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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 >> Daniels & Ors, R v [2010] EWCA Crim 2740 (24 November 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2010/2740.html Cite as: [2011] 1 Cr App R 18, [2011] Crim LR 556, [2010] EWCA Crim 2740, [2011] 1 Cr App Rep 18 |
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ON APPEAL FROM
THE CROWN COURT AT BRADFORD
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE GRIFFITH WILLIAMS
and
HIS HONOUR JUDGE ROOK QC
(sitting as a Judge of the Court of Appeal Criminal Division)
____________________
R | ||
v | ||
John Daniels Anthony Paul Davies Anthony Vincent Neale Darren Trevor Martin |
____________________
Iain Goldrein QC (instructed by BH Mohamed Solicitors) for Martin
Tom Bayliss QC (instructed by the Crown Prosecution Service) for the Crown
Hearing date : 20 October 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Richards :
The evidence at the second trial
The SOCPA regime
"There never has been, and never will be, much enthusiasm about a process by which criminals receive lower sentences than they otherwise deserve because they have informed on or given evidence against those who participated in the same or linked crimes, or in relation to crimes in which they had no personal involvement, but about which they have provided useful information to the investigating authorities. However, like the process which provides for a reduced sentence following a guilty plea, this is a longstanding and entirely pragmatic convention. The stark reality is that without it major criminals who should be convicted and sentenced for offences of the utmost seriousness might, and in many cases, certainly would escape justice. …. The solitary incentive to encourage co-operation is provided by a reduced sentence, and the common law, and now statute, have accepted that this is a price worth paying to achieve the overwhelming and recurring public interest that major criminals, in particular, should be caught and prosecuted to conviction."
Stewart's SOCPA agreement
"2. It is hereby agreed that Sonny STEWART will assist the investigator and prosecutor in relation to the ongoing investigation being conducted by West Yorkshire Police into the murder of Edward Simpson.
3. Assistance under the terms of this agreement will include the following:
(a) Sonny STEWART will plead guilty to the offences of conspiring to rob Mr Simpson and manslaughter as a result of his death.
(b) Sonny STEWART will participate in a de-briefing process. He undertakes during that process, which will be tape recorded and conducted under caution, to fully admit his own involvement in the matters under investigation.
(c) Sonny STEWART will provide the investigator with all known facts, statements, documents, evidence or any other items available to him relating to the said investigation and offences and the existence and activities of all others involved.
(d) Sonny STEWART will maintain continuous and complete co-operation throughout the investigation of the said offences and until the conclusion of any court proceedings arising as a result of the investigation. Such co-operation includes but is not limited to Sonny STEWART:
(i) voluntarily and without prompting providing the investigator with all information that becomes known to him or available to him relating to the said offences in addition to any such information already provided;
(ii) providing promptly, and without the prosecutor using any powers under any section of the Act, all information available to him, wherever located, requested by the investigator in relation to the said offences, to the extent it has not already been provided.
(e) Sonny STEWART will give truthful evidence in any court proceedings whatsoever arising from the investigation of the said offences."
i) Stewart's plea of guilty to manslaughter, and the Crown's acceptance of that plea, are criticised on the basis that Stewart's own account provided no proper factual basis for a plea to manslaughter, whilst on the case as advanced by the Crown at trial Stewart was guilty of murder rather than manslaughter. In his own account Stewart accepted involvement in the conspiracy to rob but maintained that the conspiracy envisaged only minimal if any violence being required to facilitate the robbery, owing to the timidity of the victim. The prosecution case, on the other hand, was that the conspirators must have envisaged that serious violence might be needed for the robbery.ii) It was only at a very late stage, immediately prior to the signing of the SOCPA agreement, that Stewart implicated Daniels in the events leading to the death of Edward Simpson. In his first scoping interview, on 16 June, and the draft proof of evidence handed across at that interview, he made no reference to Daniels. At the beginning of the further scoping interview, on the morning of 17 June, he was asked if there was anything else he wanted to tell the police about the events leading to the death. He responded that Daniels was "the main player in the organisation and all of the death of Edward Simpson" and went on to give details of Daniels' involvement and of the basis of his, Stewart's, knowledge of it. He claimed not to have said this before because he was scared for himself and his family's wellbeing.
iii) In the first scoping interview and the draft proof of evidence, Stewart said that Davies "laughed" on hearing that Martin was cutting the deceased's ear. In the interviews after the SOCPA agreement, however, Stewart added to his account by stating that Davies not only laughed but said words to the effect of "Darren's a game lad" on hearing the news about Martin cutting the deceased's ear. It is said that this evidence about Davies glorifying in violence became a potentially important part of the case, because the jury convicted Davies of murder after asking a specific question "If a defendant became involved in the events at a point after some injuries had occurred, but did not contribute to the death by way of violence, but also did not stop events and attempt to help the victim, does that make him guilty of murder?".
The application to exclude Stewart's evidence at the trial
"It seems to me that there is no abuse in executive discretion given the overriding public interest to which I have made reference. For the Crown to accept as a pragmatic matter a plea which is freely offered in consequence of legal advice accepted by him and in respect of which there is no evidence of improper pressure, … put shortly in the circumstances of this case – I can understand, as I indicated in the previous trial I did, why that pragmatic approach might be taken. It does not seem to me to be relevant that there is, in effect, a plea to [an offence] which, on my current understanding of the law, it would be difficult if not impossible for the Crown to make out. Given not least that Section 71 to Section 75 make provision, amongst other things, for immunity in cases of those defendants who are known … to have committed various crimes.
I turn, therefore, to the argument in respect of Section 78. The argument here is to exclude the whole of the evidence, that is a bold argument. In my view there is no proper basis for excluding the whole of the evidence. … The jury are the proper arbiters. It is not in my view appropriate to regard evidence of a co-conspirator or accomplice otherwise admissible and whose admissibility is provided for by inference by Sections 71 to 75, by regarding the prejudicial effect as outweighing the probative value, because in one sense the more cogent the evidence is against a defendant the greater the 'prejudicial' effect may seem to be. The safeguard it seems to me to be applied here is that which is conventionally applied in the case of those who give evidence against their mates, and that is to give proper directions reminding the jury of Stewart's self-interest, and any particular flaws which have emerged in his evidence and inconsistencies therein.
It seems to me that that is the way in which the interests to which I first referred, those of securing a fair trial, that is a fair trial to all parties, can be served. For those reasons I do not regard the balance is made out favourably to exclusion. The evidence is to be included."
"Do not lose sight of the fact that some witnesses may have reasons of their own for being not wholly truthful. In particular, take care when you are looking at the evidence of Sonny Stewart. He was 'One of the gang'. He has done what has been described as the deal of the decade if not of the century, got away with murder, engaged in a deal which the Prosecution are said have 'Done a deal with the devil', two of the phrases. You may think that if he had been in the dock you would have been asking whether he was guilty of murder.
Well, he offered a plea to manslaughter. Plainly, you may think, the prosecuting authorities accepted that in order to put his evidence before you. They do so on the basis that he promised, in a form of agreement which is authorised by an Act of Parliament, the SOCPA agreement, … to tell the whole truth. That does not mean to say he has told the whole truth, it is for you to decide the extent to which he has done. It has been strongly suggested that to secure the deal he might have emphasised some other Defendants' roles or even in the case of Daniels, invented them. Does he have a reason to do so? Has he minimised his own role? Your distaste for the procedure does not matter, you must avoid prejudice. But you should be careful of the fact that he might have interests of his own to serve. He did not mention a word of Johnny Daniels' involvement on the day he was first interviewed by the Police to see if they would enter into an agreement, yet the very next morning almost the first thing he did was to volunteer his name. Look carefully at why that was. Do you accept that the reason he did not mention Daniels on the 16th June last year, was that he was worried, scared about what he thought Daniels might do to him and his family? Or was it because he wanted to offer a name to secure a beneficial deal?"
The submissions on the appeal
"What is of particular importance, you may think, in this case was whether or not Sonny Stewart had had any off-the-record conversations between the first day, the 16th, and the second day, the 17th, the very first time that he mentioned anything about the involvement of Johnny Daniels. Why was that? Was it because he had spent the night wondering how he might beef up his account; was it because he was wondering whether he should tell what he knew. Was it because something was said to him secretly, off-the-record, that is, off the tape record – there was a record of it but not a tape record of it, by the Police.
Well, when he was asked in cross-examination, my note of it reads thus. 'Did you have any conversations with the Police about the account you'd given?' Answer, 'No'. 'No-one approached you to ask you about what you had said?' Answer, 'No'. The Police Officers who came told you that there were conversations about telling the truth, that is what you had to do. They said there was a conversation about giving him material which he had not got with him in the police station, the CCTV and the telephone records. But there is no actual evidence that there was a conversation about the account which he had given. That may miss the point, the point that has been made to you powerfully by Defence counsel is, everything else was tape-recorded, why was this particular conversation not tape-recorded? So you know, so you can be sure of that. But there it is, it is for you to make of the evidence what you will."
The ruling in R v George
"So far as the first category is concerned, the defence seek disclosure not only of all previous accounts of the relevant events given by the three VAA witnesses, but any record of the context in which such accounts were given, i.e. the questions put to or comments made to them in the course of giving their accounts. It is submitted on behalf of Mr George that in the light of the disclosure that has now been given, it can be seen that each of them give accounts that develop significantly and change over time. Moreover none of the witnesses, either in their first or subsequent more detailed accounts suggested that they were guilty of the cartel offence, yet subsequently admitted their guilt when required to do so by the OFT. [Counsel for Mr George] also relies upon the fact that the statements made by them to lawyers acting for VAA are inconsistent with the statements served by the OFT. She submits that it is therefore reasonable to infer that the witnesses were put under pressure either to give statements and/or to tailor their evidence to safeguard their own position and/or to protect the perceived interests of VAA. It is submitted that the material in relation to which disclosure is now sought is likely to support the proposition that such witnesses were subject to inducement or pressure, and that that could have the most serious effect upon their reliability or credibility. I accept that it is possible that such material could have that effect, and I have no doubt that if in the possession of the OFT, it would be disclosable."
"8.1 The requirement to maintain continuous and complete co-operation throughout the OFT's investigation and any subsequent proceedings is at the heart of the leniency process and is a stated requirement in both the OFT's penalty and no-action guidance. Clearly the requirement necessitates compliance with the rules and principles set out in those guidance documents and also in this guidance note ….
…
8.26 It is important that a careful note is made of all actions taken as part of an internal investigation, and that those are retained until the conclusion of any proceedings. There may be circumstances where the OFT will need to rebut arguments that an internal investigation has compromised the integrity of the OFT's case, and clear contemporaneous notes detailing each step in such an investigation will be invaluable.
8.27 The importance of note-taking and the retention of notes is particularly acute when it involves the conduct of interviews with witnesses ….
…
8.29 It is accepted that the undertaking may contend that legal professional privilege will attach to both of the types of notes referred to in paragraphs 8.26 and 8.27 above. However, there may be circumstances where the OFT is advised by counsel that disclosure to the OFT and to others is necessary to enable a case to proceed and in those circumstances the OFT will expect an undertaking or individual to waive any applicable privilege to the extent that the OFT is advised that it is necessary …."
"In my judgment the OFT ought reasonably to take such steps. I arrive at that conclusion for a number of reasons. First I have borne in mind the overriding obligation on the OFT as the prosecuting authority to deal fairly with the defence. Secondly I take account of the duty on the airlines and VAA witnesses to give continuous and complete co-operation, and of the fact that the airlines are required to grant the OFT access to all relevant documentary material as a condition of the leniency agreements. Thirdly I take account of the nature of the material sought, and of the fact that it may shed light upon an issue likely to be of considerable importance at trial, namely whether the VAA witnesses were subject to pressure or inducement with regard to the changes in their account of the events in question. Fourthly I bear in mind that waiver would not result in any unlimited loss of the applicable privilege since any waiver would be for the purposes only of the criminal trial. If a request for waiver is made, it may be that the airlines, and more importantly the VAA witnesses, will respond favourably, bearing in mind that if they do not do so, they will face the risk that immunity/leniency will be withdrawn."
The conviction appeals: discussion
The conviction appeals: conclusion
Davies's appeal against sentence
"Starting at 30 years, the aggravating features I have already identified put that figure up to 33 to 34 years given your organising role. I make allowance for the fact that you did not yourself wield a weapon within … the home of the victim. Having taken account of the fact that you are currently serving a sentence with a year and some months to run, it seems to me that the appropriate minimum terms that you must serve before you are even considered for release is one of 35 years."