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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Ekaireb, R (On the Application Of) v Criminal Cases Review Commission [2019] EWHC 2889 (Admin) (29 October 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2019/2889.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 2889 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
MR JUSTICE SWEENEY
____________________
THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF ROBERT DAVID EKAIREB |
Claimant |
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-and- |
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CRIMINAL CASES REVIEW COMMISSION |
Defendant |
____________________
for the Claimant
The Defendant neither appearing nor being represented
Hearing date: 29 October 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Hickinbottom:
Introduction
The Background Facts
The Trial
"The case for the prosecution
12. The case for the prosecution was based on circumstantial evidence. Many witnesses were called, including [Lisa's] brother and two sisters, those who had known her in Ireland, members of the Chinese community in London, those who dealt with her in relation to her pregnancy and its possible termination, private investigators, those who worked on the Mount Vernon Estate, those who had let Flat 9 Pavilion Court after 2006, those who conducted the missing person inquiries in 2007 and 2012….
13. In terms of seeking to prove [Lisa's] death the prosecution relied generally upon:
i) [Lisa's] lack of contact with her family and friends after speaking to her brother on 23 October 2006. That was out of character. Her brother's evidence was that they were very close and in contact by phone and text.
ii) Her landline, mobile telephone, e-mail account and bank accounts had not been used after October 2006.
iii) Her failure to attend appointments relating to her pregnancy.
iv) The fact that all enquiries seeking to establish proof that she was still alive came to nothing.
v) The failure of the [Claimant] to make any enquires about her or the child which she was carrying.
vi) Lies told by the [Claimant].
14. The prosecution relied upon specific evidence relating to the period before her last telephone call to her brother on 23 October 2006.
i) The [Claimant] had a 'nasty temper'. He was said to be controlling and disapproving about his wife's past. She had told police in the past that she was afraid of him and that he had assaulted her in August 2006, though she subsequently retracted the allegation.
ii) He was said to be a controlling man who restricted her access to money and to other people. Her brother's evidence was that there had been a change after the wedding as he would not allow her to work and she felt she had no freedom and no friends. The evidence of her sister… was to the same effect; she was afraid of him; she was unhappy and wanted to return to China.
iii) They had a loud argument in China in July 2006, which resulted in bruising to her arm and scratches to his chest. The argument was overheard by [Lisa's] sister…, and was said to be about her desire to leave possessions the [Claimant] had bought her, at her family home in China. Her evidence was that the police had been called, but the case was dropped after it was agreed that monthly payments would be made to her parents.
iv) The [Claimant] was obsessed by her lap dancing past and whether she had continued lap dancing after she became his girlfriend. In late August 2006 he hired a private investigator and in October 2006 contacted polygraph companies.
v) There was evidence of a previous report to police of [Lisa] going missing. The [Claimant] had called police on 15 August 2006 and referred to a text message which suggested she was considering suicide. When police made contact with the wife she told police that she was scared of the [Claimant]. The [Claimant] repeatedly called and texted; she did later agree to be picked up by him and taken home. In contrast in October 2006 he made no effort to telephone her and did not contact the police.
15. The prosecution relied on the following evidence of matters that had occurred on 23 October 2006 as pointing to the killing having occurred then or thereabouts:
i) At 20:00 on 23 October 2006, [Lisa] spoken to her brother. About 3 hours later, a telephone call was made from 9 Pavilion Court to the [Claimant's] mobile telephone. At 23:07, the [Claimant's] key fob was activated allowing access to the car park. At 23:44 and 23:58 the [Claimant] telephoned his parents.
ii) The [Claimant] went out in the early hours of 24 October to a nightclub in London's West End having telephoned the manager of the nightclub at 01:08 from 9 Pavilion Court. A parking ticket was issued to the [Claimant's] father's car at 03:15, near to the nightclub.
iii) The [Claimant] accepted that he was the last person to see her.
iv) The inherent implausibility of the [Claimant's] account of her leaving Flat 9 on the Mount Vernon Estate on a night in October 2006 with her packed bags and no one having heard from her after that time.
16. The prosecution then relied on events after 23 October 2006 as confirming the appellant had killed her:
i) After that night the [Claimant] went to live with his parents and never used the flat again.
ii) He sent text messages pretending to be his wife and asking for the contact details of her former roommate.
iii) He sent a series of text messages to his previous girlfriend; the prosecution suggested he was trying to rekindle the relationship.
iv) There had been 'unusual key fob activity' showing repeated access from one of the car parks to Flat 9 on 8 November 2006 between 21:45 and 00:04.
v) There was a sighting of the [Claimant] being driven by his father from Flat 9 by one of the security porters in a 'zombified' state possibly on the same date.
vi) On 17 November 2006 a midwife telephoned and said that [Lisa] had not attended for a scan. The [Claimant] said that he was not sure why this was and that he would ask her to telephone later that evening.
v) A series of works were undertaken on Flat 9 prior to it being rented out on 21 December 2006. These included replacing the original carpets with new carpets of the same colour, the cleaning of the marble floors and a new partition between the bedroom and living area, from which the inference might have been drawn that he was anxious to remove incriminating traces.
vi) [Lisa's] wife's wedding ring, purchased as part of a matching set, and other possessions were recovered from a storage unit being rented by the [Claimant] and his father in June 2012. The [Claimant] had previously told police that his wife had taken all of her possessions with her when she left.
The defence case
17. The defence case was that [Lisa] was not necessarily dead and, if she were, the [Claimant] was not responsible for her death. His case was that on 23 October 2006, she had told him that she was leaving him because her family needed her. She packed her bags and left the flat. He never saw her again. She was unhappy in her marriage and bored by his life-style in London. He gave evidence to that effect at the trial.
18. In supporting that case, and responding to the prosecution case he relied on the following:
i) [Lisa] had quickly become unhappy in the marriage, bored in London and had not wanted the baby. She left him on 23 October 2006 for those reasons.
ii) She had not been as close to her family as the prosecution evidence suggested. Her parents had divorced when she was young and she lived with an aunt for 7-8 years. She had never lived with her family for any sustained period.
iii) She resented her brother who lived in Denmark because he did not send money home to her parents as she did.
iv) In August 2006, she had been reported missing. She had telephoned in response to a call from the police, but said she did not want her whereabouts disclosed as she was frightened of her boyfriend. This information had been passed on to the [Claimant].
v) On 15 August 2006 she had sent him a text message saying:
'I hope you can get good life with your money you are a bad boy in the world – I do not need money I am still can get good life after few year I will show you.'
vi) She had withdrawn £1,800 from her Lloyds account on 10 October 2006. If she wanted to disappear and not be traced she would not use the known accounts after this as it would allow her to be traced.
vii) She had spoken of terminating the pregnancy. She had attended an initial consultation with the British Pregnancy Advisory Service, but did not attend on 19 September 2006 for a scheduled termination. At the time of her disappearance she was 19 weeks' pregnant and was therefore approaching the time limit for a legal termination.
vii) In August 2006 after she had left the [Claimant], she had told… a prosecution witness who helped Chinese people find work, that she would be prepared to work as an escort to make money.
viii) She had no links with the UK other than her marriage to the [Claimant] and therefore it was likely she would have gone to China or Ireland.
19. As to the prosecution's circumstantial evidence against him relating to matters before 23 October 2006, the [Claimant's] case was that:
i) Although he had a temper, he had not been violent towards her. He accepted that there had been an altercation in the street on 28 August 2006, but he did not assault her. She made a formal withdrawal of the statement she had given to police, stating: 'My husband Robert … has never been violent towards me.'
ii) He did not restrict her, beyond restricting (a) her cooking because his Jewish faith involved restriction on his diet, and (b) her working, because she was pregnant and he did not want her to work.
iii) They argued in China because she wanted to give away gifts that were sentimental. She had scratched him and he had restrained her by the wrists.
iv) He had only hired a private investigator to establish whether she was still lap dancing as she had said that she was not.
v) They had argued over the pregnancy, as he had wanted her to have the baby.
20. In respect of the evidence of events after 23 October 2006, the appellant maintained:
i) He had telephoned his parents on 23 October as he was upset that she had left him.
ii) There was no record of anything unusual in the security log at the Mount Vernon estate on the night of 23 October 2006.
iii) He had decided to move out of Flat 9 prior to the disappearance as he and his wife were moving into a different flat in Heathview Court in any event, and he had already started to furnish the new home in September.
iv) He wanted to let Flat 9 for a commercial rent. The carpets, cleaning and modifications were undertaken in furtherance of renting out the flat. The carpet changing was negotiated by his father and was a £1,500 investment which made sense since the flat could be rented for £3,000 per month, professional cleaning is standard and a partition was erected as that was a term of the lease with an incoming tenant. The evidence of a letting agent was to the effect that the new tenants wanted modifications.
v) The attempts to contact Ireland and [Lisa's] friends in late October represented an indirect attempt to trace her by finding out the whereabouts of previous flat mates.
vi) If he had been trying to lay a false trail by pretending to be her, he would not have used his own phone
vii) He had contacted his ex-girlfriend in November 2006 as a 'shoulder to cry on'.
viii) The key fob activity of 8 November 2006 was him moving personal belongings out of the flat.
ix) He admitted that he had not been frank with the midwife. This was due to embarrassment at being left by his pregnant wife and not knowing where she was.
x) As for the wedding ring, it was found along with his own in the suitcase because neither of them regularly wore them and they were put in the suitcase in their presentation boxes after the UK marriage on 4 October 2006. The suitcases would have been placed in storage at some point in 2008. His suggestion in the 2012 interview that she had taken the ring with her, would have been an assumption, and the mistake therefore owed to a lapse of memory due to the passing of time rather than a lie.
xi) He had not contacted police after his wife's disappearance because she had been angry on previous occasions when he had involved the police. He believed not that she was missing but that she had left him as she had done before.
xii) He had been depressed after his wife left and did not report her missing because to him she was not missing, but had left of her own free will.
xiii) Although he had been identified as the last person to see his wife on 23 October 2006, no one else would necessarily remember something as mundane as a person leaving the estate where they lived on foot."
"… [W]e are satisfied that the sole ground on which [the appeal] is advanced fails. We have considered the entirety of the evidence and see no reason to doubt the safety of the conviction. There were very telling points against the [Claimant] such as the inherent unlikelihood of [Lisa] leaving the flat on an October night with a suitcase given the location of the flat in Hampstead, the failure of the [Claimant] to make inquiries about his wife though she was bearing his child, the refurbishment of the flat and the finding of the ring."
The Application to the CCRC
i) A report by Dr MEC Alcock, a Consultant Forensic Psychiatrist, dated 30 April 2017.
ii) Reports by Professor Susan Young, a Registered Clinical and Forensic Psychologist, dated 11 November 2017 and 6 February 2018
iii) A report by Professor Penny Cooper on the participation of the Claimant at trial, dated 20 December 2017.
i) The defence erred in not having the Claimant psychiatrically assessed prior to trial, which would have disclosed that he suffered from Asperger's Syndrome; and consequently in failing to put before the jury evidence as to his true mental health and the effect that his condition might have upon his evidence and presentation. In the event, no psychiatric and psychological evidence as to the Claimant's mental health was put before the jury even as to his OCD, which prevented the jury from putting the prosecution evidence into its proper context. That in any event gave a misleading impression of the Claimant, and his evidence. As a result, the jury were told that the Claimant was "odd" and "not normal" – and the jury would have seen that his behaviour was unusual – which, in the absence of evidence to explain his behaviour and presentation, went unanswered and unexplained. Indeed, the Claimant's own Leading Counsel made light of his mental illness before the jury, which compounded the impression.
ii) As a result of his now-diagnosed Asperger's Syndrome, the Claimant was vulnerable at the time of his trial, in particular when he gave evidence. The defence erred in failing to have special measures put in place, including an intermediary who would have ensured that there was appropriate control over cross examination. As a result, the Claimant was denied a fair trial.
iii) The prosecution relied on inconsistencies between his police interviews, which were five years apart. In the light of the fresh medical evidence, the Claimant's police interviews (which took place without an appropriate adult present) should have been excluded under section 78 of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984.
The Statutory Test
"The [CCRC] must judge that there is at least a reasonable prospect of a conviction, if referred, not being upheld".
"In a conviction case depending on fresh evidence, the [CCRC] must ask itself a double question: do we consider that if a reference is made there is a real possibility that the Court of Appeal will receive the fresh evidence? If so, do we consider that there is a real possibility that the Court of Appeal will not uphold the conviction?"
"Lord Bingham's double question… requires a refinement in the light of the decision in R v Pendleton [2001] UKHL 66; [2002] 1 WLR 72. In that case the House of Lords held that the Court of Appeal can only ever have an imperfect and incomplete understanding of the process which led a jury to conviction; and while it can make its own assessment of the evidence that it has heard, it is (clear cases apart) at a disadvantage in seeking to relate that evidence to the rest of the evidence that was before the jury. It is for this reason that it will usually be wise for the Court of Appeal to test its own provisional view by asking whether the evidence, if given at trial might reasonably have affected the decision of the jury to convict."
Before us today, Ms Kaufmann properly emphasised that the CCRC must have regard to that observation when performing its function of considering whether to refer a case to the Court of Appeal.
The Grounds of Challenge
Conclusion
Mr Justice Sweeney :