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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 >> Miller v R [2010] EWCA Crim 1578 (09 July 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2010/1578.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Crim 1578 |
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ON APPEAL FROM WOOD GREEN CROWN COURT
His Honour Judge Pawlak
T20080986
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE TOMLINSON
and
MR JUSTICE DAVIS
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Colin Anthony Miller |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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R |
Respondent |
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Robin Miric (instructed by the CPS) for the Crown
Hearing dates : 24/06/2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Leveson :
"There is no minimum number of events necessary to demonstrate such a propensity. The fewer the number of convictions the weaker is likely to be the evidence of propensity. A single previous conviction for an offence of the same description or category will often not show propensity. But it may do so where, for example, it shows a tendency to unusual behaviour or where its circumstances demonstrate probative force in relation to the offence charged. … Circumstances demonstrating probative force are not confined to those sharing striking similarity."
"Mr Riza asked me to confine myself to saying whether the conviction for rape was capable of demonstrating a propensity and the essence of that rape was the taking advantage sexually of a 16 year old girl against her will. This case concerns a younger girl, again taken advantage of, if the allegation is true. The conviction for rape demonstrates a clear propensity for sex with a young girl in circumstances where for whatever reason she is not consenting. It may also show an appetite for such unlawful sex. It is therefore clearly capable of demonstrating a propensity."
"offending by a young person is frequently a phase which passes fairly rapidly and therefore the reaction to it needs to be kept well balanced …"
"You are entitled to consider why these matters did not come to light sooner. The defence say that it is because they are not true. They say that the allegations are entirely fabricated, untrue and they say that had the allegations been true you would have expected a complaint to be made earlier and certainly once either defendant … was out of the way .. of the complainant. The defence say that she could have complained to her mother or her grandmother before she left the country or to her mother on the plane, or to the headmaster of the school … or to the social worker who came on one occasion to speak to her (although again bear in mind there is no evidence that the complainant was ever given any contact details or instructions as to how to make such a complaint, or that she could have complained sooner to a family or extended family member once she was safe in Jamaica.
On the other hand the prosecution say that it is not as simple as that. When children are abused they are often confused about what is happening to them and why it is happening. They are children and if a family member is abusing them in his own home or their own home, to whom can they complain? A sexual assault, if it occurs, will usually occur secretly. A child may have some idea that what is going on is wrong but very often children feel that they are to blame in some way, notwithstanding circumstances which an outsider would not consider for one moment them to be at blame or at fault. A child can be inhibited for a variety of reasons from speaking out. They may be fearful that they may not be believed, a child's word against a mature adult, or they may be scared of the consequences or fearful of the effect upon relationships which they have come to know, or their only relationship.
The difficulties, you may think, are compounded in the family situation where they involve a family member for whom the feelings of the child may be ambivalent and uncertain. The child may not like the abuse if it happens but there may be aspects of the abuser, if there is one, that cause the child to view them with some degree of affection. The relatives may be the only relatives the child has. The fallout from any disclosures can be unpredictable and sometimes very worrying, particularly if the child does not believe that she will be believed. If the adult has an imposing personality or is someone of who [sic] they are perhaps afraid or who may have overborne them or who has power over them or who may even have expressly warned them not to tell, these are all matters which could inhibit disclosure.
Experience shows that people react differently to the trauma of a serious sexual assault where it has happened. There is no one classic response when it happens and I speak not only of children. Some may be compliant and submissive, some may disassociate themselves from what is happening; they may blank it out, they may freeze, others may protest and resist, they may scream and shout. Some may complain to the first person they see while others may feel shame and shock and not complain for some time. A late complaint does not necessarily mean it is a false complaint and that is a matter for you to consider in the context of all the evidence in this case.
If a child or children are abused they are often subject to very mixed emotions and that may explain delay in making a complaint. Whether any of that applies here is very much a matter for you. There are sometimes in life, sometimes earlier, sometimes later, moments which can trigger a disclosure when suddenly it is easier to reveal what Mr Miric called "a dirty secret" when the need arises to disclose and speak out because of the situation in which they may find themselves. Never, you may think, an easy thing to do and you may think requiring some courage to do so.
Now let me make it clear that I make these observations to you not as directions of law but as things which in common sense and common experience and with a knowledge of the world you may like to consider in assessing whether there is some sinister or innocent explanation for the delay and whether it affects the honesty and truthfulness or accuracy of a child's evidence."
"The experience of judges who try sexual offences is that an image of stereotypical behaviour and demeanour by a victim or the perpetrator of a non-consensual offence such as rape held by some members of the public can be misleading and capable of leading to injustice. That experience has been gained by judges, expert in the field, presiding over many such trials during which guilt has been established but in which the behaviour and demeanour of complainants and defendants, both during the incident giving rise to the charge and in evidence, has been widely variable. Judges have, as a result of their experience, in recent years adopted the course of cautioning juries against applying stereotypical images how an alleged victim or an alleged perpetrator of a sexual offence ought to have behaved at the time, or ought to appear while giving evidence, and to judge the evidence on its intrinsic merits. This is not to invite juries to suspend their own judgement but to approach the evidence without prejudice."
"The judge is entitled to make comments as to the way evidence is to be approached particularly in areas where there is a danger of a jury coming to an unjustified conclusion without an appropriate warning. This was the reasoning behind the directions suggested in Turnbull in relation to identification and Lucas in relation to the treatment of lies. We think that cases where the defendant raises the issue of delay as undermining the credibility of a complainant fall into a similar category save clearly that the need for comment is in this instance to ensure fairness to the complainant. But any comment must be uncontroversial. It is no part of the judge's task to put before the jury Dr. Mason's learning [who had delivered a lecture on the topic to the Judicial Studies Board] without her having been called as a witness. However, the fact the trauma of rape can cause feelings of shame and guilt which might inhibit a woman from making a complaint about rape is sufficiently well-known to justify a comment to that effect. The suggested direction ... provides an example in very general terms of an appropriate form of directions which should be tailored to the facts of the case. In the present case, the judge was entitled to add to that general comment, the particular feelings of shame and embarrassment which may arise when the allegation is of sexual assault by a partner. He was also entitled to remind the jury of the way in which the complaint in fact emerged, as explained by the complainant herself."