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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 >> Campbell, R. v [2009] EWCA Crim 1076 (12 June 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2009/1076.html Cite as: [2009] Crim LR 822, [2009] EWCA Crim 1076 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM
CENTRAL CRIMINAL COURT, LONDON
HHJ ROBERTS QC
T2006/7081
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE HEDLEY
and
MR JUSTICE HICKINBOTTOM
____________________
R |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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JASON CAMPBELL |
Appellant |
____________________
Mr Bernard Finucane QC and Mr Louis Mably for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 23rd April 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Aikens:
The Facts
The Trial
The Summing up
The Grounds of Appeal
Submissions of counsel: the overall view
Ground 7: Was there a misdirection by the judge because he suggested that there was some burden on the appellant to explain why witnesses of fact or expert witnesses were not called?
"…….
18. There is no simple answer to the problem and much depends on the judge's sense of fairness in the particular situation. In our minds, (as of those of the Court in Wright) the dangers of making adverse comments and of failing to warn the jury not to speculate will usually be the paramount consideration. On the other hand, now that a defendant's failure to give an explanation in interview or his failure to disclose his case in advance may be the subject of comment, the case for permitting comment on failure to call an available and obviously relevant witness may be stronger. The absence of power to comment would be an encouragement to dishonest evidence naming persons alleged to know of relevant events, if they can be named in the certain knowledge that the jury will be directed not to speculate on why they have not been called.
19. If comment is made, while we note the logical force of Sir John Smith's comment that the issue has no bearing on that of burden of proof, a reference to the burden of proving the case remaining on the prosecution may in some situations be appropriate. Moreover a judge who is proposing to make adverse comment upon the failure to call a witness should first invite submissions from Counsel in the absence of the jury.
……."
"…… No doubt there is a whole range of possible explanations why any particular witness may not have been called and that is the reason why judges normally advise juries, and I certainly advise you in this case, to concentrate on the evidence that has been given and not spend too much time worrying about why other witnesses have not been called or what they might have said if they had been. … …"
"…… Mr Finucane asked Mr Campbell a bit more about Andrea and it transpired that she was a bit more than girls he knew. During the week or so after Christmas 2005 she had sent him texts from which it is clear that she was quite keen on him and wanted him to come round to her house on his own in the evening, her number was in his phone books. Mr Finucane and Mr Goldberg of course comment quite strongly on Mr Campbell's failure to call Andrea to confirm his account of the incident at her house. They suggest that if his explanation for the residue getting on his glove had been true Andrea would have been called to confirm it and she has not been. You know how you should approach points of that kind. ……"
"…… We know of course that an expert in the same field as Mr Phillips was instructed by Mr Campbell's solicitors. You may think it is a pretty safe inference (a) that Mr Campbell's expert will have done the same sort of field study as Mr Phillips. He might even have been allowed into Maria's house which Mr Phillips was not, and (b) that if his findings had been significantly different from Mr Phillips's, he would have been called to tell us so. ……"
"….. Mr Mostyn points out that it would not have been in the least unusual for Mr Campbell to be visiting his sister's and making or receiving calls transmitted by Windsor House sector 1. He relies on the call data for other days, which are conveniently summarised in the schedules at section 22. We have the call data from Mr Campbell's phone for 23 days, between 26th December and 17th January. As the schedules show, on ten of those 23 days the phone made or received calls transmitted by Windsor House.
The prosecution and Mr Goldberg of course place a good deal of reliance on Mr Campbell's failure to call the two witnesses who should have been able to confirm the two key parts of his account if they were true; Jermaine, who should have been able to confirm the reason for Mr Campbell driving from Camberwell to Streatham and then up to Brixton during the afternoon; and Maria who should have been able to confirm that she lent Mr Campbell £40 that day, and that he collected it from her house in her absence. It is unlikely, say the prosecution and Mr Goldberg, that Maria would have forgotten that if it really happened, so why has she not been called? ……"
"……Another two witnesses who Mr Finucane and Mr Goldberg suggest ought to have been able to confirm the all-important part of Mr Campbell's evidence about the loan, if it was true, were his mother and his girlfriend Leanne. If Mr Campbell was telling the truth, the arrangement for the loan was made at Leanne's flat that morning when Maria brought her mother round to collect the baby, yet Mr Campbell's mother was no called and Leanne's arrangement for a loan, was actually read to us as part of the prosecution case. It was of course open to the defence to ask for Leanne to be called to give evidence in the witness box, so that they could put to her in cross-examination that that morning Maria had arranged to lend money to Mr Campbell, but that was not done.
I told you earlier how, as a matter of law, you ought to approach this question of drawing inferences from the fact that a potentially relevant witness has not been called, and you will decide for yourselves whether to draw any inference from the failure to call these witnesses. You will perhaps want to be especially careful about drawing any inference from the fact that Leanne and Mr Campbell's mother have not been called. ……"
"……. Mr Campbell in the witness box and Mr Mostyn in his closing speech pointed out that following the service o Mr Campbell's defence case statement, the police went to see Maria and she made a statement to them. Mr Mostyn says, well, if that statement had contradicted Mr Campbell's case, the prosecution could have called her as a witness. You may think it is a pretty safe inference that Maria's statement to the police did support Mr Campbell's account, but that of course does not tell us whether it was a true statement or a false one designed to help her brother out of trouble. Her statement, not only have we not seen it, but it is not of course evidence in the case. If she had been called to give her account in the witness box, that would have been evidence and you would have assessed her and her evidence. But she was not called and so we have not had the opportunity of seeing her or hearing what she might have said or how well it might have stood up to cross-examination. You may think it is actually unrealistic to have expected the prosecution to call her if she made a statement supporting Mr Campbell's account, which the prosecution would therefore be saying is untrue. They would hardly have called her as a witness themselves. If she was going to be called by anyone, realistically it would have been Mr Campbell. But he has not called her and, as I say, it is a matter for you to decide what inference to draw from that, if any. ……"
Ground 8: Did the judge wrongly encourage speculation by the jury that there might be further expert cell-site evidence concerning the call at 6.26pm?
"…… Now, the urinator, whoever he was, will have course have walked a rather different, greater distance and in a different direction from Joseph [to which the judge had just referred]. In fact, he will have walked around the building to the side which is actually nearer the Furzedown sector 2, if you look at the map. You might conclude that while he was urinating the building, the block of flats, would have been between himself and Windsor House sector 1. And so, say the prosecution, the evidence certainly fits their case that Mr Campbell was at the car parat and was indeed the urinator. ……"
Mr Larkin does not dispute any of statements in that passage either.
"…[the appellant] must have been travelling north up the A23, in other words away from his sister's. Mr Finucane makes that suggestion because Furzedown Sector 2, which transmitted the end part of that call, is northwest of Windsor House. But if [the call at 18.26] was made when [the appellant] was travelling north on his way back from Maria's, it is perhaps a little surprising that his next call four and a half minutes later, that is call 256, was transmitted again by Windsor House Sector 1, instead of being transmitted by one of the other cell-sites further north, which you might have expected. So that is obviously an important argument for you to consider". (volume XI pages 141G to142B).
"…the jury might very well ask themselves, is there anywhere along the route that Mr Campbell says that he travelled that day which is actually covered by Furzedown sector 2? We do not have any evidence about that at the moment, but it is actually not too late". (volume XI page 3C – D).
"…. A point that has occurred to me overnight, and I do not know whether we are going to be able to do anything about this because we are at a very late stage in the trial, but it would be interesting to know, where if at all, along the route which Mr Campbell says he took on this particular occasion, your signals might be picked up by the Furzedown sector 2. I have raised with counsel whether it might be possible even at this late stage to get somebody from Mr Phillips's office and somebody from the defence expert's office actually to do a check by actually going along the route and testing the strength of the signals from the various cell sites as you go along, to see if there is anywhere, possibly more than one point, where the signal from the Furzedown, sector 2 might be sufficiently strong that it might pick up any call that you make. I do not promise we will be able to get an answer from that. It struck me that might be something you might like to know if we can find the answer to it. ……"
"…… I am not sure myself whether there is anything for either side in this. It may be that there is not and it may be that any points arising out of it are fairly evenly matched and counsel take the view it is best to leave matters as they stand but I think it is an important area and I think Mr Wrack in particular needs to discuss with Mr Campbell whether he would prefer Mr Phillips to be called or whether he would prefer to leave matters as they stand and it may be that other counsel have an interest and they may want to consider their positions. I think realistically it is going to take an hour for counsel to see their clients and discuss those matters. I am sorry to hold you up (inaudible) but I am sure you will appreciate it is potentially quite an important area because if Mr. Wrack would like Mr Phillips to be called then we will go into exactly what he found, otherwise we will leave matters as they stand. So I think, Mr Wrack, the most important thing is that you have as much time as you need in order to discuss with Mr. Campbell which way it will be. ……."
Ground 9: Did the judge put the appellant at a disadvantage by suggesting that he might be recalled to deal with the issue of who made the phone call to Radhika on Springer's mobile phone at 17.39 hours and did this cause prejudice to the appellant when he was not recalled?
"…… One of the jurors with an eagle eye has spotted something that I d not think anybody has noticed before, and that is, if you look in the combined schedule at page 12 of 24 – that is page 34 in the overall numbering of the big bundle – there is a call 195 at 17.39, made by Mr Springer or on Mr Springer's phone, and that is at a time when it seems Mr Springer's phone is on the move between the Brixton area and the Tulse Hill area, because by call 198 further down this page, when call 198 ends it has reached that sector 2 of Morrison House. The number which Mr Springer's phone is ringing at 17.39 is Radhika's. Now, we do not have any evidence about that, but all we know about Radhika at the moment is that she was Mr Campbell's lady friend. I think I had better leave that with counsel as to whether anybody wishes to call any further evidence about that, or to make any further suggestions to the jury as to what that might be about. At the moment there does not seem any obvious reason why Mr Springer should have been ringing Mr Campbell's lady friend Radhika. So I will just leave that with counsel to consider it……"
"…… Well, I can simply say in front of the jury, as I indicated earlier, I do not intend to call Mr Campbell. He cannot meaningfully deal with a call that is made when he is not there, as his evidence has clearly been. He was asked questions by Mr Finucane. It was on 16 January…he was obviously asked a question of whether Radhika knew Daniel Springer, and the answer from Mr Campbell in cross – examination was "I'm not sure whether Radhika knew Daniel Springer. He may have. Me and her never spoke about Springer. ...... "
Renewed application: ground 5: Failure to sum up fairly the cell-site evidence.
Application to rely on proposed new ground 7A: that the judge reversed the burden on the issue of "bad character".
"…… It is of course entirely a matter for you to decide whether you accept Mr Campbell's explanations for those two matters. If you accept his evidence that he was simply keeping the firearm for someone else and that the residue got on to his glove while he was examining someone else's gun out of curiosity, you will no doubt conclude that those two matters do not take the prosecution any further. If you reject his explanation and if you think that the loaded firearm was his and was being kept for his own use and that the residue got on to his glove when he fired either that gun or another gun, it would be open to you to conclude that Mr Campbell is a gunman as the prosecution and Mr Springer say he is and to treat that as something that offers some support for the prosecution's case against him as regards this robbery and murder. It can not of course on its own prove him guilty of these crimes. At best it can add another fairly small piece of the jigsaw which the prosecution are trying to make into a complete picture. You would be entitled to consider it along with all the rest of the evidence. You would be entitled to conclude that the people who played the main roles in this robbery were serious criminals. People with access to firearms and ammunition, people who were prepared to use them t commit serious crimes like this one. The field of possible candidates is therefore narrowed if one borrows an expression of DS Conway: "to people of that ilk", but unfortunately there are considerable number of people of that ilk in South London so even if Mr Campbell fails into that category as a possible candidate for one of the robbers on this occasion, so do a considerable number of other young men of his age and background. ……"
Application to rely on proposed new ground 7B: the judge failed to give a "Lucas" direction specifically in relation to the appellant's explanation of how the gun came to be under the floor boards and/or how there was firearms residue on one of his gloves.
Conclusion