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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 >> FGH v R. (Rev1) [2024] EWCA Crim 1353 (06 November 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2024/1353.html Cite as: [2024] EWCA Crim 1353 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT HARROW
HHJ ARRAN
T201447109
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MRS JUSTICE FARBEY
and
THE RECORDER OF LEEDS (HIS HONOUR JUDGE KEARL KC)
(SITTING AS JUDGE OF THE CACD)
____________________
FGH |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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REX |
Respondent |
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Mr A Johnson (instructed by the Crown Prosecution Service) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 18 October 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
MRS JUSTICE FARBEY:
Introduction
Facts
"He found the defendant had an IQ of between 52 and 60 which indicated a mild degree of learning disability, but there was no enduring mental illness. And this is the important part of the doctor's evidence: 'He demonstrated a high degree of vulnerability and he could easily be manipulated or exploited, but he had a reasonable degree of judgement.'"
Fresh evidence
"I do not remember much from the day I got arrested in 2014, everything that happened was a shock and so it has been hard to remember the details. I know that I was with Justin, he and some other people picked me up and we went off in a car and when the police came I had a gun on me. I had never seen the gun before that day, and I had never been around guns before. I am not interested in that sort of thing, I would never choose to use or even carry a weapon…
I had a hard time in prison, some of the other inmates were unkind to me and bullied me, like when I was younger."
"The finding of a global learning disability has implications for Mr. [FGH] giving evidence before the Tribunal. It is noted that he has considerable difficulties with his verbal comprehension, and with his working memory. He has a speech impediment and has deficits in his expressive speech and language abilities.
I recommend that if Mr. [FGH] is required to give evidence before the tribunal, it would be essential that he was supported by a registered intermediary. Mr. [FGH] has been assessed to have mild dysmorphism, associated with his learning disability and has identified deficits in his expressive language abilities."
"[The applicant] presented as an individual with a mild learning disability. He had difficulty understanding questions. He needed information to be explained using simplified language. He became frustrated when he could not understand information."
"In my opinion, he suffers from a mild disorder of intellectual development also known as mild learning disability. This is indicated by his past history and ongoing presentation which is consistent with an individual who has experienced lifelong problems with intelligence and difficulty learning new information. He has required help and support from his mother and family members throughout his life. He has not been able to live independently and has required support from his mother in relation to activities such as shopping, cooking, managing his finances and attending hospital appointments. Whilst he is able to manage his activities of daily living by himself, he requires a lot of help and support with day-to-day activities consistent with an individual with mild learning disability."
"Mr [FGH] is assessed as having moderate learning disabilities. He has communication difficulties and is unable to speak clearly and in long sentences. From documents made available to me by his Social Worker, it is the conclusion of a Speech and Language Therapist that Mr [FGH] has limited independent life skills; limited reasoning and social networks; and vulnerability in the community. Mr [FGH's] mother reports that he is very vulnerable as he easily gets misled by people and follows people without reasoning about the impact of his actions. At the time he was assessed, there were concerns as regards his ability to function in the community when on his own."
SCA's decision
"You state that on 05/03/2014, there was an occasion when you were picked up in a car by your friend Justin, and his two friends, Harvey and another; you had no idea what they were planning.
You were riding in the back seat of a convoy consisting of two cars when they were stopped by the police.
It is noted that you have given a generally thorough, plausible, and relatively consistent account in your NRM referral, Further Representations, Witness Statement, and Witness Statement 1 in relation to your claimed exploitation. You have detailed how you entered the exploitation; that you were passed a bag by one of the people in the car who forced you to hold and hide a loaded firearm; you hid it in the waistband of your trousers, for this you received a seven-year sentence.
You did not know the firearm was in the car, until that day, you had never even seen a gun. You and Justin ended up going to the same prison. Whilst in prison, Justin began telling other inmates to harass and beat you, you feared for your life in there. There have been no recognised inconsistencies within your account therefore, your claim has not been undermined.
Furthermore, it is considered that your account is also consistent with external information from the US State Department Trafficking in Persons Report for 2023 in relation to the United Kingdom.
Based on the information provided it is considered that you were recruited by your friend, Justin, in the UK, after you were picked up in a car. You were then transported in the car somewhere unknown to you…Furthermore, you were forced by someone in the car to hide a loaded firearm, after the police stopped the car…[You have] recognised vulnerabilities [and]…did not know what the initial plans were, and…you were harassed and threatened whilst in and after prison… Lastly you were forced to hide a loaded gun against your will…
Overall, there are no significant credibility issues in your account. By analysing the available evidence, it has been considered that your account has met the required threshold, namely 'on the balance of probabilities' it is more likely than not to have occurred."
Ground 3: Duress
Ground 1: Abuse of process
The applicant's submissions
The respondent's submissions
Discussion
"As always, the question for this court goes to the safety of the conviction. However, in the present context, that inquiry translates into a question of whether in the light of the law as it now is (this being a rare change in law case) and the facts now known as to the applicant (having regard to the admission of fresh evidence) the trial court should have stayed the proceedings as an abuse of process had an application been made. This question can be formulated indistinguishably in one of two ways which emerge from the authorities: was this a case where either: (1) the dominant force of compulsion, in the context of a very serious offence, was sufficient to reduce the applicant's criminality or culpability to or below a point where it was not in the public interest for her to be prosecuted? or (2) the applicant would or might well not have been prosecuted in the public interest? If yes, then the proper course would be to quash the conviction …"
"(1) Is there a reason to believe that the person has been trafficked? if so,
(2) If there is clear evidence of a credible common law defence of duress, the case should be discontinued on evidential grounds; but
(3) Even where there is not clear evidence of duress, but the offence has been committed as a result of compulsion arising from trafficking, prosecutors should consider the public interest in proceeding to prosecute."
Ground 2: Intermediary
"Mr [FGH] is a very vulnerable individual and he has significant communication difficulties, which directly stem from his diagnosis of learning disabilities and his mental health issues.
Mr [FGH's] conditions have a significant impact on both his expressive (how he is understood by others) and receptive (how others understand him) communication, which are further impaired in highly stressful situations like court hearings.
Mr [FGH's] full scale IQ fell in the range of 52-60, which is at the lower end of the learning disability range. This means that he finds it difficult to process and understand complex information. Mr [FGH's] oral language is also affected in such a way that he cannot access vocabulary efficiently."
Conclusion