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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 >> Gurpinar v R [2015] EWCA Crim 178 (20 February 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2015/178.html Cite as: [2015] WLR 3442, [2015] EWCA Crim 178, [2015] WLR(D) 80, [2015] 1 WLR 3442, [2015] 1 Cr App R 31 |
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2014/02175/B1 & 2014/02167/B1 |
ON APPEAL FROM THE CENTRAL CRIMINAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE COULSON
and
MR JUSTICE GILBART
____________________
Mustafa Gurpinar |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Regina |
Respondent |
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Nii-Azu Kojo-Smith and another |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Regina |
Respondent |
____________________
Philippa McAtasney QC for the Appellant Kojo-Smith
Miss M Russell and A Power for the Applicant Caton
Duncan Penny QC and Duncan Atkinson for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 25 and 26 November 2014
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Thomas of Cwmgiedd, CJ :
This is the judgment of the court to which we have all contributed.
Introduction
i) In the first appeal, the appellant Gurpinar was convicted of murder at the Central Criminal Court before HH Judge John Bevan QC on 29 June 2012 and sentenced to detention at Her Majesty's Pleasure with a minimum term of 13 years.ii) In the second appeal, the appellant Kojo-Smith was convicted of murder at the Central Criminal Court before HH Judge Richard Marks QC on 14 April 2014 and sentenced to detention at Her Majesty's Pleasure with a minimum term of 18 years.
I THE LAW IN RELATION TO LOSS OF CONTROL
"54. Partial defence to murder: loss of control
(1) Where a person ("D") kills or is a party to the killing of another ("V"), D is not to be convicted of murder if—
(a) D's acts and omissions in doing or being a party to the killing resulted from D's loss of self-control,(b) the loss of self-control had a qualifying trigger, and(c) a person of D's sex and age, with a normal degree of tolerance and selfrestraint and in the circumstances of D, might have reacted in the same or in a similar way to D.
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1)(a), it does not matter whether or not the loss of control was sudden.
(3) In subsection (1)(c) the reference to "the circumstances of D" is a reference to all of D's circumstances other than those whose only relevance to D's conduct is that they bear on D's general capacity for tolerance or self-restraint.
(4) Subsection (1) does not apply if, in doing or being a party to the killing, D acted in a considered desire for revenge.
(5) On a charge of murder, if sufficient evidence is adduced to raise an issue with respect to the defence under subsection (1), the jury must assume that the defence is satisfied unless the prosecution proves beyond reasonable doubt that it is not.
(6) For the purposes of subsection (5), sufficient evidence is adduced to raise an issue with respect to the defence if evidence is adduced on which, in the opinion of the trial judge, a jury, properly directed, could reasonably conclude that the defence might apply.
(7) A person who, but for this section, would be liable to be convicted of murder is liable instead to be convicted of manslaughter.
55. Meaning of "qualifying trigger"
(1) This section applies for the purposes of section 54.
(2) A loss of self-control had a qualifying trigger if subsection (3), (4) or (5) applies.
(3) This subsection applies if D's loss of self-control was attributable to D's fear of serious violence from V against D or another identified person.
(4) This subsection applies if D's loss of self-control was attributable to a thing or things done or said (or both) which—
(a) constituted circumstances of an extremely grave character, and(b) caused D to have a justifiable sense of being seriously wronged.
(5) This subsection applies if D's loss of self-control was attributable to a combination of the matters mentioned in subsections (3) and (4).
(6) In determining whether a loss of self-control had a qualifying trigger—
(a) D's fear of serious violence is to be disregarded to the extent that it was caused by a thing which D incited to be done or said for the purpose of providing an excuse to use violence;(b) a sense of being seriously wronged by a thing done or said is not justifiable if D incited the thing to be done or said for the purpose of providing an excuse to use violence;
(c)…
(7) In this section references to "D" and "V" are to be construed in accordance with section 54.
(8) .."
"The ancient common law defence of provocation, reducing murder to manslaughter, was abolished and consigned to legal history books
… Just because loss of control was an essential ingredient of the old provocation defence, the name is evocative of it. It therefore needs to be emphasised at the outset that the new statutory defence is self-contained. Its common law heritage is irrelevant. The full ambit of the defence is encompassed within these statutory provisions".
The course of argument before the judge in the second case and the course of the argument in these appeals make it necessary to underline these clear words of Lord Judge CJ. It should rarely be necessary to look at cases decided under the old law of provocation. When it is necessary, the cases must be considered in the light of the fact that the defence of loss of control is a defence different to provocation and is fully encompassed within the statutory provisions. As has been frequently observed, the law does not develop in an accessible and coherent manner if reliance continues to be placed on cases that arise under a repealed or superseded law, unless there is good reason to do so.
i) The killing must have resulted from the defendant's loss of self- control: see paragraph 10 of Clinton;ii) The loss of self-control had a qualifying trigger: see paragraphs 11-29 of Clinton;
iii) A person of the defendant's sex and age, with a normal degree of tolerance and self-restraint and in the circumstances of the defendant might have reacted in a similar way to the defendant: see paragraphs 30 – 32 of Clinton.
As Lord Judge emphasised at paragraph 9 of Clinton:
"9 … If one is absent, the defence fails. It is therefore inevitable that the components should be analysed sequentially and separately. However, it is worth emphasising that in many cases where there is a genuine loss of control, the remaining components are likely to arise for consideration simultaneously or virtually so, at or very close to the moment when the fatal violence is used."
These components were considered further in R v Dawes [2013] EWCA Crim 322, [2013] 2 Cr App R 3, [2014] 1 WLR 947, [2013] 3 All ER 308.
Leaving the defence to the jury
"Where on a charge of murder there is evidence on which the jury can find that the person charged was provoked (whether by things done or by things said or by both together) to lose his self-control, the question whether the provocation was enough to make a reasonable man do as he did shall be left to be determined by the jury; and in determining that question the jury shall take into account everything both done and said according to the effect which, in their opinion, it would have on a reasonable man."
It is important to note that in contradistinction to the requirement in s.54 (5) and (6) of the Act of "sufficient evidence", the Homicide Act 1957 required only "evidence".
"Under the existing law, the judge must put the defence to the jury whenever there is evidence that the defendant ("D") was provoked to lose self-control, however, unlikely the defence is to succeed. The judicial obligation was probably not intentionally created by Parliament when the doctrine of provocation was reformed in 1957. The current position does not serve the interests of justice because the need to put the defence to the jury in these circumstances increases the likelihood that an unmeritorious claim may succeed. The current position may not even serve the interests of every D. Even if there is evidence of a loss of self-control, D may not want the jury side-tracked by a partial defence if his or her main claim is for complete acquittal."
"To ensure that the judge should not be required to leave either of the defences to the jury unless there was evidence on which a reasonable jury properly directed could conclude that they might apply."
At paragraphs 18 and 40 under the heading "Lack of Judicial Control" the paper noted:
"18. Under the existing law, if there is any evidence, that the defendant was provoked to lose his or her self-control, the judge must leave the defence to the jury, even if the defendant is not running a plea of provocation, for example because he or she is seeking a complete acquittal.
40. We agree with the Law Commission that there is no justification for the current position and we propose that the judge should not be required to leave either of these defences to the jury unless there is evidence on which a reasonable jury, properly directed, could conclude that it might apply."
"This differs from the position with the existing partial defence of provocation, where if there is evidence that a person was provoked to lose his or her self-control, the judge is required to leave the partial defence to the jury even where no jury could reasonably conclude that a reasonable person would have acted as the defendant did."
"This requires a common sense judgment based on an analysis of all the evidence. To the extent that the evidence may be in dispute, the judge has to recognise that the jury may accept the evidence which is most favourable to the defendant, and reject that which is most favourable to the prosecution, and so tailor the ruling accordingly. That is merely another way of saying that in discharging this responsibility the judge should not reject disputed evidence which the jury might choose to believe."
Loss of control
The reaction of a person of a normal degree of tolerance and self-restraint
II THE APPEAL OF GURPINAR
(1) The background
(a) The background evidence
"my tiny alligator needs sum food still .. dats what I name my knife LOOOL when I get a machete imma call it a crocodile"
"Bare man from ur ski told me ur some any neek stop actin on fb I'm finished talkin to u now."
(b) The evidence relating to killing of the deceased
(c) The actions of Gurpinar after the killing
"It don't bother me cos I didn't wanna fight."
Later, he asked his friend on Facebook not to tell anyone what had happened. Although there were over 900 Facebook messages after the killing, at no time did Gurpinar say that the stabbing was accidental or carried out in self-defence.
(d) The pathology evidence
(2) The course of the trial
"What I don't think it is, is provocation. It's not called that now, is it? It is called something else - loss of control. But at no stage does he say that he lost control and it seems to me that to add in a direction about loss of control would simply confuse."
"I don't see it as being anything other than an added complication that doesn't get us anywhere. The real route to manslaughter here is lack of intent. I should have said that, of course. They have got to consider accident, in which case it is no crime. They have got to consider self -defence and if it is or may be, he has got a complete defence and they have got to consider, once they have decided that it is not self-defence and is homicide, the question of intent and that is an issue. It seems to me that provocation – he doesn't say it and it is a fight, a playground fight. All right."
The appeal
(a) The application for leave
(b) The submissions on the appeal
i) There was evidence of loss of self-control both from witnesses and Gurpinar that Gurpinar was either angry or frightened at the time of the fight. Given his anger and his being frightened, there was an inference of loss of self-control to be drawn from the actual fact of a 14 year old boy of good character stabbing another in the chest. It did not matter that he had said that he did not want a fight, as it was sufficient that he lost his self-control for the second or two of the stabbing. When trial counsel had concluded that he acted in panic to stop the attack and to defend himself, he should have appreciated that this gave rise to loss of self-control.ii) The conduct before the stabbing was sufficient evidence of a qualifying trigger – a fear of serious violence and things said or done.
iii) There was sufficient evidence of the third component, taking into account Gurpinar's youth and the circumstances he faced.
Our conclusion
i) As we have set out at paragraph 10, we accept that it does not matter that the partial defence of loss of control was not part of the defence case. Nor does it matter that Gurpinar did not give any evidence of any loss of his self-control. The judge had to consider the whole of the evidence, including Gurpinar's evidence, objectively.ii) Although on the jury's verdict, it is clear that they rejected Gurpinar's evidence that he picked the knife up in the park and did not bring it with him, it is necessary to consider the issue on the basis that the jury might find that he had picked the knife up in the park, as that was one view of the evidence the jury was entitled reasonably to take.
iii) Although there was some evidence that Gurpinar was angry at some stage, it is plainly evident from the video and the Facebook messages that there was no evidential basis on which he could be said to have lost his self-control to any degree. The Facebook and other messages sent by Gurpinar, making due allowance for his immaturity and semi-literacy, made clear that he intended to use a knife if one was available. The video made it clear that Gurpinar delivered one thrusting blow with the knife which was plainly aimed at the deceased's chest. There was no sufficient evidential basis of any loss of self-control - the first component.
iv) Even if we were to have accepted that the doing by Gurpinar of an act atypical of him combined with anger and fear might give rise to a sufficient evidential inference of loss of self-control by Gurpinar, there was no evidence that the act may have been atypical. The evidence from his Facebook and other media comments demonstrated, on the contrary, that far from there being no evidential basis that his actions were atypical, clearly that violence and the use of knives were typical of his expressed views (making due allowance for his immaturity and semi-literacy).
v) As to the second component, the qualifying trigger, there was evidence from a witness independent of the rival groups that Gurpinar looked scared and his voice was quivering a bit. We are prepared to assume that he may have been in fear of violence (including the use of a knife) during the fight in which he was about to engage. However, there is no evidence that such fear was anything more than fear before engagement in a fight or that it in any way resulted in a loss of self-control.
vi) As to the third component, we have carefully considered what was shown on the video in the light of the eye witness evidence. We consider that there was no evidential basis on which a jury could conclude that a youth of Gurpinar's age and sex, with a normal degree of tolerance and self-restraint would have reacted in the same or a similar way to Gurpinar, either on the basis that he took the knife with him to the park or picked up the knife which he found lying in the park.
vii) Furthermore, the Facebook messages sent by Gurpinar to which we have referred and which are an integral part of the evidential background provide further evidence, making due allowance for his immaturity and semi-literacy, that his reaction in striking the blow at the deceased's chest was not a reaction of a youth of his age with a normal degree of tolerance and self-restraint.
viii) Looking at the evidence overall and assuming that the jury may have found the facts in the narrow area of evidence in dispute in a way most favourable to Gurpinar, there was insufficient evidence on which a jury properly directed could reasonably conclude that the defence of loss of control might apply.
III KOJO- SMITH
The background
(a) The disorder
(b) The groups
Group A
OFFENCE | VERDICT/PLEA | SENTENCE | |
Niazu Kojo-Smith | Murder | Conviction on 4 April 2014 |
7 April 2014 Detention at Her Majesty's Pleasure with a minimum period of 18 years detention |
Riaz Anderson | Violent disorder (Count 2) | Guilty plea on 4 January 2013 |
2 August 2013 20 months detention |
Tristan Mullings | Violent disorder (Count 2) | Guilty plea on 25 January 2013 |
2 August 2013 20 months imprisonment (less 189 days on a qualifying curfew) |
Travis Townsend | Violent disorder (Count 2) | Acquitted on judge's direction 24 May 2013 |
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Michael Alvaranga | Violent Disorder (Count 2) | Acquitted 4 April 2014 |
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Javin Rigabie | Violent Disorder (Count 2) | Acquitted 4 April 2014 |
Group B
OFFENCE | VERDICT/PLEA | SENTENCE | |
Danny Caton | Violent disorder (Counts 2 & 3) | Guilty pleas on 25 January 2013 |
2 August 2013 28 months imprisonment (Count 2) 12 months imprisonment (Count 3 – concurrent) 6 months for activation of a suspended sentence (consecutive) |
Tony Caton | Violent disorder (Counts 2 & 3) | Conviction on 4 April 2014 |
3 years imprisonment on each count concurrent |
Michael Ndefo | Violent disorder (Counts 2 & 3) |
Guilty pleas on 25 January 2013 |
2 August 2013 28 months imprisonment (Count 2) 12 months imprisonment (Count 3 - concurrent) |
Rhys Regisford | Violent disorder (Count 3) | Guilty plea on 19 December 2012 |
2 August 2013 16 months imprisonment |
Anselm Legemah | Violent disorder (Count 2) | Conviction on 4 April 2014 |
7 April 2014 2 years detention in young offenders institution |
Emmanuel Oleyede | Violent disorder (Counts 2 and 3) | Acquitted 4 April 2014 |
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Jason Vaughan | Violent disorder (Counts 2 and 3) | Acquitted 4 April 2014 |
Evidence at trial
(a) The respective cases
(b) The CCTV evidence
i) Group B approached the stationary Group A near the Foot Asylum store. The deceased Woodards was in the front of Group B.ii) Woodards and Kojo-Smith approached each other. Woodards made a gesture towards Kojo-Smith, who walked back out of camera shot. An item was thrown by someone in Group B. Kojo-Smith, holding a knife, moved forward towards Woodards, who moved backwards with his hands raised and palms facing outwards, being pulled back by Danny Caton. Kojo-Smith then lunged out and stabbed Woodards, who was still holding his hands out.
(c) The eye witness evidence called by the prosecution.
i) One witness was employed at Dermologica, a stall on the ground floor of the arcade. According to her evidence which was read to the jury, she saw the two groups both shouting at each other "it's war". Bottles were thrown and smashed and stools were thrown. Youths were also running up and down.ii) A witness gave evidence by videolink from the Far East that she was on the upper floor eating food with a friend when she heard angry shouting. The two groups of boys were shouting at each other and she heard someone say "He's got a knife". She then saw a male (Kojo-Smith) pull out a knife with a blade of about 15cm from his right-hand side, wave it about for a few seconds as if to show the person in front of him that he had a knife and put it back in his pocket. It was not given to him by anyone. A few seconds later he took it out again and ran forwards with it, towards the male in front of him (the deceased). The incident was fast and chaotic and she thought the chairs may have been thrown before the stabbing. In an identification procedure on 12 September 2012, she identified Kojo-Smith as the black male with the knife.
iii) Another witness gave evidence that there was two-way verbal traffic between the groups of males. She saw that a male whom she later identified as Kojo-Smith was really angry and was very intimidating and aggressive. He was standing opposite another male (the deceased Woodards) who was also confrontational but she could not see the deceased's face as he had his back to her. She said of Kojo-Smith and Woodards
"He was really angry. There was intense anger in his eyes. He was very intimidating and aggressive. The second male also appeared confrontational in the way that he stood (this is the male that Kojo-Smith was opposite), but I couldn't see his face."In cross examination she said"I don't know whether it was something that was said and then something was thrown but it caused the guy (a reference to Kojo-Smith) to go for the other guy."She agreed she had said in interview:"something got said and then it all kicked off."Kojo-Smith pulled a knife out from the right hand pocket of his hooded top. The blade was about 15cm long. She did not see anyone hand it to him. He held it so it was clearly visible. The deceased then moved backwards a little. Kojo-Smith then lunged towards the deceased who had his arms halfway up (to show he was unarmed on the prosecution case) and pushed the deceased so hard he went out of the witness's viewpoint. After the stabbing there was lots of chair throwing, as well as throwing of drinks and yogurt. The witness thought that Kojo-Smith may have lunged forward as a result of something being thrown.iv) A witness who worked in a shop called Choice (where the first incident had occurred, but not when he was on duty) gave evidence that he witnessed the confrontation between Kojo-Smith and the deceased. The deceased (wearing grey) was walking aggressively towards Kojo-Smith, who seemed to be backing off. Something was then thrown at Kojo-Smith (the glass which hit his shoulder) and he reached down into his hooded top and pulled something out which he tried to conceal in his hand. Kojo-Smith then made two sweeping motions towards the deceased and after that the deceased fell back. The deceased's friends then pulled him back (one of the friends was said to be Tony Caton). The incident really started when the co-accused, Danny Caton, threw the first glass.
v) Another witness from Choice said that members of the public were very scared when the violent disorder broke out; there was a woman with a pushchair in particular who was caught in it. He saw Kojo-Smith in blue and the deceased in grey. Kojo-Smith advanced forwards at speed and he saw them both swinging with fists and then Kojo-Smith swing a punch towards the deceased's chest. It was like a stabbing and definitely not accidental and was with some force. The judge summarised his evidence:
"The man in grey was at the front of his group and as he charged forward towards the man in blue, who was charging forwards to him, he looked as though he was about to do something to the man in blue. Both of them were being aggressive."Two males then dragged the deceased away (one of these was Tony Caton). The witness said that both Kojo-Smith and the deceased had been acting aggressively and had charged towards each other.vi) Another witness who worked at Choice recognised Kojo-Smith from the earlier incident, by virtue of his blue hooded top. There was a lot of noise and shouting. Both groups were aggressive. He saw Kojo-Smith put up his hood. Danny Caton approach Kojo-Smith's group; he was the more prominent and pointing his finger. He saw Kojo-Smith take up a defensive bladed stance and his arm came out with a swing in an awkward movement which missed. Kojo-Smith then swung a second time and using his whole body weight. Kojo-Smith was aggressive and obviously wanted to hurt or cause damage to one of the two people from the other group (either Danny Caton or the deceased). There was a lot of screaming. He saw Danny Caton go to the floor. He did not see the knife.
vii) The Assistant Manager of another store gave evidence. He witnessed the verbal altercation between Kojo-Smith and the deceased, who were both speaking aggressively but the witness could not hear what they were saying over the noise of the two groups. Kojo-Smith then became very agitated and was pacing in anger. He lifted his top to insinuate that he had something in his waistband. The deceased said "go on, show me what you've got," provoking Kojo-Smith. One of Kojo-Smith's group then picked up a chair. A glass was then thrown (by Danny Caton), which smashed on the window of the Fred Perry store. When a second glass was thrown (by Tony Caton - which made contact with Kojo-Smith's shoulder), Kojo-Smith spun round and lunged with his right hand. It was not a punch, but the witness could not see what was in Kojo-Smith's hand. There was then rushing. After that chairs were thrown. At no point did the deceased insinuate he had a knife himself or threaten to stab Kojo-Smith, the deceased just stood his ground.
viii) A witness working at a restaurant on another floor heard a commotion on the ground floor. He saw the deceased move forwards towards Kojo-Smith's group. He was talking but seemed like he did not really want an argument. The witness accepted that the deceased may have gestured towards his waistband to indicate he was armed with a knife. That was something that young males often did in the witness's experience.
ix) The manager of the Yoghurt stall remembered seeing the deceased being grabbed as males in Kojo-Smith's group were trying to kick him when he had been on the floor (after the stabbing).
x) Another witness gave evidence that she was about 25 metres from the stabbing. The witness heard raised voices and went to the front of the shop. She described the two groups and an aggressive looking male whom she thought was Kojo-Smith. She said that he had a fierce demeanour, a look of rage and hatred, "like a pitbull dog" (but by her description that may have been the co-accused Ndefo). She heard some of the verbal exchanges and saw the deceased facing Kojo-Smith before he stumbled, holding his abdomen. It had been Kojo-Smith who had instigated the verbal altercation, the witness stating that the deceased's group had seemed happy and jolly and not out for any trouble. She agreed that her view had been slightly obstructed.
xi) A diner at a restaurant gave evidence that she had been eating when she heard loud shouting. She saw males having an argument. Chairs were then grabbed and glasses. She then saw the deceased shouting at Kojo-Smith, whom she identified in an identification procedure on 16 November 2012. The deceased was goading Kojo-Smith. The male in grey was gesturing as if he didn't fear anything and had a 'let's fight' attitude. He was really shouting. The male in blue was gesturing, "No, no, go away from me, you don't want to fight with me; I'm going to knock you down straight away." He, the man in blue, appeared sweet looking as if to say, 'Leave me alone' with a serious look as in, 'You have been warned, and I don't want to fight but if I do you're going to get beaten up.' She said that "He was not as loud as the man in grey but he had a serious tone of anger." The deceased was really upset and shouting with his hands in the air. Kojo-Smith swung his hand towards the deceased, who fell to the floor. She did not see a knife but he seemed to be holding/carrying something.
xii) A witness gave evidence that she had been out shopping with her stepson who was aged 15 years. She saw a person she thought might have been Tony Caton acting aggressively. She heard the deceased say "pussy" to the other group and the deceased's group were boisterous but not initially aggressive. There was lots of screaming and glass smashing but she did not know by whom. She tried to help the deceased when she saw him lying on the floor. He had no weapons on him.
xiii) A woman gave evidence that she witnessed a male that she thought was Kojo-Smith put his hand in his right hand pocket and take out a flick knife. The blade was the length of an iPhone which was 11cm. She believed that Kojo-Smith was wearing a leather jacket and he said "I've got a knife". He then put it back in his pocket. The deceased said something to Kojo-Smith which caused Kojo-Smith to step forwards and with his right hand punch him. Kojo-Smith connected to the deceased's chest where his heart was and then landed another punch. When the suspect punched the deceased, he, the suspect, had an angry expression and she thought that he punched the deceased really hard. Kojo-Smith walked away as if nothing had happened.
xiv) Another witness gave similar evidence regarding Kojo-Smith taking the knife from his right hand pocket, but he described it as a lock knife. Both the deceased and Kojo-Smith were aggressive. When Kojo-Smith lunged to stab the deceased he was without fear and his face was pure aggression. The witness did not see the deceased do anything threatening and it was the production of the knife by Kojo-Smith that escalated the situation. The deceased put his hands up defensively but Kojo-Smith stabbed the deceased with full force and the entire length of the blade went in the deceased's chest. The force of the attack also pushed the deceased into the window of a shop.
xv) A security officer gave evidence that he saw the confrontation between the deceased and Kojo-Smith but Kojo-Smith appeared the more aggressive. Danny Caton threw something and the atmosphere changed. Kojo-Smith's group attacked the deceased and were kicking and stamping on him when he went to the floor. The deceased was not armed. Another witness said that he saw the male with the knife (Kojo-Smith) and he described Kojo-Smith landing two blows in rapid succession, pivoting his body to inflict those blows so as to cause as much damage as possible.
xvi) A security guard at the centre gave evidence that within the deceased's group, three males had been very aggressive and were egging the others on. One of the three (the male wearing a grey top) had produced a knife. He did not witness the stabbing but saw the violent disorder 56 seconds after the stabbing (from the CCTV footage). A knife was used to cut the deceased's clothing which the witness then put on the floor next to the deceased.
xvii) The marketing manager at Westfield gave evidence that she was at a meeting when she heard a noise and went to look down from an upper floor to the mall in question. She saw two groups shouting and gesticulating aggressively towards each other. One group started throwing chairs, and then the other group also did so. A colleague of hers, with whom she was meeting, saw Anderson (also in Group A) with a knife.
xviii) The evidence of eyewitnesses from Clinton Cards was read, which was to the effect that Kojo-Smith was panicking and frightened (after the stabbing). He said "Please, please, someone's trying to kill me." "I got rid of the ting." "I'm trying to run away from some boys." "These boys are chasing me." "My life's in danger."
(d) The scientific evidence
(e) Kojo-Smith's evidence
"I was backing up. Liam Woodards was gesturing to me that he had a weapon, putting his hand inside his waistband and moving it around. He said to me, 'You're big; why are you moving back like a pussy? I'm gonna stab you, come.' I kept on telling him, 'Move away from me, move back', but he didn't. I 100 percent believed that he was going to stab me. I kept backing away but he kept on coming closer, closer and closer. I guess he could see that I was frightened. All of a sudden I got hit by something on my right shoulder that was thrown. I tried to cover my face and ducked down. People were rushing towards me. I was scared. I took the knife out at this point in order to scare them off so that they would back off. It was all so fast. I came forwards and instinctively, and in order to defend myself, I swung once. Liam Woodards was coming towards me. If I hadn't done that, I thought that I would get stabbed or worse."
Submissions to the judge on leaving loss of control to the jury
i) there was evidence that the deceased had goaded and taunted Kojo-Smith, by gesticulating, insinuating that he a knife and saying "What what what" and "show me what you have got etc". No reference was made to Kojo-Smith's own evidence in this part of her skeleton;ii) the qualifying trigger was principally within subsection 55(3) although, arguably, s.55(4) and, therefore s.55(5) also applied;
iii) by reference to pre-Act case law, to which she argued it was proper to refer, while minimal or fanciful evidence should not be left to the jury (Jones (Robert James) [2000] 3 Archbold News), the judge was under a duty to leave the defence to the jury. Acott [1997] 2 Crim App Rep 94 and Cambridge (1994) 99 Crim App R 142 showed that the judge had to do so when there was evidence from which a reasonable jury "might conclude that the defendant was or may have been provoked";
iv) the evidence could come from any source, and did "not require a frenzied attack". It could come from a defendant, even though it was not his case, and from prosecution witnesses.
The ruling by the judge
"if the judge considers that there is some evidence of a specific act or words of provocation resulting in a loss of self-control, even though he, the judge, believes the circumstances to be such that no reasonable man could have acted as the Defendant did."
He recorded the fact that Kojo-Smith had not advanced the defence and had relied solely on self-defence. That was not a reason per se not to leave it to the jury.
i) that Kojo-Smith was confronted with conduct that was capable of amounting to a qualifying trigger under s.55(3) or (4) of the Act, andii) that Kojo-Smith's actions in stabbing the deceased resulted from Kojo-Smith's loss of control, "i.e. there is evidence that at the material time he did in fact lose control."
"12. On any view of the matter he produced the knife from his pocket - he said for the purpose effectively of scaring [Woodards] off - and swung it at [Woodards'] chest, he maintained once, whereas the prosecution said twice, on one of the occasions causing a small stab wound to the chin, on the other a fatal stab wound through the chest.
13. There was in addition some (disputed) evidence that [Woodards] was then very briefly kicked on the ground.
14. He then immediately ran off, was on his phone within a minute and quickly thereafter disposed of the knife.
15. Against the above background, and taking account of both the eye witness evidence as well as his own account of how he acted before, during and after the stabbing, in my judgment there is no evidential basis for this having occurred in circumstances whereby [Kojo-Smith] had in fact lost control.
16. On the contrary, whatever view the jury take as to his motivation in acting as he did, all the evidence points to D having acted throughout in a deliberate purposeful way that was thought out. Accordingly I do not intend to leave this defence to the jury."
The argument on the appeal
i) the judge had found there was evidence of the second component - a qualifying trigger. He was wrong in finding there was no evidence that the killing resulted from a loss of self-control;ii) the evidence on the CCTV and graphics, as well as the eye-witness evidence, was capable of being sufficient evidence of a loss of self-control by Kojo-Smith;
iii) Kojo-Smith instinctively took the knife from his pocket after he was hit by what appeared to be the third missile launched from group A. The interactions were fast and chaotic. This was clear from all of the evidence on CCTV and eye-witness accounts. He was in fear of serious violence, being confronted by the deceased who had been provoking him by words and conduct;
iv) once the jury had rejected the complete defence of self-defence, the partial defence of loss of control ought to have been left for the jury to evaluate;
v) there were two ways of looking at the same evidence. It was not for the judge to impose his own view where the jury may have taken a view favourable to Kojo-Smith;
vi) it was the prosecution's case that he reacted in anger. If the jury concluded that he did this, it plainly would not have helped Kojo-Smith when considering self-defence. However, once the jury rejected self-defence, they should have been able to consider whether the angry reaction/loss of temper, and the instant reaction by stabbing, was a loss of control. It should have been a matter for the jury whether that loss of temper with its qualifying trigger was loss of self-control;
vii) the prosecution's submission that there was a focused advance by Kojo-Smith did not mean that there was no loss of self-control. It was submitted that once a person had lost control, his focus was bound to be upon the person who delivered the provocation;
viii) the prosecution had submitted that a person could be angry yet still be in control. That was accepted, but plainly a person who had lost control could be equally angry. This was likely where he 'snapped' in the face of provocation;
ix) it was submitted that there was ample evidence for the jury to consider that the killing had resulted from a loss of self-control.
Our Conclusion
IV: APPLICATIONS BY CATON
(a) The background
i) the trial judge should have allowed his application under section 101(1)(e) of the Criminal Justice Act 2003 (CJA 2003) to be able to put before the jury evidence of Kojo-Smith's previous convictions;ii) the sentence of three years imprisonment concurrent on each of the two counts 2 and 3 was manifestly excessive, and showed disparity from the sentences passed on other defendants on those counts.
(b) The previous convictions of Kojo-Smith
Sentence