about 18 she accepted an early morning lift in the Appellant's car. In the course of the journey he put his hand between her legs and made an indecent suggestion.
Counts 13, 14 and 15. Each was based upon an opportunity seized by the Appellant to put his hand in her knickers and penetrate her digitally. The first such occurred when she was about 9 years old.
Count 16. At B Road she was forced into the toilet by the Appellant who then penetrated her vaginally with his penis. Whilst intercourse was taking place there was a knock on the door. She said "Who is it?" The reply was "Ivan." She said she would be out in a minute and the Appellant stopped what he was doing. In the house at the time was IH, one of her foster father's friends, and she presumed that it was he who knocked.
"Q. The reason I asked is you appeared to be accepting that it could not be his.
A. No.
Q. You are still saying it is.
A. Yes.
Q. Thank you very much."
We return to this later in the judgment.
THE HISTORY
1969-1976. Michelle claims to have reported the assaults to her mother without arousing particular interest.
c. 1980. Michelle told a then boyfriend, DG that a friend of her father, whom she did not name, had sexually assaulted her.
c. 1988. S tells her sister, A, of abuse some 18 years previously.
September 1986. Upon leaving home in acrimonious circumstances TB complains to a teacher, Mr S, and to Social Services of physical abuse by her foster father. She does not complain of sexual abuse by anyone.
1992. S told her husband, CL, that she had been abused, having been moved to do so by a chance visit made by the Appellant who got no further than the doorstep. This was a few weeks after her Mother's funeral.
1993. S told a friend, SS, of abuse by a man called James who was a regular visitor. The above had taken place in the bedroom and bathroom.
2000. Michelle told her then boyfriend, MS, that she had been abused as a child.
2001. Michelle marries Mr S and refuses to allow the Appellant to attend the wedding. Thereafter, per Mr S "TB and S have visited our house on a number of occasions when matters have been discussed." Michelle says she learned of abuse to S from A.
6th February 2001. S tells her G.P., Dr Ward, that she was sexually abused. He refers her for counselling. At some stage S set out in a letter what had happened to her. The letter was subsequently destroyed, unread by anyone else.
October 2002. K, S's brother, says that TB "disclosed to me the full details of the abuse that she had suffered as a young child at the hands of JS. TB told me that she wanted the men (sic) exposed." K wrote to the Appellant and his brother asking to meet to discuss the allegations. There was no response.
2002. At some stage the sisters meet in distress to discuss experiences, supported by drinking vodka.
17th March 2003. In the course of a visit to a Police Station about another unrelated matter K alleges abuse of those he regarded as his sisters. He is asked to encourage the making of a formal complaint.
September 2005. The video interviews.
(a) Leave aside Michelle's recollected complaint to her mother, no complainant made any contemporaneous complaint, not even inter se or to other potentially vulnerable siblings a matter of concern to TB as the youngest as appears from her interview.
(b) With reference to the complaints of sexual abuse that came to be made there is no significant discernable variation over time.
(c)The evidence of Mr S raises concerns as to collaboration reflected in a number of meetings at his house.
THE DEFENCE
THIS APPEAL
(a) Abuse of process: An application should have been made to the trial judge to stay for an abuse of process having regard to the delay and the consequent impact upon the fairness of the trial. Whether or not successful, any such application would have served fully to apprise the Court of the chronology and of the resultant problems in terms of impaired recollection, missing witnesses and lost records.
(b) Failings on the part of both solicitors and counsel in the conduct of the defence allegedly so as to impair it.
(c)The Summing Up serious defects in its terms served to deprive the jury of direction and guidance that were imperative in the circumstances of this case.
(a) Abuse of process: we make no comment save to accept the submission that had a fully researched application been made then, at the least, the Court would have had the material wherewith to make various decisions, in particular as to the guidance for the jury.
(b) Professional Incompetence. There are matters open to adverse comment particularly a belated change of defence counsel shortly before trial but we have discerned nothing which has arguably had an impact upon the safety of the verdicts.
(c) Summing Up. We are reluctantly satisfied that this was inadequate in that it did not give to the jury such direction and guidance as were essential if the verdicts were to be transparently safe.
THE SUMMING UP
"Delay of up to 32 years must threaten the fairness of any criminal trial, not least when the Crown case depends on late complaint and oral testimony, see R v Telford Justices ex p. Badhan (1991) 93 Cr. App. R. 171 at 179. True, a developing concern with and, understanding of sexual abuse is reflected in a growing experience of cases featuring delays that at one time would have been regarded as intolerable. That experience and the underlying problem of unreported abuse has served to encourage experienced judges to be more liberal in their concept of what is possible by way of a fair trial in the face of delay, but, as we think there is a price, namely safeguarding the Defendant from unacceptable resultant prejudice by a "proactive" approach in terms of directions. Before a conviction following such a trial can appear to be safe, it is necessary to be satisfied that the judge has confronted the jury with the fact of delay and its potential impact on the formulation and conduct of the defence and on the Prosecution's fulfilment of the burden of proof. "
That proposition was subsequently endorsed by this Court in R v Lloyd (unreported) 30th November 1998 and in R v M (2000) 1 Cr. App R 49, albeit that by way of both these latter decisions there was emphasis upon the need to tailor the summing up to fit the particular circumstances of a case. It is our reluctant view that in the event the summing up failed to meet up to the challenge posed by the exceptional delays.
"Now, in this case, although the complainants are now adult women, they were giving evidence (several inaudible words) about things that had happened when they were much younger. In some cases, they were very young indeed and although there is no rule of law which requires the evidence of children (inaudible) that is supported in (inaudible), you will need to have a little care when you are dealing with the evidence of children, particularly young children, talking about things that happened a very long time ago, because experience tends to show that in any particular set of circumstances, an adult might have reacted rather differently to a child and for instance, it may be that an adult will make a particular point in remembering the date or the time, the sequence or what day it was. Things of that sort, whereas of course a child is sometimes more alert to what is actually happening and do not pay a great deal of attention to detail; days, dates, times, what they were wearing and things of that sort and what might seem to be a rather irrelevant detail to them, so bear that in mind and also when there are discrepancies, particularly when you are dealing with cases that are very old and these are very old, historic allegations memories can play tricks and sometimes fail altogether.
It may be that that means the defendant will be unable to remember details but it also means that witnesses might not be able to recall all the details with exactitude and remember when you are dealing with young children who may not recall detail or see the importance of detail, but as I say, recall the bits that matter to them.
It is also right, perhaps to have in mind when you are dealing with something that happened they say when they were very young with the ability of children to complain to authority because whilst these ladies can stand here and say:" Why didn't you scream and shout or why didn't you complain?" When you are very young and the person is at least, sort of in authority and also much older that the (several inaudible words) it is sometimes rather more difficult to complain about it. At least it may appear to them to be rather difficult for them to complain.
If you find that there are discrepancies, look for an explanation and decide whether the explanation for the discrepancies is so fundamental that you have to disregard all of the evidence or of there is a reasonable explanation for why there is a discrepancy or (several inaudible words)."
He returned to the topic at 28B and thereafter to 29E his summing up broadly follows the JSB Specimen Direction:
"Now, the last principal matter of law is the question of delay. These things, if they happened, happened a long time ago, and you have to be aware of the real danger of prejudice to a defendant. You have to keep that in your minds when you are considering the case about the length of time has gone by, and as I said earlier, memories fade and so on with the passage of time.
You are entitled first of all to consider why the matters did not come to light sooner. Does that reflect badly on the complainants, or is there an explanation which you find satisfactory? You have had the three ladies give their various reasons in this case, ranging from concern about the father, and in one case, I think (several inaudible words) until the father dies (several inaudible words) because of upsetting him and possibly making him ill, or trying to shut out what had happened and get on with life. There are a variety of explanations (several inaudible words), but you are entitled to look at those and see what you make of those explanations. Do they reflect upon the reliability or not? Do you find the explanations acceptable?
You should also make allowance for the fact that from the Defendant's point of view, the longer that goes by between the incident, whatever it was, and coming to court, may reflect, it may make it more difficult for him to answer the complaint made. If you think about it for a moment, if you were in that position and had to think back 20 years or more as to what might have happened, you might find yourselves in some difficulty being able to explain what was happening, and possibly even remembering enough to form a defence, and obviously (several inaudible words) if you now cannot remember the dates so long after, it might have been possible (several inaudible words). You cannot do that now, because you cannot remember the date."
He then concluded this topic with a short paragraph at 29F:
"I do not think any particular difficulty has been raised on behalf of the defendant in this case, but an alibi (several inaudible words) and there might have been I suppose, some sort of documentary evidence 20 years ago that no longer exists, so bear all that in mind when you consider this case, and ensure that this defendant is not prejudiced in any way by the passage of time. This is how you deal with that (inaudible)."
(a) At no stage did the judge draw the jury's attention to the potential impact of delay upon the burden and standard of proof. It is rigorous attention to the latter that ultimately secures a trial that is fair: it is for the Prosecution to surmount the impact of delay upon the cogency of the evidence.
(b) In the passage cited from 19F the judge effectively downplayed the burden and standard of proof. Confronted by "discrepancies" in the Prosecution evidence the jury was seemingly only to regard such discrepancies as having an impact upon the strength of the Prosecution case if there was no reasonable explanation: a warning that all witnesses might have recollection difficulties due to the delays was obviously justifiable but only in the context of the burden and standard of proof. Further, it is unfortunate that the passage is almost entirely about the potential evidential problem of the complainants: the reference to the Appellant is cursory and there is no specific reference to his witnesses.
(c) Turning to the passage starting at 28B we have two comments. First, in dealing with explanations for the delay the judge did not pick up from the Specimen Directions the potential for a reference to the conduct of the Appellant. It was surely germane to point out that this was not a case in which silence had been maintained by way of ongoing threats. On the evidence after 1988 he had made one abortive approach to S's home in the aftermath of her mother's funeral and that was it. Second, it is unfortunate that his reading of the Specimen Direction stopped short of its last sentence,, "Even if you believe that the delay in this case is understandable, if you decide that because of this the Defendant has been placed at a real disadvantage in putting forward his case, take that into account in his favour when deciding if the Prosecution have made you sure of his guilt." The burden of proof point was there and it was not taken up.
(d) The final paragraph starting at 29F cannot be justified. The problem with increasing familiarity with and acceptance of historic sex abuse cases is that there is a temptation to become blasι about the passage of time. It is worth pausing a moment to reflect upon the significance of the early complaints of offending against S and Michelle: they dated back to 1969 before TB was born and, for that matter, before the introduction of decimalisation. The timescale is huge and the conduct of the defence must have difficulties, and arguably the less obvious the more dangerous. Further, even allowing for a standard of preparation and presentation that could not have matched that which has been deployed before us, it is difficult to believe that enquiries would not have served to identify a list of concerns more specific and cogent than the loss of "some sort of documentary evidence". Indeed, as we point out in the next paragraph, a clear example of potential prejudice had emerged in the course of the evidence. Overall we cannot justify a final paragraph that effectively denigrates the potential impact of delay the reverse was needed.
"She agreed that she had had the termination of pregnancy, and she was asked how could it be JS's child because by March she would have been a lot more pregnant than she is saying, and she said there is no doubt in her mind it was, but she is a bit confused about the dates."
We have acknowledged that the judge was not shown the relevant documentation, hence a re-examination by him and a summing-up on the matter which respectively served effectively to leave open the paternity issue and to by-pass relevance to delay.
"But, it is something that you must take into account in his favour and you do that in two ways. First of all, when somebody gives evidence like this defendant has done, and called evidence as with anyone of good character, it can support his credibility. That means it is something that perhaps you can take into account when deciding whether you believe his evidence.
Secondly, because he is now 63 and has no convictions on his record or no cautions, it may be and you are entitled to take this view that he is less likely to start committing this sort of offence now, although of course, you have to bear in mind that although 63 now, the time that the young ladies were talking about was (inaudible) years ago. Nevertheless, that is something you are entitled to consider here."
As to the first limb, the words "something that perhaps you can take into account" are unacceptably diffident by reference to the JSB Direction, viz "it is a factor which you should take into account." As to the second limb, we comment as follows. The opening words reflected a reading from the JSB Direction viz., "In the second place the fact that he is of good character may mean that he is less likely to commit this crime now." Given the Appellant's age and history, this was self-evident and for the jury's purpose effectively irrelevant. It is unfortunate that the judge did not pick up the addendum to this Specimen Direction viz., "In cases where it is necessary to give the Delay direction, see direction 37, para 4." Reference to the latter serves to supply a precedent particularly germane to the instant case as serving to identify the relevance of good character for second limb purpose. "Having regard to what you know about this defendant and in particular the [ ] years since the date of the alleged offence and that no similar allegation has been made against him you may think he is entitled to ask you to give considerable/more than usual weight to his good character when deciding whether the Prosecution has satisfied you of his guilt." Obviously a mere failure to adopt a Specimen Direction cannot in itself found an appeal, but the inadequacy of this truncated second limb direction does serve, in our judgment, to contribute to our finding that the delay directions were seriously flawed.
"Now, in the course of the case, because these charges were specimens, you have heard other matters which are not the subject of charges; that things that happened, for instance on more than one occasion.
You heard for instance evidence from I think it was A that on occasions the defendant would dance with her in a rather provocative manner. That of course is not the subject of a charge. These other matters are admitted so that you can see the whole picture and you can see whether it helps you to decide the whole case, and in particular what you have heard about the defendant for instance dancing provocatively and committing other matters that are not actually charged on this indictment amount to or might amount to what the law calls reprehensible behaviour; another sort of misconduct. "
The immediate concerns are twofold: what "evidence of, or a disposition towards, misconduct" (see s.98) is referred to; and whether a bad character direction was justified. As to the first concern, it is only "provocative dancing" with A that is particularised and from the subsequent review of the evidence we learn that this occurred when she was 14 or 15, that is in 1977 or 1978. Given the delay, given the lack of particularity (and hence of any basis to assess the weight and significance of whatever further allegations are referred to), we query whether any direction was justified other than a direction to attach no adverse weight to these matters. If we are wrong in that the evidence was more cogent than appears from the summing up, then we are satisfied that that which the judge was referring to should have been fully deployed in terms of the respective cases of Prosecution and Defence with directions sufficient to comply with s. 101 et seq. built upon such. Overall this contributes to our concerns about the summing up.
GENERALLY