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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 >> Kelly & Anor, R v [2003] EWCA Crim 2957 (28 October 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2003/2957.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Crim 2957 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM LIVERPOOL ASSIZES
Mr Justice Cassels
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE DOUGLAS BROWN
and
MR JUSTICE DAVIS
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George KELLY & Charles CONNOLLY (both deceased) |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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Regina |
Respondent |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr W Waldron QC and Mr S Berkson for Connolly
Mr S Pownall QC for the Crown
(In the matter of a reference to the Court of Appeal by the Criminal Cases Review Commission by the applicant Kathleen Hughes, the daughter of George Kelly now deceased, and
In the matter of a reference to the Court of Appeal by the Criminal Cases Review Commission by the applicant Eileen Connolly, the widow of Charles Connolly now deceased)
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Rix:
Introduction and synopsis
"The all-important evidence for the prosecution consisted of a woman named Dickson and a man named Northam, both persons of bad character, who swore that they were in a Public House on the night of the murder with Kelly and Connolly, that they heard the robbery of the cinema planned by these men, and that after the shooting, Kelly admitted that he had shot the Manager and the Under-Manager and Connolly stated that he had waited outside the cinema but that he ran away as soon as he heard the shots. Graham corroborated the evidence of Dickson and Northam, because he swore that in conversations which he had with both accused in prison, each admitted to him the part which each had played in the commission of the crime, which was substantially the same as the admissions which they had made to Dickson and Northam prior to their arrest.
"I am of the opinion that but for the evidence that Graham gave before Mr Justice Cassels, Kelly would not have been convicted."
"Although there was other significant evidence in [Kelly's] trial, in particular the evidence of the witnesses Northam and Dickson, who said that Kelly and Connolly had in their presence planned the robbery of the Cameo Cinema and had later confessed to what had happened there, in the case of Kelly that he had fired the fatal shots and in the case of Connolly that he had stood outside when Kelly went into the manager's office, both of those witnesses, Northam and Dickson, were treated as accomplices and the judge, Cassels J, directed the jury that they should be cautious about convicting Kelly without corroboration. He also directed the jury that they could find corroboration in the evidence of Graham. If Graham's earlier statement implicating Johnson had been disclosed, Kelly's counsel could have made effective use at trial of the oddity that in September 1949 Graham had implicated Johnson and in November 1949 had implicated Kelly (and Connolly) as the Cameo Cinema culprits. The defence might well have been able to discredit Graham's evidence in the eyes of the jury, and in doing so, might also have been able to call into question certain aspects of the police investigations and evidence…
"The Crown's case against Kelly was entirely circumstantial, lacked any forensic support, and rested essentially on the evidence of Northam, Dickson and Graham. The Crown recognised at the time that Graham's evidence had made a significant contribution to Kelly's conviction, and Graham was promptly rewarded by his immediate release from his then current sentence. The jury at the first joint trial of Kelly and Connolly had been unable to agree a verdict. The Crown acknowledges that the failure to disclose Graham's earlier statement was in breach of the Crown's obligations, even as the law recognised them to be at the time.
"We therefore agree that the Crown's failure to disclose Graham's earlier statement renders Kelly's conviction at his retrial unsafe. Unfortunately, Kelly was sentenced to death and, after losing his appeal, hanged.
"In the case of Connolly, the matter is complicated by the fact that his trial was severed from that of Kelly. If it had not been, as it should not have been, Connolly may well have been convicted as well, although his case was different since the Crown did not allege that he had been in the manager's office at the time of the murders. Following Kelly's conviction at his retrial, however, Connolly pleaded not guilty to murder, but guilty to new charges of robbery and conspiracy to rob which were added at the last moment to the indictment. The question is whether Connolly's pleas of guilt to the robbery charges are undermined so as to render his convictions on those charges unsafe in the light of the Crown's failure to disclose Graham's earlier statement and also in the light of the circumstances in which those pleas were tendered. The Crown has submitted that those pleas were entirely voluntary and that those convictions remain safe. We disagree. Once Kelly's conviction has been declared unsafe for the reasons stated above, it is in our judgment unrealistic to regard Connolly's convictions, albeit in terms of robbery rather than murder, as safe. If Kelly cannot safely be regarded as the murderer, Connolly cannot safely be regarded as his accomplice in a case where the evidence against the two was essentially the same and came from the same sources. If anything, the evidence against Connolly was weaker. Kelly's conviction, moreover, had been obtained in part by reason of the non-disclosure of Graham's statement. Connolly's convictions, although the product of pleas of guilt, can themselves be said to be founded in part on the Crown's failure to make proper disclosure of the Graham statement as well as on the unenviable position of Connolly who, despite the earlier maintenance of his innocence, had to face up to the fact that Kelly had been convicted and sentenced to death. In those circumstances his own counsel said, in mitigation, that he had advised him to plead guilty on the terms available to him. Had Graham's earlier statement been available, Connolly's counsel's advice may well have been very different. "
The murders
Johnson's role
"He said, 'I had the place lined up for some time. I often used to go there. Anyway on this night I went up to the manager's office…When I asked them for the cash one of them went for me so I let him have it right away. The other fellow then went for me so I put a bullet in him too but it went into his neck and he dropped to his knees and turned over. The first was killed right away and I thought to myself well, this bugger might recognize me, so I shot him in the back to finish him off. I put three bullets into him before he went out, but the first chap went out when I put the first in him…as I was going out I bumped into the fireman by the top of the stairs. How that fellow didn't recognize me I don't know…
"I ran out but funny enough I didn't like to leave the district. I mooched around and then to finish it off I was stopped by a copper. He asked me for my identity card and I thought he was going to search me but he didn't. If he had I was finished because I had the gun on me then. Anyway I went and got rid of it right away…
"He also told a prisoner named McBRIDE that he's done it.
"I am willing to give evidence any time you want."
" "He fell to his knees" – according to Dr Grace the bullet that killed Catterall, the assistant manager, entered his back, struck his rib, went right down the body and went through the liver on the way down and was finally found on the inside of the thigh. Was Catterall shot while he was on his knees? Who knew that? Only one person. Has Graham imagined his evidence? If you have a reasonable doubt, you will find him not guilty. If, upon the evidence, you come to the conclusion that George Kelly is the man who, on that night of March 19th of last year, shot that cinema manager, Leonard Thomas, and thus brought his life of 44 years to an end, you will find him guilty. Will you now please consider your verdict."
Graham's second statement
Northam's and Dickson's evidence
"Let me warn you that it is dangerous to convict a prisoner on the uncorroborated testimony of accomplices, although it is within your province to do so if you choose…The evidence of one accomplice cannot be corroborated by another…But a prisoner's conduct in the circumstances of the case may be corroboration. Graham's evidence, if you accept it, may be corroboration, because you may think it strengthens the other evidence. That is a matter for you. Whatever description may be given to Graham – and you may think that he has laid himself open to many – but whatever description is given to that man, he cannot be described as an accomplice. A description of the coat worn by the murderer that night may also be corroboration. That again is a matter for you."
"Q. On the 29th September when you gave that statement to the police did you then omit anything at all of what you have given in evidence, either before the Magistrates or here? A. Nothing at all – just the overcoat."
"September 29th: Northam gives all the details to the Police except about the overcoat … October 10th: the coat handed to the Police."
"Q. Would you tell my Lord and the Jury what was the earliest date you learned from Northam and Dickson about Kelly being involved in this murder? A. The 29th September.
"Q. What was the date you heard of the Beehive? The same date.
"Q. And the interview on the Sunday? A. Well, I take it about the same date.
"Q. And the Monday in Lime Street? The same date…
"Q. The first you learned of the overcoat was October 10th? A. Yes."
Kelly's evidence
"Q. Why did you sign it? A. At the moment I signed this I was in a motor car, and I did not notice the word "definitely".
Q. What did you, a police officer of 23 years' service, think you were signing? A. I signed that statement going along in a motor car.
Q. Do you say you did not read it? A. I did not read it.
Q. When did you decide that he may have been in at half past 9? A. When I told Mr. Balmer.
Q. Then why did you not say to Mr Balmer: "I am not sure about it; he may have been in or he may not have been "? A. When I signed that I did not read it. I thought Mr. Balmer had put in "to my knowledge"."
"Although I saw Kelly about 9.0 p.m. and again just before closing time, I cannot say whether or not he was in the house between those times. It would have been easy for him to leave between those times and I certainly did not serve him with any other drink" (emphasis added).
CI Balmer's role
The splitting of the retrials
"I understand that this case is to be re-tried separately, that is to say, Kelly is to be tried first. My first point, on behalf of Kelly, is that I object to the re-trial separately."
"The Court has considered the possibility of there being a separate trial in this case. Objection has been taken to that by learned Counsel appearing for the defence of the prisoner George Kelly. Learned Counsel appearing for the defence of the defendant Charles Connolly has formally applied for a separate trial, and learned Counsel for the prosecution says that he takes no part in the matter other than to say that the matter is one for the exercise of judicial discretion.
"In the exercise of that judicial discretion, I direct that there shall be in this case a separate trial, and that the first of the defendants to be tried shall be George Kelly. A separate trial provides a plain issue for the jury concerning the one person to be tried. So far as I read the depositions, they seem to disclose that the two cases for the Prosecution differ in fact and in law in some important respects. A separate trial eliminates any evidence which is not directly against the person tried. I have come to the conclusion that it is in the interests of justice that the jury, in a long case like this, particularly on a re-trial and on a capital charge, should not have to dissect the evidence of individual witnesses and relate it to more than one person under trial. I do not think that the Defence is prejudiced, but, on the contrary, it may well be favoured by a separate trial, in that there will be before the jury no evidence other than that relevant to the issue being tried concerning one prisoner. Witnesses, whether for the prosecution or Defence, will be cross-examined once only, and the jury's task and recollection will be simplified. I therefore direct, as I stated at the beginning, that there shall be a separate trial, and that that of George Kelly shall be taken first."
"Prima facie it appears to the court that where the essence of the case is that the prisoners were engaged on a common enterprise, it is obviously right and proper that they should be jointly indicted and jointly tried, and in some cases it would be as much in the interest of the accused as of the prosecution that they should be."
"The real test, after all, which must be applied by a court of criminal appeal on a matter which is essentially one of discretion is, has the exercise of discretion resulted in a miscarriage of justice? If improper prejudice has been created whether by a separate or by a joint trial – for as we showed at an earlier stage of this judgment prejudice might be caused to one prisoner by ordering a separate trial on the application of the other – this court will interfere but not otherwise."
Connolly's guilty plea
"After Kelly had been found guilty by the jury on his re-trial for murder, Counsel for the Crown informed Mr Rowson that the Prosecution would be prepared to seek the approval of the trial Judge, to the addition to the indictment against you of a charge of robbery. Also, if you were prepared to plead guilty to the lesser charge, the Court would be asked to consent to the murder charge being withdrawn. We were informed that this proposal had been mentioned to the Judge who had indicated his approval of the matter proceedings in that way.
"Mr Rowson, Junior Counsel and myself immediately arranged to see you at Walton and what had been proposed was explained to you. No advice as to how you should plead to either charge was sought by you or offered by Counsel nor, I have no doubt whatsoever, would experienced Counsel, such as Mr Rowson, even consider doing so."
"The difficulty of Connolly became obvious from the moment that a jury had accepted, as one must assume they had accepted, the evidence of Northam, Dickson and Graham. In those circumstances, my Lord, it was obvious to anyone that there would be some difficulty in persuading a jury, as was attempted at the first trial of Connolly, to accept his evidence of an alibi. In those circumstances, my Lord, he has, on my advice and those interested in the Defence in this case, pleaded guilty to the charge of robbery."
(Mr Pownall submitted that that passage did not amount to a statement by Mr Rowson that he had advised Connolly to plead guilty and so did not confirm Connolly's evidence that he had so advised him, and in any event did not confirm any degree of pressure.) Mr Rowson continued his mitigation by reference to those passages in the evidence of Northam, Dickson and Connolly which would permit the submission that Connolly's role was a subsidiary one and that
"he had not the slightest intention or knowledge that violence was going to be used. No doubt the fact that all that evidence was given by those three has induced the Prosecution in this case to accept the plea of not guilty".
"To a very great extent I venture to think, my Lord, that the events with which he was mixed up were not really the outcome of his own desire in any way, and he does, through me, for what it is worth, express his very deep regret for having been mixed up in this matter. It is a regret that is not expressed here for the first time, because he expressed it to Graham in Walton Gaol when he told him that he had been a fool to be mixed up with the job."
"…I was dance crazy you know – he said it was a bit too late you can't come. I said I've paid to come in. One word led to another and I hit him…Mr Rowson brought this up, said the case of Connolly's past of an assault to this doorman was when he was drunk and had no control over…I didn't say…that's what I'm trying to get over to you, the same thing as he's saying, what you just repeated now."
"Mr Maxwell-Brown remembers being approached by the prosecution the day before the trial date regarding Connolly's plea. He stated that he would be pleading not guilty. He told counsel about the approach that had been made but was then not involved in the subsequent talks between prosecution and defence counsel and the presiding judge.
"He was aware that there was talk of a deal but that the judge was not happy initially and counsel made a second approach to the judge…Finally an agreement was reached and Mr Maxwell-Brown was informed that an alternative charge of robbery would be put on the indictment. He and defence counsel, Mr Rowson and Mr Gordon Clover, went to see Connolly and explained the situation. There was very little time, he thinks it may have been that same afternoon.
"Connolly had been aware that Kelly had been found guilty of murder and was reminded of this fact by Mr Rowson and Mr Maxwell-Brown, who wished to ascertain what Connolly would plead. The situation in relation to the prosecution approach and a possible charge regarding robbery were explained to him. Connolly asked what he would get for the robbery charge and Mr Rowson informed that he would probably get ten years imprisonment. Connolly wanted to see his wife or family and Mr Rowson pointed out that it was he, not his wife, who was going to hang. He was repeatedly told that it was a decision, which he himself would have to make.
"So far as I can remember, the meeting lasted about half an hour and Connolly decided that he would plead guilty to the alternative charge…Mr Maxwell-Brown does not now remember anything specifically about a conspiracy charge, but has no doubt that it would have been mentioned at this meeting. Although Connolly was given 'advice', it was in the form of answers to his questions not that he was advised to plead guilty to robbery. Connolly never protested about pleading guilty to robbery. He was not shocked by the suggestion; he was paying attention and made his own decision. Having made his decision he appeared to be relieved."
Kelly's 1950 appeal
The law in relation to appeals from old convictions
"The conduct of the trial and the direction of the jury must be judged according to the standards which we would now apply in any other appeal under section 1 of the 1968 Act."
See also R v. King [2000] 2 Cr App R 391 at 402, where Lord Bingham again stressed that this court is concerned only with the safety of the conviction.
"To return, however, to the position in 1974, Mr Mansfield submits, rightly, that paragraphs 443 and 443a of Archbold (38th ed.) were by no means exhaustive. They were merely aspects of the defendant's elementary common law right to a fair trial which depends on the observance by the prosecution, no less than the court, of the rules of natural justice. No authority is needed for this proposition but it is illustrated by the decision of the Divisional Court in Leyland Justices, ex p. Hawthorn [1979] Q.B. 283. On the broad basis of this right, the defendant is plainly entitled (subject to statutory limitations on disclosure, and the possibility of public interest immunity, which we discuss below) to be supplied with police evidence of all relevant interviews with him. We would adopt the words of Lawton L.J. in Hennessey (1979) 68 Cr. App. R. 419, 426, where he said that the courts must,
"keep in mind that those who prepare and conduct prosecutions owe a duty to the Courts to ensure that all relevant evidence of help to an accused is either led by them or made available to the defence …" "
The new evidence
Kelly's appeal
The law in relation to appeals from pleas of guilty
"A plea of Guilty having been recorded, this Court can only entertain an appeal against conviction if it appears (1.) that the appellant did not appreciate the nature of the charge or did not intend to admit he was guilty of it, or (2.) that upon the admitted facts he could not in law have been convicted of the offence charged."
Subsequent authority has shown, however, that that is too narrow a formulation.
"When the accused is making a plea of guilty under pressure and threats, he does not make a free plea and the trial starts without there being a proper plea at all."
"Since the applicant's plea of guilty was founded upon that ruling, we shall grant the applicant leave to appeal from his conviction."
"the respondent having pleaded guilty, [the court of appeal] had only power to quash the conviction if either there had been a wrong decision on a question of law or a material irregularity in the course of trial"
and continued:
"It is not any error of law or any irregularity which is sufficient for this purpose…In our judgment before an appellant who has pleaded guilty can rely upon an erroneous ruling on a point of law or a material irregularity, he must show that his plea "was founded" upon the erroneous ruling of law or material irregularity."
"Whilst the Court was usually slow to set aside pleas of guilty which had been unequivocally made, where they had been made in ignorance of malpractice having operated to a defendant, different considerations might apply."
"The appellants had pleaded guilty but they would, apparently, not have done so if the witnesses whom they hoped to call had been available. Guilty or not, their right to have the charge against them proved beyond reasonable doubt had been, at least, impaired. It seems there was really no need to rely on the extension of the concept of abuse of process made in the Horseferry Road case. A defendant does not get a fair trial if he is precluded from calling witnesses whom he believes to be necessary to his defence."
"It is submitted that the material irregularity created by the non-disclosure deprived the appellants of material which would have enabled them to make properly informed decisions as to what course they should take…Even without that documentation, the appellants could have run their defence and given evidence in support of it. It is stressed, however, that in addition to being deprived, so to speak, of ammunition, the appellants were put into a difficult dilemma. For the offences charged, they could have been sentenced to a substantial period of imprisonment. At the time of the trial, after the second Gulf War, they had an understandable fear as to what sentence a court might consider properly reflected public disapproval of assistance to Saddam Hussein. In those circumstances, the prospect of a muted presentation of the facts by the prosecution, followed by a suspended sentence, put pressure on the defendants to go quietly…We have considered the aggregate of all the unusual circumstances of this case – the material irregularity, the judge's ruling based on an unawareness by him and by prosecuting counsel of the undisclosed documents, and finally the pressure added to those factors by the discussions leading to the changes of plea. We consider the pleas of guilty to be "founded on" the material irregularity and the judge's ruling coupled with the pressure to which we have referred. In the result, we cannot regard the convictions as safe and satisfactory."
"58…The defendants had not lost the ability "properly to defend themselves" at a retrial when they would be well aware of the failures on the part of the prosecution. The defendants could, if they were prepared to take the consequences of doing so, exploit the earlier non-disclosure to challenge the bona fides of the officers in charge of the prosecution "viewed as a single entity".
"59. The shortcomings on the part of the prosecution are not of the category of misconduct which would justify interfering with the defendants' freely entered pleas of guilty. We see this case as being in a wholly different category from the exceptional case Lord Lowry was considering in his speech in Bennett. When the appellants pleaded guilty they were not aware of the matters relied upon before Turner J. for obtaining a stay of the retrial, but they were aware that they were appealing against their conviction. They therefore should have appreciated that the appeal against their conviction might succeed. If this had happened they would still be bound by their pleas of guilty. They were never ignorant of any evidence which went directly to their innocence of guilt. They were only unaware of material which could, but for their pleas, have been used to attack the credibility of the prosecution witnesses. Ignorance of this kind does not justify reopening their pleas of guilty. While there was an irregularity in their trial on the Frugal indictment, the appellants' pleas to the Madrid indictment were not "founded on" and were independent of that irregularity."
"30. However, when the appeal is in respect of a conviction following a plea of guilty the considerations which apply are very different and the circumstances in which it may be appropriate or proper to allow an appeal are of necessity very limited. That is because the safety of the conviction depends not on some legal error or procedural irregularity which has arisen in the course of the adversarial process of the trial, thereby leading to a verdict of guilty which might otherwise have been not guilty; it rests upon the question whether, and in what circumstances the Court should look behind the plea of guilty (which represents a voluntary recognition of guilt) and enter on an examination of the reasons or motives of the defendant in deciding so to plead. That in turn requires the Court to reach a decision based not upon objective matters of record, namely the procedures adopted and decisions reached openly in the course of the trial, but on the subjective recollection and subsequent account of the appellant and/or his advisers as to the reasons for his plea. Such a procedure is an inherently unsatisfactory basis for interference with an unequivocal plea, voluntarily made at the proper time, for reasons or motives which may be infinitely various. Of course, if the defendant can establish that he pleaded guilty without understanding the nature of the charge or otherwise without intending to admit his guilt of what was alleged, the conviction may be quashed; as may also be the case if the appellant can show circumstances which effectively deprived him of a free choice as to plea: see Archbold (2001) at paragraph 7-103 and cases there cited [see now Archbold (2003) at para 7-291]. In such cases the voluntary nature of the plea is vitiated.
"31. It will also sometimes be the case that an appellant can establish that, as a result of trial processes prior to his plea, such as an erroneous ruling on a point of law (see R v. Preston 95 Cr App R 355 at 381) the basis of the plea is fundamentally undermined. Similarly, where by reason of some act of deception or non-disclosure on the part of the prosecution the appellant has effectively no alternative but to plead guilty, when he would not otherwise have done so, his conviction may thereafter be set aside (see for instance R v. Schlesinger and others [1995] Crim LR 137 and R v. Blackledge and others [1998] 2 Cr App R 100). However, that will not be the case where, in the face of evidence bona fide presented by the prosecution, the accused has pleaded guilty on the basis of advice from counsel, however reluctantly accepted: see R v. Peace [1976] Crim LR 119. As made clear in R v. Boal (1992) 95 Cr App R 272, although a plea of guilty does not deprive the court of jurisdiction to hear an appeal against conviction, it is highly relevant to the issue whether the conviction is unsafe that the defendant knew what he is doing, intended to plead guilty, did so without equivocation and after receipt of expert advice…
"33…Thus once the defendant has pleaded guilty and been sentenced on the basis of his plea, it will only be in the rarest of cases that circumstances should be regarded as vitiating or undermining the voluntary nature of the plea to such an extent that the conviction should be regarded as unsafe. Certainly it will not in the ordinary way be sufficient to demonstrate that the evidence of a particular witness, which at the time appeared reliable, has been shown subsequently to be unreliable or untrue."
"35…As a result, we are satisfied that:
1. Had the Crown prior to the appellant's plea of guilty been aware of the deficiencies of PC Desmond's report the prosecution would not have proceeded.
2. Equally, and in any event, had the defence been aware that the report was not reliable, the appellant would not have entered a plea of guilty.
3. Had the deficiencies of the report emerged and had the Crown disclosed them at any stage prior to sentence, as we are satisfied would have been done had the truth been known, the defendant would have sought to vacate his plea of guilty.
4. The Crown would have supported the appellant in that application and, had it been successful, would have elected not to proceed.
5. If, contrary to what we are told would have happened, the Crown had proceeded, the defendant would have called his expert witness to attest to the possibility of mechanical failure in which event it is possible, and indeed probable, that the jury would have acquitted the defendant.
"36. In those circumstances, we are satisfied that the assumption of both the prosecution and the defence as to the reliability of PC Desmond's report as to the reasons for the accident and his dismissal of the suggestion of mechanical failure, and the subseq uent revelation of the worthlessness of that report and opinion fatally undermine the plea."
"7. This court will only rarely entertain an appeal against conviction where there has been a plea of guilty, but the circumstances in which an appeal may be successful are not confined to those identified by Avory J in Forde [1923] 2 KB 400, as is clear from the recent judgment in Togher [2001] 1 Cr App R 457. The court has to consider whether the appellant had a fair trial. It is difficult to see how the appellant can be said to have had a fair trial when it is now the case for the prosecution that she should not have been tried at all. Furthermore if, when advising in relation to plea, her legal advisers had access to all of the relevant material it is clear that she would have been strongly advised not to plead guilty, and there is no reason to think that she would have refused to accept that advice."
Connolly's appeal: discussion and conclusion
"That was on May 14 and the murder was 8 weeks before. The jury might think quite possibly that the man be honestly mistaken, when he said he was at work at Bibbys because he was in fact at work there up to March the 18th…"
Conclusion
Note 1 CI Balmer said, in answer to a question from the judge, that “The first time I saw him in connection with this case was on this date – 19th March”. The reference to “March” was clearly a slip for “November”, since 19 November not March was the subject matter of the questioning at this point and “this date” had already been identified as 19 November. 19 March was the date of the murders. [Back]