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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 >> Nicholson v R. [2012] EWCA Crim 1568 (12 July 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2012/1568.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Crim 1568 |
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ON APPEAL FROM
HHJ Milford QC sitting at Newcastle-upon-Tyne Crown Court
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE LLOYD JONES
and
THE RECORDER OF BIRMINGHAM (HH Judge William Davis QC)
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GAVIN NICHOLSON |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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REGINA |
Respondent |
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N Campbell QC (instructed by CPS - Special Crime Division) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 29 June 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Pitchford :
The indictment
Count 1: | On 13 March 2007, sexual assault of a woman, to whom we shall refer as SG, by touching, contrary to section 3 Sexual Offences Act 2003. |
Count 2: | On 8 October 2007, sexual assault of a woman, to whom we shall refer as JH, by touching. |
Count 3: | On 16 June 2008, sexual assault of a woman, to whom we shall refer as JU, by touching. |
Count 4: | On 23 June 2008, assault by penetration of a woman, to whom we shall refer to as LR, contrary to section 2 Sexual Offences Act 2003. |
Count 5: | On 11 September 2008 sexual assault of a woman, to whom we shall refer to as ES, by touching. |
After a trial between 27 June and 19 July 2011 the jury returned verdicts of not guilty upon counts 1 and 2 and unanimous verdicts of guilty upon counts 3, 4 and 5. The appellant was sentenced by the trial judge to a term of 8 years imprisonment upon count 4, and 5 years imprisonment upon counts 3 and 5 all concurrent.
The evidence
Expert medical evidence
Ground 1: count 3, submission of no case to answer
Ground 2: cross-admissibility directions to the jury
"the mere fact that the prosecution disproved misperception in one or more of the patients does not increase the likelihood that the remainder have not suffered misperception. In this sense, the issue can be likened to one of causation. In that sense, it is a different issue to that normally encountered in that, in the normal case, there is no credible medical reason for innocence which the jury has to consider in coming to its verdict."
Furthermore, Mr Macdonald objected that although the evidence was that false memories such as those asserted in the present case were rare, no statistical evidence was tendered by the prosecution to demonstrate the degree of improbability of this cluster of 'false' complaints. For that reason the jury was not provided with the tools with which to assess the probative value of the coincidence when making their judgment of the evidence of any particular complainant.
"First, he accepted that evidence on one count was relevant and probative in another to prove that the deaths of some of them were not the result of a rare medical phenomenon, i.e. naturally occurring hypoglycaemia in a non-diabetic patient …"
Nevertheless, the court accepted the appellant's case that [65] "statistically speaking [the rarity of the naturally occurring condition] would not alter the odds of any one individual case being a naturally occurring phenomenon." It is the acceptance of this proposition by the court in Norris on which Mr MacDonald relies in support of his argument that the judge should not have permitted the jury to treat the counts 3 - 5 (and SK) evidence as mutually supportive upon the issue whether any one complainant was describing a true or a false memory. It is therefore of some importance to ascertain the reasons for the court's rejection of Mr Norris' first ground of appeal.
"77. Clearly it cannot follow, either as a matter of logic or probability, that because it would be "extraordinary" to have five cases of hypoglycaemia resulting from natural causes in so small an area and so short a space of time, therefore it is evidence to demonstrate that it is either certain or more likely that all of the five cases were the result of non-natural causes. Such a line of reasoning would be wrong in terms of legal analysis and, we suspect, must also [be] wrong in terms of scientific or probability analysis. It was not the conclusion that Professor Ferner or Dr Kroker was suggesting by their evidence. We are satisfied that each was simply indicating that, based on their experience, it would be quite extraordinary to have five cases of naturally occurring hypoglycaemia in the circumstances postulated by the defence." [original emphasis]
"78. … If, as we must assume they did, the jury dutifully followed the judge's directions on the issue of proof of the cause of hypoglycaemia in each case, then they could not have considered the particular evidence of Professor Ferner and Dr Kroker we have highlighted as supporting a conclusion that it therefore followed that in all five cases the cause of the hypoglycaemia must have been non-natural.
79. Thus we conclude that the direction that the judge gave on the "cross admissibility" of evidence concerning the cause of the hypoglycaemia in each of the five victims cannot validly be criticised.… " [original emphasis]
(1) Any one of the four complainants was not the victim of false memory; and
(2) All of the four complainants were not victims of false memory.
In our judgment the conclusion of the Court in Norris at paragraphs 77 - 79 supports Mr MacDonald's argument as to proposition (2) but it does not support his argument as to proposition (1).
"…it is necessary to consider each count separately and return separate verdicts. It is not permissible just to lump the evidence together and look at the global picture and say, 'Well he must be guilty.'"
"The defence case is that none of these ladies is lying; each is suffering from a false memory caused by the anaesthetic, either a dream or a hallucination or a misperception of an event which did occur. When considering the evidence of any one of these three complainants and the suggestion that she is suffering from a false memory you are entitled to consider the evidence of the other two complainants and of [SK] and ask yourselves: what are the chances of three other women who are unconnected and have all been patients at the Spire by coincidence also making similar allegations by reason of false memory against the same source; the greater the number of the allegations and the greater their similarity the less likely that a coincidence has occurred."
"If you choose to adopt this approach but you have already rejected the evidence of a particular complainant or [SK] you should ignore her evidence for the purpose of proving the guilt of the defendant … If you concluded that the memory of a particular complainant may have been false you are entitled to take that into account in favour of the defendant when considering whether the allegation of any other complainant arose as a result of false memory."
"You must not attach undue weight to the proved tendency or let it dominate your mind; you must decide the case on all the evidence relating to a particular count which includes the defence evidence. Although I have described these approaches as the first and second approach you do not have to apply them in that order and you do not have to apply either of them if you do not wish to do so."