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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 >> Edwards & Ors, R v [2005] EWCA Crim 1813 (29 June 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2005/1813.html Cite as: [2006] 1 Cr App R 3, [2006] 1 Cr App Rep 3, [2005] EWCA Crim 1813 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
(LORD JUSTICE ROSE)
MR JUSTICE HOLLAND
MR JUSTICE RICHARDS
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R E G I N A | ||
-v- | ||
KARL ADRIAN EDWARDS | ||
STEPHEN JOHN FYSH | ||
JAMES EDWARD DUGGAN | ||
NAVEED NASIR CHOHAN |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR J LYNN appeared on behalf of the APPELLANT FYSH
MR J MCCRINDELL appeared on behalf of the APPLICANT DUGGAN
MR J SAMUELS appeared on behalf of the APPLICANT CHOHAN
MR B HOULDER & MR A BASSANO appeared on behalf of the CROWN
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Crown Copyright ©
"...to allow that in at this stage would seem to be on balance to have such an adverse effect on the fairness of the proceedings that the court ought not to admit it..."
He went on to say:
"...I have to balance the type of conviction that would go before the jury as against the allegation that the defendant faces, and in the context of this case, there are offensive weapons, be it CS gas or a knife and incidents of effectively common assault on police officers, and to allow that in for these offences it seems to me would have an adverse effect on the fairness of the proceedings, but more fundamental as I have indicated, I think it is the age of the conviction which plainly must be taken into account, and, having regard to the balancing act that I have to do,... I think it is perfectly clear on the authorities that these should not be allowed in, and so I do not allow them in."
That conclusion as to the impact of the 1992 matters on the fairness of the proceedings, Miss Arshad submits, was a finding which bound the Recorder when the later application was made, following the attack upon the prosecution witnesses.
"I have come to the conclusion that there is a difference now between the prosecution arguments, the difference being a sustained attack upon the character of the police, and it seems to me that, even though these convictions are of a serious nature and of some age, the jury are entitled to know about this conviction, that I think they would be misled seriously if they did not know of this matter."
In our judgment, that was a conclusion which was not only open to the Recorder, it is one which he was, in the circumstances as we have described them, right to reach.
"So far as gateway (g) is concerned, yes, it is an inevitable consequence of the defendant's case that the prosecution witnesses have to be attacked by counsel as having made this up and put their heads together, as was put squarely to them, and rightly to them, by Mr Lynn, cooked up a story, invented a malicious and unpleasant story, a fraud."
As it seems to us, once it is accepted, as it was in the court below and is here, that the attack on the prosecution witnesses amounted to an allegation of conspiracy to put their heads together, in order falsely to implicate the appellant, the judge's ruling under gateway (g) was, as he described it himself "inevitable". In our judgment, there is no substance in the grounds of appeal so far as Fysh is concerned.
"In this case you have heard evidence that Mr Chohan has a bad character, in the sense that he has got criminal convictions and you have heard, it is alleged, that he otherwise misconducted himself by supplying heroin to Donna Marsh. It is important that you understand why you have heard this evidence and how you can use it. As I will explain in more detail later, you must not convict Mr Chohan only because he has got a bad character. You have heard of this bad character because, first of all, in relation to the allegation that he was supplying drugs to Donna (and bear in mind it is her allegation that that is the position) it may help you to understand other evidence in the case, namely how is it that Donna Marsh was so confident that the man running past her on Lee Street, running away from Mr Marsh and from the two women, was the defendant. The reason being because she was seeing him several times a day when acquiring drugs from him. So it may help you to consider the accuracy and reliability of her identification and it may help you to understand the case as a whole. You have heard, in relation to the previous convictions, of his bad character and it may help you to resolve an issue that has arisen between the defence and the prosecution, namely the question whether he has a propensity or a tendency or an inclination to commit offences of the kind with which he is charged. If you think it is right, you may take the previous convictions into account, in deciding whether or not Mr Chohan committed the offences with which he is now charged. The prosecution rely on the robbers in 1992 because they show that he has a tendency to use weapons to threaten violence to steal and two instances have been given to you where a sheath knife was used, one in order to steal and one whereby theft actually took place and it is said, ten years on, now he is using a handgun. The prosecution rely on the burglaries in 2000 because they say that they show that the defendant has a tendency to use bogus explanations to trick his way into older people's homes in order to steal from them... So the prosecution's case there is that it is, on this occasion, a combination of pretending to be looking for people who have robbed his mother, asking for a pen and paper to write down the description of the alleged robberies and then using the pretext, coming back and saying: 'We have found them' going in, producing the gun and stealing wallet. So the crown are saying here there is a tendency to commit robberies with a weapon and to target the elderly with bogus explanations and, therefore, they say it makes it more likely that he is guilty of the offence. The defence, on the other hand, say, first of all, these robberies were ten years ago, he described himself, 'I was about 16 or 17 at the time, the burglaries were three years old, I always pleaded guilty to offences that I had been arrested for' and it is, in fairness to the defence, a matter which you can take into account, deciding what impact the convictions had on his truthfulness. Mr Samuels put it in a well known phrase from Casablanca of 'rounding up the usual suspects' and that is what obviously you must be very careful about...
If you do conclude that, at the time of these offences in May, 2003, Mr Chohan did have a propensity to commit offences of that type, namely robberies with weapons or targeting the elderly with bogus explanations to get entry into the property, then you can consider whether it makes it more likely that he committed the offences in May, 2003. You have to decide to what extent, if at all, his character helps you when you are considering whether or not he is guilty. You must not convict simply because of his convictions, nor mainly because of them. The propensity or tendency amounts to some additional evidence pointing to guilt, but please bear in mind, even if he did have such a tendency, it does not necessarily prove that he would commit further offences or that he has committed these offences.
You are also entitled to consider the evidence of Mr Chohan's previous convictions in the following way. If you think it right, you may take into account, when deciding whether or not his evidence to you was truthful, because a person with convictions for dishonesty may be less likely to tell the truth, but it does not follow that he is not capable of telling the truth. Indeed, Mr Chohan says, 'The fact that on the previous occasions I have been arrested and I have always held my hands up means that, when I plead not guilty, I am likely to be telling the truth' and you decide to what extent his character helps you when judging his evidence. So that is the extent to which the evidence of his previous convictions may be used for the particular purposes I have just indicated, if you find it helpful."
That approach is not only, rightly not criticised by Mr Samuels in this case, but, subject to one refinement in relation to the distinction drawn between propriety of dishonesty and propriety to untruthfulness in para 13 of Hanson, it provides an impeccable summing-up which may well afford useful guidance in other cases where summing up the significance of previous convictions.