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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 >> JVG, R. v [2015] EWCA Crim 1630 (22 September 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2015/1630.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Crim 1630 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE BLAKE
MR JUSTICE HADDON-CAVE
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R E G I N A | ||
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J VG |
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(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr J Gadsden appeared on behalf of the Crown
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Crown Copyright ©
"You should bear in mind however that the prosecution's case is that these alleged crimes took place over a number of years and were concealed."
"You are entitled to take into account everything you have heard about the defendant, including his age and what his son and former wife have said about him."
"Having said that, considering what you know about the defendant you may think he is entitled to ask you to give weight to his previous good character when you are deciding whether the prosecution have satisfied you that he is guilty."
(i) Evidence of a child's perception
"There is an important point to bear in mind about [AB]. When a child is six she may well not be able to see clearly or understand that sexual activity is wrong or inappropriate, especially with an adult. She will already have been conditioned, quite properly, to trust an adult relation. She might even be flattered by the attention. But when the child is 12 or 13 however, knowing much more about the world and having learned more about what makes sexual activity appropriate or inappropriate, feelings that things are wrong may well come to dominate and allegations may explode forth where there was previously silence and no suspicion of them. These are considerations that you should bear in mind."
"She said he would use sexual words while this was happening, bitch, cunt and fuck. This has been described at various stages [as] swearing.
i... when a person hits their thumb with the end of the hammer you might swear, use one of those words, but using those words in a sexual context is quite different you might think. Some people might use them for stimulation or to heighten the experience, and that is effectively what [AB] is saying took place. It's not swearing as such, it is the use of words which we associate as swear words in a sexual context."
"Well there are several things for you to think about this, to consider about this. Firstly, how can [AB] have been fully clothed and yet leak menstrual blood onto the bed without staining her clothes and/or making them damp?
The defendant said in evidence there was no blood on her trousers 'If there had been blood on her trousers I would have seen it. She was still in her day clothes the next day'.
Well, if that is right, how did the blood pass from [AB's] body to the bed without staining or dampening her clothes? Defence counsel suggested that AB might have changed her clothes between the leak of menstrual blood and the defendant seeing her fully clothed.
Well, that was not put to [AB] so she has not been able to deal with that point and it is not supported by the evidence and there is no evidence that [AB] had a spare set of clothes with her into which she could change.
Is the truth of the matter, so that you can be sure, that what [AB] says, namely that she was naked on the bed and with the defendant and leaked? Well that is a question for you."
"Next: how was it that [AB] knew to tell the police after the end of the first recorded interview, after the machine had been switched off, that there was a stain of blood on the bed ... Remember, there is no doubt whatever that the blood was [AB's] menstrual blood, any other suggestion would be quite wrong.
The defendant said yesterday: 'On Sunday I saw the stain. [AB] didn't even know. I never told her she had leaked on the bed'. Well, never was the word he used.
Mr Gadsden, prosecuting counsel, then put it to [her] how then did she know about the blood to tell the police and the defendant said this ... 'Later on I said to her: "Look at the mattress, that's what you've done to the bed". When she came on the next visit I pointed it out to her, that was two or three weeks later. I turned the mattress back and showed her the blue stain'.
Well none of this was put to [AB] so she has had no opportunity to deal with it. What [AB] did say, and I quote, 'Sometimes I helped him change the sheets ... we would flip the mattress to keep it fresh. The defendant couldn't flip the mattress himself because he was old'.
Well, you are entitled to ask yourself whether the defendant, as he says, turned the mattress over himself. Also, did the defendant find himself fatally caught out by this point and then invented a story about showing [AB] her blood some time later to try and get himself out of the trap that prosecution counsel sprang. Well, these are matters for you but they are examples of issues that mean that this case may not just be a matter of one person's word against another."
"The defendant must know if this were true it would demolish the prosecution case. Although the defendant does not have to prove anything, it is for the prosecution to prove the facts so that you are sure, you are entitled to take into account the fact that ... there is no independent evidence to back this up, which you might think it is not difficult to obtain but has not been part of the evidence."
"The defendant relies on these. He says they indicate that all was well and that [AB] was affectionate towards him, not regarding him as her abuser. 'Look', he says, 'they're messages of affection entirely appropriate for a granddaughter to her grandfather'. Well indeed they are, but what is important is what was really going on in [AB's] head at the time. Were her messages really what she thought or was she writing them, as it were, between gritted teeth to appease the rest of her family perhaps so as not to ... arouse suspicion."
"Well, the central issue in this case then is that [AB] and the prosecution say that she is telling the truth and you can be sure of that. The defendant says it is a pack of lies. He is not saying there was some misunderstanding or that [AB] is too mentally ill to give a reliable account, or is hallucinating or something of that sort. No, the defendant accuses her of lying and that she knows she is lying, it is as simple as that.
Well, if [AB] has been lying, she's been lying now for two years to people in authority and has done so on several occasions. Her lies, if lies they are, would have split an otherwise apparently perfectly healthy, happy family, it would have been a very wicked thing to do. There is no suggestion that [AB] might be lying, for example, because the family was already unhappy and sides were being taken in some family split, or because she had some malicious but false motive for taking revenge on the defendant. There is no suggestion that [AB] is a fantasist habitually, or a habitual liar, or that she has lied on some other occasion."
"This [ground] is in my view misconceived. This is not a case of a single jury, in a single trial, returning verdicts which could be regarded as inconsistent. The first jury reached verdicts on some counts, but not on others. Counsel has confirmed that no submission was made that a retrial would be an abuse of the process, and I do not see how such an argument could have been advanced. The second jury were entitled to reach their own verdicts as to the counts which were before them."