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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 >> Bhagchandka v R. [2016] EWCA Crim 700 (22 June 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2016/700.html Cite as: [2016] EWCA Crim 700 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT BLACKFRIARS
MR RECORDER BEDINGFIELD
T20147276
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE WYN WILLIAMS
and
THE RECORDER OF LIVERPOOL
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE GOLDSTONE QC)
(sitting as a Judge of the Court of Appeal (Criminal Division))
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ANIRUDH BHAGCHANDKA |
Applicant |
|
and |
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REGINA |
Respondent |
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Copies of this transcript are available from:
WordWave International Limited
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7414 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Jonathan Ingram (instructed by the Crown Prosecution Service) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 8 June 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice McCombe:
"Q. Did either of them identify themselves to you?
A. Yes. Mr Jindal did.
Q. Mr Jindal gave you his details.
A. Yes. He stated that he was driving the vehicle.
Q. He said he was driving. Can you give us the exact words he said?
A. Yes. He said "I was driving. I don't know how the car ended up there but I was going fast."
Q. "I was driving. I don't know how the car ended up there but I was going fast." The other man who was with Mr Jindal, was he present when that was being said?
A. Yes. He was.
Q. Was he saying anything, doing anything or was he able to listen to what was being said?
A. He could hear what was being said, yes.
Q. Did you have both of their attention as far as you were concerned?
A. Yes.
Q. Did he react when Mr Jindal said that he was driving and he didn't know how the car ended up there and he was going fast?
A. Yes, he did.
Q. Did he say something?
A. He did.
Q. What did he say?
A. He said that he was a passenger in the vehicle. Front seat passenger.
Q. He said he was a, can you give us the exact words, please?
A. He said: "I was sitting in the front passenger seat"."
"A: It was his car, he was talking to the cops, handling everything, so I didn't really come in between, or have anything to do with it.
Q. PC Brooks said that you told him you were the passenger in the vehicle; do you agree with that?
A. No, no, I don't remember him asking me anything about the car, all they were trying to ascertain was if I was hurt or not, since the ambulance was there and to make sure I was alright. That's the only conversations I had with the cops.
Q. Were you given any impression that other than the obvious injuries, anyone was in trouble at the incident?
A. No.
Q. When you have been in the court, you have seen an officer with a notebook with a piece of paper saying that you refused to sign something. Do you remember being offered something to sign?
A. I don't. I didn't even know that you could refuse an officer or not sign something if you said it. I was not aware of – I don't know how the process works and I don't think I would be in a position to refuse to an officer at 4.00 a.m. in the morning to not sign a document.
THE JUDGE: Were you offered a document to sign?
A. No.
THE JUDGE: You were not offered a document to sign?
A. No."
Under cross examination the applicant maintained his denials.
Q. … in his normal, ordinary way of just investigating a road traffic accident. That is a perfectly understandable question to you and he wrote it down as the answer you gave. Do you accept that or not?
A. I did not have a conversation with PC Brooks regarding this subject.
Q. So he made that up?
A. He was speaking to Ayush the whole time, as I said.
Q. PC Brooks' evidence is that outside his own car he talked to both of you, who were both standing right next to him, both together, both within earshot of each other and he asked who was were. Jindal said he was driving and you said, "I was sitting in the front passenger seat" and that is what he wrote down. Are you saying that he lied about that?
A. Jindal must have said whatever – he did not speak directly on any particular event. All of this was being spoken to Mr Ayush at that time."
"PC.S, As you know, PC TELFORD arrested Ayush just over the weekend and I interviewed him on tape in the same way that I interviewed you. He agrees with your account pretty much and he says that you were driving as well and he accepts that he's allowed you to use that vehicle even though the insurance policy only states that he's entitled to drive it. He says that immediately after the accident, before the police arrived, that you had a conversation and he says that you asked him to say that he was driving.
A. BHAG. I was not aware of what was going on. For me to say that he was driving, why?
PC.S. Well I suspect because your driving was sufficiently fast for you to have had that accident. You may have been worried about insurance or not having insurance and you asked him to lie on your behalf because you would be in trouble otherwise. What do you say to that?
A.BHAG. I didn't have a conversation with him.
PC.S. Why is Ayush lying?
A.BHAG. Lots of things happen when this ???? police was there immediately after, a minute or two so …
PC.S. So what? So you're saying that you didn't have time to have a conversation?
A.Bhag. Yeah. We got out, everyone was a little, police came and then we did exactly what we did.
PC.S. I am just trying to understand why your friend Ayush would lie about that.
A.Bhag. Why would? If I was, even if I am not aware of ????
PC.S. That's fair. He told me the truth about everything else, so I am just wondering why he might lie about that one particular detail.
A.Bhag. I have no clue."
"Mr Ingram: Your Honour, I think I have to accept that there is no actual evidence from Mr Jindal. His interview was put to Mr Bhagchandka and the jury are entitled to take into account the questions that were put in interview.
The Judge: What if I say this, "you decide the case against Mr Bhagchandka on the evidence you have heard. You should not speculate about other matters. Mr Jindal's comment to the police about Mr Bhagchandka was not made under oath and he has not come to swear on oath that Mr Bhagchandka said this to him. You should not rely solely on Mr Jindal's comment to find the defendant guilty. Having been asked that, you remember that Mr Bhagchandka denied that the conversation took place."
Mr Ingram: Your Honour, yes. Perhaps the question of relying on what Mr Jindal said, I think it is right to say that it is not evidence what Mr Jindal has said; it has been put to Mr Bhagchandka, he has been asked about, and he has denied it.
The Judge: So if I say "you should not rely on Mr Jindal's comment to find the defendant guilty …", as opposed to, "you should not rely soley - "
Mr Ingram: Yes, I think that must be right."
"I am not going to go through the interview with you, because, (1) you have heard it already or had it read to you; and (2) I believe you have a copy of the interview in your possession."
As is obvious there was no specific reference to any part of the interview at this point. Second, the judge made specific reference to the line of cross examination which Mr Ingram had initiated about whether to two men had discussed saying that Jindal was the driver, as alleged by Jindal in his interview under caution. The judge did not relate this line of cross examination specifically to the applicant's interview under caution (or for that matter Jindal's interview under caution) but that was the only context in which this had arisen. He referred, too, to that part of this cross-examination which asked the applicant to provide an explanation as to why Jindal may have lied about this issue. Third, the judge gave a direction which was in similar terms to that which he had discussed with prosecuting counsel as set out above. This occurred towards the end of his summing up – after he had dealt with character evidence. This is what he said:-
"You are not to speculate about the fact that Mr Jindal is not on trial. You are to decide the case against Mr Bhagchandka on the evidence you have heard and should not speculate about any other matters. Mr Jindal's comment to the police about Mr Bhagchandka was not made under oath. He has not come to swear on oath that Mr Bhagchandka said this to him. You should not rely on Mr Jindal's comment to find the defendant guilty. You will rememeber that Mr Bhagchandka just simply denied that that conversation took place and it is a matter for you to determine whether you believe Mr Bhagchandka's evidence.
"A. I was in the car when PC Brooks was speaking to Ayush. But I am not aware as to what they were talking about.
Q. You have no idea what he was talking about. It wasn't of any interest to you at all.
A. At that time? Such an incident had taken place and I was the driver, so the whole thing was –
Q. Exactly, it was fundamentally your fault. You were the driver, you were the one who caused the whole thing.
A. That is what was going on in my mind again and again.
Q. You were not interested in what Jindal was saying to the police officer about it.
A. He was dealing with his car at that moment.
Q. It was of crucial interest to you at that stage, inevitably, Mr Bhagchandka. Come on, that is common sense."
Mr Kovalevsky argued that the jury might have relied upon finding these answers untruthful as support for their finding of guilt on count 1.