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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 >> Neill, R v [2013] EWCA Crim 2617 (17 December 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2013/2617.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Crim 2617 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE CRANSTON
MRS JUSTICE LANG DBE
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R E G I N A | ||
v | ||
JASON NEILL |
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Mr J Taylor appeared on behalf of the Crown
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Crown Copyright ©
"You see the Crown case is here that the Defendant in effects started, I use the word grooming. Now I will explain that in a moment. Grooming [E] from the summer of 2011. The Crown are saying that a person who sexually assaults a young child can commence by touching apparently innocent parts of a body but whilst two of them are engaged upon innocent pass time, in this case the computer. It is plainly you may think a child's mind otherwise occupied, the touching to start with is not in an overtly sexual place."
So he goes on in what can only be described as putting forcefully the case on behalf of the Crown. He continued:
"It is, the Crown say, in effect an acclimatisation of a victim and to quote them from their opening to you, 'to push the boundaries' as the Crown put it, 'whilst trust and friendship continue.'"
He then continues:
"Would this young girl who is making on the defence account, a deliberately manipulative, lying allegation, commenced by a concerned complaint to [B] in June or July 2011? She would then have to be devious enough to make the complaint in January and further to allege the event was not whilst she was alone with the Defendant when no-one else could say what has happened, but actually allege as she does and has throughout, when she was there with other people around and indeed [H] being on the Defendant's lap.
The Crown suggests, it is a matter for you if you are going to making this allegation against that background, why would you not make more serious and you may think the question that [A] asked on this was important?"
So it goes on for another page.
"The defence in effect say would a married man of good character with children sexually assault this 13 year old under the very noses of his wife and children indeed even with his own son on his lap? If she was being abused, why would she continue to come round so often and go to the very place where she knows he will abuse her? Would she, even though young, have been going on Twitter and if you find it was her, to vote in I think Star quiz, so soon after she was upset about what happened?"
So he did in short form summarise the case for the defence. He then, after that opening of about 10 pages, as, we have pointed out, run through the case for the prosecution and run through the complaints that were made. He reminded the jury, having directed them that what the mother said about the truth of the girl was not evidence in support of the prosecution unnecessarily reminded them of those passages when the girls' mother spoke of how she had found her daughter to be truthful. That detracted from the correct direction that they could not use that as support for the prosecution. On the next day he did run in great detail through the evidence given by the defendant, by his wife and by other witnesses. So he did balance the unnecessarily long recitation of the evidence given by the Crown by a similarly lengthy and unnecessary lengthy running through of the evidence of the defence.