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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 >> Carrasco, R. v [2024] EWCA Crim 499 (30 April 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2024/499.html Cite as: [2024] EWCA Crim 499 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
The Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LEWIS
MR JUSTICE GOSS
HER HONOUR JUDGE MONTGOMERY KC
(Sitting as a Judge of the Court of Appeal Criminal Division)
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R E X |
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JUAN RAMON ALONSO CARRASCO |
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Lower Ground Floor, 46 Chancery Lane, London WC2A 1JE
Tel No: 020 7404 1400; Email: [email protected] (Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr J Sirwardena appeared on behalf of the Crown
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Crown Copyright ©
Thursday 30th April 2024
LORD JUSTICE LEWIS:
"the appellant's pleas were induced by erroneous legal advice upon which he relied, and therefore the pleas were not freely made in circumstances where he had a defence, which quite probably would have succeeded and, as a result, a clear injustice has been done".
"1. I understand that the judge has indicated sentences of 12 months' imprisonment if I plead guilty to the three matters today.
2. Taking all circumstances into account, I wish to take this offer.
3. I will plead guilty to counts [1], 3 and 4 on the indictment.
4. This is my own choice, based upon a variety of different factors.
5. This statement has been interpreted into Spanish for me and I am happy with the contents."
The endorsement then bears the appellant's signature.
"A defendant who pleads guilty is making a formal admission in open court that he is guilty of the offence. He may of course by a written basis of plea limit his admissions to only some of the facts alleged by the Crown, so long as he is admitting facts which constitute the offence, and Asiedu did so here. But ordinarily, once he has admitted such facts by an unambiguous and deliberately intended plea of guilty, there cannot then be an appeal against his conviction, for the simple reason that there is nothing unsafe about a conviction based on the defendant's own voluntary confession in open court. A defendant will not normally be permitted in this court to say that he has changed his mind and now wishes to deny what he has previously thus admitted in the Crown Court."
"31. … will always have it made clear to him that a plea of guilty, should he choose to tender it, amounts to a confession. Only he knows the true facts, which usually govern whether he is guilty or not and did so here. If he is guilty, the fact that the choice between admitting the truth and nevertheless denying it may be a difficult one does not alter the effect of choosing to admit it. We do not begin to agree that Asiedu had no real choice but to plead guilty. He had a completely free choice. Nor do we agree with the further submission made on his behalf that the conviction of the others in some way altered the climate against him. That would be irrelevant to his freedom of choice, but as a matter of fact the disagreement of the first jury in his case, when he had distanced himself from the hoax defence advanced by those whom it convicted, might if anything have been taken as some encouragement.
32. Because it is of cardinal importance that a defendant makes up his own mind whether to confess by way of plea of guilty or not, and because only he knows the true facts, it is not open to him to assert that he was led to plead guilty by mistaken overstatement of the evidence against him. As Sir Igor Judge P observed in R v Hakala [2002] EWCA Crim 730 at paragraph [81], the trial process is not a tactical game. A defendant knows the true facts; he ought not to admit to facts which are not true, whatever the evidence against him, and this will always be the advice he is given. If he does admit them, the evidence that they are true then comes from himself, whatever may be the other evidence advanced by the Crown."
"57. For an appeal against conviction to succeed on the basis that the plea was tendered following erroneous advice it seems to us that the facts must be so strong as to show that the plea of guilty was not a true acknowledgment of guilt. The advice must go to the heart of the plea, so that as in the cases of Inns and Turner the plea would not be a free plea and what followed would be a nullity."
"55. There are no doubt many defendants who, although they know they are guilty of the offence alleged against them, nevertheless enter a plea of not guilty in the hope of being acquitted. In making the decision one way or the other many factors may fall to be taken into account. The Bar Council's Code of Conduct makes clear that defence counsel should explain to the accused the advantages and disadvantages of a guilty plea. It goes on that he must make it clear that the client has complete freedom of choice and that the responsibility for the plea is that of the accused. It is common practice, endorsed by paragraph 12.5.1, to tell an accused that he should plead guilty only if he is guilty. In the present case the Bar Council's code was followed to the letter. The appellant deliberated over his plea over the best part of a working week. He was very keen that his counsel should strike the best possible deal with counsel for the prosecution. This involved limiting his involvement in the conspiracy to a minimum. He was under no pressure or illusions as to the position he was in. True the advice he was given on sentence and particularly on confiscation was somewhat optimistic but the reality, in our judgment, is that he entered his plea of guilty without any pressure from counsel, the court or anyone else. The only pressure was, like with many defendants, from the situation in which he found himself. In our judgment it cannot be said that the appellant's plea was not a true acknowledgment of guilt and was entered only because of erroneous advice. In so far as the advice he was given fell short of what might reasonably have been expected (and this really only applies to the house) it was in our judgment peripheral to the plea, albeit that the appellant would now have us believe it was not.
56. There is no doubt that at all times the appellant was fully in command of his faculties. His plea of guilty was tendered after a very great deal of thought and negotiation. He admitted the offence to his lawyers by endorsing a document acknowledging his plea. He then tendered his plea in open court and listened to his counsel mitigating on his behalf without questioning what he said. The evidence against him was extremely strong. His bureau was a concern with a small turnover of less than a £1,000 per week and yet he changed some $U.S 5.8m to £4m. The exchange transactions took place in streets or cars and he received sacks of money, which he exchanged for large denomination notes. The plain inference is that he pleaded guilty because he was guilty."
At [58] and [59] of that case, the court said this:
"58. It is very difficult to see how erroneous advice as to the length of sentence could ever go to the heart of a plea – except perhaps where the maximum penalty for the offence is understated – for the decision on length of sentence lies with the judge or the Court of Appeal. The appellant knew that in this case. He knew there was no certainty as to the length of sentence the judge would impose upon him. He also knew there was no certainty what would happen to his house following confiscation proceedings.
59. In our judgment the advice that the appellant received does not invalidate his plea of guilty."