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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 >> Lederman, R v [2015] EWCA Crim 1308 (23 July 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2015/1308.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Crim 1308 |
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ON APPEAL FROM BLACKFRIARS CROWN COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE CLARKE QC
T21047237
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE SIMON
and
MRS JUSTICE PATTERSON DBE
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REGINA |
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- and - |
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GEOFFREY LEDERMAN |
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Christopher Donnellan QC appeared for Mr Lederman
Hearing date: 9 July 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Patterson:
Factual background
Fitness to Plead and Unfitness to Attend Trial
"My conclusion is that he is unfit to stand trial essentially, and that is in the most part because of potential impact on him, the potential impact on his mental state and his risk of suicide, completed suicide, of him being required to attend court and stand trial." [27D-E]
"Yes, that is a difficult judgment. I mean based upon my review – my assessment on Thursday that was my feeling, that he would be broadly speaking able to follow proceedings and you know, answer questions et cetera. But there is some debate about that I suppose inasmuch as he is changeable and also that he does – he is prone to occasional periods of dissociation and there does seem to be evidence of a deterioration in his mood and to a certain extent in his cognitive abilities over recent weeks.
So I'd say as of last Thursday it's a difficult judgment to make but on balance I'd say that he was just about able to follow court proceedings but that may change.
…
As of Thursday I've said at this point that on balance I'd say that he's cognitively intact enough to be able to follow things but that could change depending upon how things go on the day in court." [36B-E & 38E]
"I think my conclusion was at the time that he was --- he was just above the threshold for fit to plead but I thought it highly likely that as the trial date approached his mental state would deteriorate and that would put him below the threshold" [58D]
"…simply cannot get past the terror of appearing in court and potentially being deemed a liar. The cerebrovascular disease that has caused the impairment in his executive functioning will not improve and is likely to get progressively worse over time. In my opinion therefore it is highly unlikely that Mr Lederman will regain the mental capacity to stand trial."
"My view is that he is not currently fit to plead and stand trial. Because he simply wouldn't be able to follow proceedings in court. He may be able to understand some questions and respond intelligently to some questions but other questions would totally throw him. When I say "questions" again, I mean discussion going on in court, questions between other people, not necessarily towards him. But some issues will – he will be totally thrown and unable to follow even get a vague gist of what is being discussed." [88C-E]
"Our submission is that he is not deliberately refusing to come to court in the context in which we've heard that evidence and he should not attend court for a trial if a trial is to continue. [110G]
…
An alternative is that he is excused attendance and the trial proceeds in his absence. [112C]
…
If your Honour is against us then he is not fit to attend and that is a matter for the court whether the trial should – if you find him fit to stand trial, first can you excuse his attendance on medical evidence and the trial will proceed in his absence." [140C]
i) the appellant could have attended court; and
ii) there was no application for evidence to be adduced from the appellant in any other form, whether by video link or to have a statement from the appellant read. In fact, the defence was fully set out in the police interview and in accounts that he had given to his medical advisers, in particular, to Professor Yorston who had seen him as recently as 27 November. All of that content was before the jury. There was nothing further which could have been said on the appellant's behalf.
"…as the medical men have all said, the sooner the better. And the sooner his trial starts and he can go home, the trial having started, it seems to me the better."
"My concerns are encapsulated by Professor Yorston's description that bringing him to court would tip him over. In other words, to use his term, and adopted as a lay man, he hasn't tipped yet. That I find troubling in that, as you say, it is slightly – and all these terms sound pejorative and they are not meant to, it is holding a gun at the court's head saying: don't you dare tip him over the edge." [132E-G]
"I should say for all those involved in this case, particularly those emotionally involved, that though the defendant attended at dismissal proceedings, it was quite obvious to me that his mental condition was I think in layman's terms best described as not normal. He was listening. He was paying attention but it was quite apparent to me that the attention paid to him was something that caused him to quail. Having said that, after the dismissal was rejected he did enter pleas of not guilty to the indictment and I am entirely satisfied that Geoffrey Lederman was fit to plead and fit to give instructions not only to medical examiners but also, given the way it was argued very ably by Mr Donnellan QC, that he had given extensive instructions to his lawyers which will be used in this forthcoming trial." [10G-11D]
"Matters that are common ground, although touched on by Mr Donnellan quite rightly, are that it is really not arguable that this is a state of affairs which should cause a stay of the prosecution. In circumstances such as this I always disapprove of the term 'abuse'. Mental conditions such as the defendant is suffering from might be examined to see whether a stay of prosecution should take place but it seems to me that, given the case in the state that it is, a stay of prosecution is not applicable.
There is no question either of insanity. Neither doctor regards this defendant as being what is referred to as sectionable, so it is not a question of a jury having to decide merely whether he did the act after a judicial finding that he was not fit to be tried. The finding that I make is not that he is not fit to be tried but that he is not in a state to attend his trial which is a different finding and a narrow one and very unusual and should be adopted by the court in very, very exceptional circumstances." [12G-13F]
Renewed Application for Leave to Appeal
"Mr Donnellan, quite understandably, concentrates on the complete lack of recollection of that action by the defendant and asserts that the Crown's inability to fill that gap as far as the defendant's knowledge and intentions were concerned is and should be fatal to the ability of any jury properly to convict.
The difficulty is that in my view as far as dismissal is concerned which is insurmountable is the defendant's acknowledgement that the driving into the wall was deliberate and was effectively a safety manoeuvre.
The particular matter that is relied on by the Crown in page 3 of the first interview is, 'I thought to myself, "This is madly out of control. I've got to crash the car, otherwise I'm going to do some damage" and I think I visualised the wall the other side and the clear patch of road and I thought, "You've got to crash it", and that's what I did.'
It means two things. Firstly, there is evidence, even if he did lose some mental stability outside West Hampstead station, that within the 300 yards of the station and the crash he not only regained full mental control, but made a positive decision to plough his car across the road into front garden walls on that pavement which was actually highly populated at the time.
In my view, it is the decision to cross that road and the consequences of that crossing that is the actus reus and, for that matter, the mens rea of the offences with which Mr Lederman is charged." [3C-4F]