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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 >> Ali, R. v [2019] EWCA Crim 1527 (06 September 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2019/1527.html Cite as: [2020] WLR 402, [2019] EWCA Crim 1527, [2019] WLR(D) 500, [2020] 1 WLR 402, [2020] Crim LR 350, [2020] 1 Cr App R 1 |
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ON APPEAL FROM Central Criminal Court (Recorder of London)
HHJ N Hilliard
T20177181
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MRS JUSTICE MCGOWAN
and
MR JUSTICE BUTCHER
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Regina |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Khalid Mohamed Omar Ali |
Respondent |
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Andrew Trollope QC and David Gottlieb (instructed by Waterford LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 31 July 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Gross :
INTRODUCTION
"…on or before 28th day of January 2012 unlawfully and maliciously made or had in his possession or under his control an explosive substance with intent by means thereof to endanger life or cause serious injury to property outside the United Kingdom, or to enable any other person to do so."
Count 2 was in the same terms, save that the dates in question were "…on or before the 6th day of July 2012".
"….on or before the 27th day of April 2017, with the intention of committing acts of terrorism, engaged in conduct in preparation for giving effect to that intention, namely purchasing knives and travelling to London."
THE FACTS
THE Ex PARTE HEARINGS
"Further to the ex parte notification hearing that took place on 15 June, we have just been ex parte in front of the Judge again. This was to address a query that the Judge had raised at the earlier hearing."
"I do not understand these ex p applications. Brian [i.e., Mr Altman QC, then leading counsel for the Respondent] says they are not pii. If not what sort of applications can be made ex p whether with or without notice as to the reason? Chapter and verse please. We will have to decide whether we raise it with …[the Judge]."
"The two ex parte hearings on 15 and 19 June 2018 were conducted in accordance with the guidance provided in the CPS Disclosure Manual as follows:
Ex parte notifications to a judge
In R v H and C [2004] UKHL 3, the House of Lords set out that neutral material or material damaging to the defendant should not be brought to the attention of the court. Only in truly borderline cases should the prosecution seek a judicial ruling on the disclosability of material in its hands (see paragraph 35).
However, it is recognised that other exceptional circumstances may arise in which the judge should be notified ex parte of otherwise non-disclosable sensitive material, such as where not to reveal non-disclosable sensitive information to the judge would create a risk that the judge's fair management of the trial or a wider public interest would be prejudiced. The judge must be told that the purpose of the hearing is to prevent the inadvertent mismanagement of the trial and that therefore he or she is not being asked for any ruling on disclosure.
In such circumstances, the prosecution advocate should only put before the judge such information as is necessary to enable him or her to properly manage the trial process or protect the wider public interest and should be used to do no more than flag areas of potential concern or sensitivity. Only such revelation as is strictly necessary should be made to the judge and only in very rare circumstances should the revelation go beyond the category of material and headline information. The judge should determine how much of the material, if any, needs to be viewed before he or she is in a position to best ensure the fair management of the trial."
"The following are examples of circumstances in which an ex parte notification could be conducted, so long as the criterion set out above is applied:
- where there is a CHIS whose name or identity appears on the face of the papers;
- where the defendant is a CHIS, particularly a participating CHIS; and
- where there are details of observation posts or the product from them that has been edited.
Notice of the intention to notify the judge ex parte should be given to the defence in all but exceptional circumstances. The process should reflect that applicable to the different types of PII hearings.
A suitable form of notice to the defence is suggested as follows:
'The prosecution are in possession of material [categorise where appropriate] which does not satisfy the disclosure test and which at present cannot be disclosed in the public interest. It is the prosecution's intention to alert the judge to the existence of material in this category so as to ensure that he/she is able to manage the trial in a way which is fair to all parties.'
Except in Type Three cases the prosecution advocate should invite the judge to consider making it clear in open court that:
- the ex parte 'hearing' was not one where he or she was requested to rule on PII or decide a truly borderline issues of disclosability, but was necessary for the fair management of the trial;
- (further) submissions from the defence were not required; and
- he or she is aware of the basis on which material would be disclosable under the CPIA and when PII would justify withholding it; and
- nothing done was contrary to principles in Edwards and Lewis v UK and R v H and C."
THE APPEAL AGAINST CONVICTION
i) Such case authority as there was did not contemplate ex parte hearings outside the ambit of PII. In this regard, the Applicant placed much reliance on the decision of the House of Lords in R v H [2004] UKHL 3; [2004] 2 AC 134.
ii) The CPS Manual could not confer authority, otherwise lacking, for these hearings; nor did the examples there given justify hearings of this nature.
iii) While the inherent jurisdiction of the Court permitted, exceptionally, departures from public justice, such in camera hearings remained inter partes; they were not ex parte, with the defendant excluded.
iv) Neither the Criminal Procedure Rules ("the Crim PR") nor Art. 6(1) of the ECHR lent any support to this practice; to the contrary, they pointed in the opposite direction.
v) Either statute or a decision of high judicial authority was required before such a practice could properly be introduced. In the absence of either, the grounds for holding such hearings and their parameters had not been carefully and closely identified.
"41. The judge must be told that the purpose of the hearing is to prevent the inadvertent mismanagement of the trial and that therefore he or she is not being asked for any ruling on disclosure.
42. In notifying the judge ex parte of sensitive material, the prosecution advocate should only put before the judge such information as is necessary to enable him or her to properly manage the trial process or protect the wider public interest. In order not to create unwarranted unfairness to the accused, the notification hearing should be used to do no more than flag areas of potential concern or sensitivity….."
"As a general rule the English system of administering justice does require that it be in public: Scott v Scott [1913] AC 417. If the way that courts behave cannot be hidden from the public ear and eye this provides a safeguard against judicial arbitrariness or idiosyncrasy and maintains the public confidence in the administration of justice. The application of this principle of open justice has two aspects: as respects proceedings in the court itself it requires that they should be held in open court to which the press and public are admitted and that, in criminal cases at any rate, all evidence communicated to the court is communicated publicly. As respects the publication to a wider public of fair and accurate reports of proceedings that have taken place in court the principle requires that nothing should be done to discourage this."
"…protects the applicants from justice administered behind closed doors beyond all public control, and therefore constitutes one of the means of preserving confidence in the courts. In making the administration of justice more transparent, it helps to achieve the aim of Article 6(1), namely a fair trial, the guarantee of which is one of the fundamental principles of all democratic societies."
"However, since the purpose of the general rule is to serve the ends of justice it may be necessary to depart from it where the nature or circumstances of the particular proceedings are such that the application of the general rule in its entirety would frustrate or render impracticable the administration of justice for whose protection Parliament has made some statutory derogation from the rule. Apart from statutory exceptions, however, where a court in the exercise of its inherent power to control the conduct of proceedings before it departs in any way from the general rule, the departure is justified to extent and to no more than the extent that the court reasonably believes it to be necessary in order to serve the ends of justice. A familiar instance of this is provided by the 'trial within a trial' as to the admissibility of a confession in a criminal prosecution. The due administration of justice requires that the jury should be unaware of what was the evidence adduced at the 'trial within a trial' until after they have reached their verdict; but no greater derogation from the general rule as to the public nature of all proceedings at a criminal trial is justified than is necessary to ensure this. So far as proceedings in the courtroom are concerned the trial within a trial is held in open court in the presence of the press and public but in the absence of the jury…"
Much the same point was illustrated by Lord Scarman (at p.471); considerations of prejudice to national security alone would not justify the Court sitting in private; if, however, the factor of national security appeared to endanger the due administration of justice (for example, by deterring the Crown from prosecuting in cases where it should do so), then the Court may sit in private.
"Bitter experience has shown that miscarriages of justice may occur where such material is withheld from disclosure."
"If material does not weaken the prosecution case or strengthen that of the defendant, there is no requirement to disclose it. For this purpose the parties' respective cases should not be restrictively analysed. But they must be carefully analysed, to ascertain the specific facts the prosecution seek to establish and the specific grounds on which the charges are resisted. The trial process is not well served if the defence are permitted to make general and unspecified allegations and then seek far-reaching disclosure in the hope that material may turn up to make them good. Neutral material or material damaging to the defendant need not be disclosed and should not be brought to the attention of the court. Only in truly borderline cases should the prosecution seek a judicial ruling on the disclosability of material in its hands…..If the disclosure test is faithfully applied, the occasions on which a judge will be obliged to recuse himself because he has been privately shown material damning to the defendant will…be very exceptional indeed."
"There may be circumstances where the prosecution have to see the Judge ex parte to ensure the trial does not proceed in a way which is unfair to a defendant.
This is an exceptional course. A record is kept and a transcript can be considered in the event of an application for leave to appeal. That is the case here."
i) The need must be exceptional; such a hearing can never be routine or simply held by way of a course of least resistance.
ii) There must be no practicable inter partes alternative, so that even an in camera hearing cannot practicably be held.
iii) The ex parte notification hearing must be necessary in the interests of justice to avoid the risk of inadvertent mismanagement of the trial occasioning unfairness to the defendant.
iv) The material shown to the Judge and the discussion at the notification hearing must be kept to a minimum and confined to what is necessary to achieve the purpose of the notification hearing. It is only by such restraint on the part of counsel, subject to tight case management by the Judge, that the acute dangers inherent in any private exchange of material between prosecutor and Judge can be avoided or minimised.
THE RENEWED APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL SENTENCE
"…You would have killed any policeman you could. Timely intervention prevented this…"
Refusing leave to appeal sentence, the Single Judge observed that the uplift to 40 years for the minimum term was "well merited". He added that the ex parte applications had not affected the sentencing process.
"You decided to deliver that message by an act of extreme violence in circumstances which would attract maximum publicity and instil terror. I am sure your plan was to attack and kill someone in central London. I am absolutely sure it went way beyond merely threatening violence…."
Those were conclusions the Judge was amply entitled to reach; they comprise a complete answer to the submissions advanced on behalf of the Applicant.
"You were obviously being followed on the 27th of April and it will be of great reassurance to the public that that was the case. The timing of the intervention by armed officers on the 27th of April was, in fact, before anybody was attacked by you and at a stage which had enabled the greatest amount of evidence to be gathered. That can never be an easy balance to strike, but in this case, events show that it was struck at the right stage…
The fact is, you were detained in a successful operation and an investigation which followed, all of which deserve commendation as do the brave police officers who arrested you in the street."
With those observations, we specifically agree. That balance is never easy to strike. Thankfully, it was correctly and commendably struck in this case.