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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 >> Callum v R [2010] EWCA Crim 1325 (16 June 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2010/1325.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Crim 1325 |
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ON APPEAL FROM
Central Criminal Court before HH Judge Worsley QC and a jury
between June 23 and July 10 2008
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE PITCHFORD
MRS JUSTICE RAFFERTY
and
HIS HONOUR JUDGE GOLDSTONE QC
____________________
JERMAINE CALLUM |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
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REGINA |
Respondent |
____________________
Duncan Atkinson (instructed by CPS) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 20th May 2010
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Pitchford :
The background facts
Identification Evidence
"I was so traumatised that night. I did recognise the gunman on the night itself. I thought about it and realised that I had seen him the day before, 1 October. It was late on the night of 3 October. I thought that I realised when I had seen him. I was thinking about it between 3 and 6 October. It was on the first visit to hospital before I was seen by the police. I was just thinking about it. Before I saw the police, I knew at the back of my brain I knew it was JJ but I was more worried about what had happened to my brother. I did not tell the police about my suspicions. I wanted to be sure myself."
"I identified no-one. I picked out two people as close, as possibilities. I did not want to be involved. ... In my brain, they resembled the gunmen. I had to pick someone. I was not 100% sure."
Judge's Ruling
Appellant's Grounds of Appeal
Halton
"So far as the conversation in the car, driven by DC Hooper back from the parade is concerned, on 6 October, that officer's evidence was that they had spoken in the back as if they all appeared to know JJ and that was something denied by this witness. They point out that, at the parade, it was a 90% qualification on the positive identification that he made."
Temple
"First, that he is the brother of Robel, of course, and would be more upset than anybody else perhaps at the scene; that he agreed that he had been smoking some form of cannabis that night; Mr Spens submitted it is too unsatisfactory for you to rely on his evidence at all; he pointed to the description he gave about moving from the bottom stair to the door and to claim to have the face to face meeting with the gunman – there was no reference to that when he spoke to the police soon after the event; that he did not in fact realise who it was because he said to the neighbour Mr Goncalez, "I am going to kill someone if I find out who it is", and that he told the police woman, Newman, he saw that one had a gun and he could not have seen that. This goes to show that he is unreliable and that he has said to the police that he had seen a black boy, "whom I don't know and I don't think I would recognise him again". On 6 October, of course, he did not pick him out at the parade, and thereafter he was in the car when Jason was talking about "I picked out JJ as the shooter", and therefore his mind was influenced, suggests the defence, by things he has learned by 2 October, and it is not until 22 October that he is saying to the police in a statement that he is 100% sure it was JJ because he had seen him the day before the shooting."
Application of Section 78 Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984
"... normally preceedings are fair if a jury hears all relevant evidence which either side wishes to place before it, but proceedings may become unfair if, for example, one side is allowed to adduce relevant evidence which, for one reason or another, the other side cannot properly challenge or meet, or where there has been an abuse process, e.g. because evidence had been obtained in deliberate breach of procedures laid down in an official code of practice."
"the trial judge should in the course of summing up to the jury - (a) explain that there had been a breach of the code and how it has arisen and (b) invite the jury to consider the possible effect of that breach. The Court of Appeal has so ruled on many occasions, and we approve those rulings; see for example Quinn [1995] 1 Cr App R 480 at 490F. The terms of the appropriate direction will vary from case to case and breach to breach."
"However, there are at least two situations where a qualified identification may, in appropriate circumstances, be both relevant and probative. First, where altogether the weight of the evidence will still be less than a positive identification, it supports or at least is consistent with other evidence that indicates the defendant committed the crime with which he is charged. Secondly, the explanation for a non or qualified identification may help to place the non or qualified identification in its proper context, and so, for example, show that the other evidence given by the witness may still be correct. Otherwise, a non or qualified identification could be used to attack the credibility of other evidence given by a witness when the explanation for this may show that such an attack is unjustified. In each case it will be for the judge to decide whether the evidence is more prejudicial than relevant and probative bearing in mind the importance of protecting the position of the defendant against unfairness. In this case, as we shall see, part of the case for the prosecution is based on the pattern of identification evidence including the build, the complexion and clothing which the appellant was wearing. Subject to the jury receiving appropriate warnings which were given in this case, the general evidence of the witnesses who saw a man who the prosecution say was the appellant was highly probative."
Argument for the Respondent
Discussion and Conclusion
"Mr Spens submits the defence are significantly disadvantaged in any attempt to explore Holton's purported "90% sure" identification of the defendant, since the identification parade by virtue of his having heard what Aird, another witness, had to say about the correctness or otherwise of the identification. I disagree because it seems to me that Mr Spens is able to explore the fact that although there is a positive identification of his client, it falls short of being 100% sure at the time of the identification. It is a matter for Mr Spens, of course, to decide whether he wishes simply to explore what 90% means and that it clearly means something less than 100% and if the Holton witness is not sure, how could a jury act on his evidence as being sure? Whether he wishes to explore the conversations that took place in the car thereafter is a matter for him, but it seems to me this is prima facie admissible evidence, clearly relevant to the central issue before the jury which will be one of identification, and that the qualification made by Holton is a matter which goes to the weight of the evidence, and I am in no way persuaded that Mr Spens cannot properly represent his client, or that the jury would inevitably reach a conclusion that this is reliable evidence which cannot be tested. It is clearly open to being tested, and if I may say, Mr Spens has some pretty good ammunion with which to attack the reliability of this witness's identification. Accordingly, I rule that it is admissible."
"What happened was that an interview on 3 October 2007 that witness said he did not identify JJ who he knew by sight. On 6 October he did not identify him during an identification procedure. There is evidence that on the same day the officer was driving that witness and others from the identification parade, there was a conversation in the car about the identification of JJ, and on 7 October in answer to questions, that witness purported to identify JJ as the gunman for the first time, saying according to the note in the liaison log, "later on this witness told the officer it was JJ". By 22 October, this witness ... says he is now 100% sure it is JJ, and of course, in his most recent statement of 23 June, he makes clear that it was indeed JJ who he saw going into the block of flats and putting his hand inside his jacket as if to pull something out. ... I am entirely satisfied that there is admissible evidence here which will go before the jury. The defence are able to test that evidence by reference to the significant witness interviews which were recorded at the time, and [are] now in transcript form, the statement of Detective Constable Hooper who overheard the conversation in the car after the identification parade which has been put in writing in the liaison log and there to be used for the purposes of cross-examination, and, of course, the recent statement of Andrew Temple which comes many months after the incident. These can be put to the witness. It does seem to me that bearing all those matters in mind, the evidence is prima facie admissible as to why Andrew Temple did not pick out JJ who he says was responsible when he attended the identification parade. It does also seem to me that this is essentially a matter for the jury to assess, and, accordingly, I rule this evidence is admissible."
"May witnesses who purport to identify Mr Callum have identified him as someone they have seen around the estate but who in fact had no connection with the shooting?"
"You know that the Crown's case is that disclosed in those messages which had clearly been saved on Mr Callum's phone, and they say saved for a purpose, though it is not possible to say what date they were saved, that this describes killing someone and, say the prosecution, this is a statement of intent to do what in fact was done here, namely the killing of someone with the MAC machine gun using 9mm bullets."