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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 >> DT, R. v [2009] EWCA Crim 1213 (04 June 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2009/1213.html Cite as: (2009) 173 JP 425, [2009] EWCA Crim 1213 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE KING
HIS HONOUR JUDGE MOSS QC
(Sitting as a Judge of the Court of Appeal Criminal Division)
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R E G I N A | ||
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DT |
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Mr I Wicks appeared on behalf of the Crown
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LORD JUSTICE THOMAS:
Introduction
The evidence
"[The appellant] then said, 'I made him pour boiling water over himself.' 'What do you mean? I asked. [The appellant] said, 'I made him fill the kettle, boil it, I said if you haven't done it prove it.' [The appellant] made [MC] lay down and offered him a pillow to bite. [The appellant] said, 'He poured it over his back.' He added, '[MC] poured another kettle full on himself.' I said, 'What do you mean? You made him pour boiling water over himself twice?' [The appellant] said, 'Yes.'"
(iii) He then explained that MC had not been paying for the drugs that had been supplied. (iv) She then went on to say in her statement that the appellant said that MC had admitted taking the jeans. The appellant then had gone to the bin shed at the hostel and retrieved a pair of jeans which he then said were his. Her mother pointed to another bag in the shed which the appellant then opened. Inside were MC's jacket, coat and jeans.
"I am due to leave Portsmouth tomorrow. If I had not been I would not make this statement. I would be concerned for my safety. I thought I knew [the appellant] but I realise now that I do not. I cannot understand why he would do something so disgusting I will not attend court. I am leaving the area and I and do not intend to return for court."
The application to admit the statement under the CJA 2003
"In criminal proceedings a statement not made in oral evidence in the proceedings is admissible as evidence of any matter stated if --
(a) oral evidence given in the proceedings by the person who made the statement would be admissible as evidence of that matter,
(b) the person who made the statement is identified to the court's satisfaction, and
(c) any of the five conditions mentioned in subsection (2) is satisfied."
"that the relevant person cannot be found although such steps as it is reasonably practicable to take to find him have been taken."
"So certainly efforts have been made to get the witness here."
"Well ... that may be a point; on the other hand how early can one serve witness summonses on people? This was done a couple of weeks or so before the trial was due to start and that would seem to be the reasonable time to do it, when you know the witness is reluctant. Clearly efforts were made here to try and find her, enquiries were made, and so on and she is, on the face of the evidence, quite clearly making herself scarce.
Looking at 116, it is specifically 116(2)(d), the evidence can be read."
He then set out the section and said:
"It seems to me that such steps as are reasonably practicable have been taken here and she still cannot be found in time for this trial. So the provisions of section 116(2)(d) in my judgment are made out."
The summing up
"However the law allows evidence to be given in other ways and in this case you heard the evidence of [SD] read to you, even though she did not come to court and even though the defence do not accept what she has to say in that statement. You heard that the police had been trying to trace her and in the last bit of information they have she is somewhere down in the West Country, but she is clearly making herself scarce otherwise she might have been here. She has disappeared. Again, it is life, it is a fact of life, witnesses do not all turn up and everybody says what they say like they do in, you know, on the television documentaries ... we are dealing with real people. And sometimes real people are not very co-operative for all sorts of reasons. So you do not see her and you know the defence do not agree with what she says."
The grounds of appeal
The approach to s.116(2)(d)
"It is, however, important that all possible efforts are made to get the witness to court. As is clear, the right to confrontation is a longstanding requirement of the common law and recognised in Article 6(3)(d). It is only to be departed from in the limited circumstances and under the conditions set out in the CJA 2003. The witness must be given all possible support, but also made to understand the importance of the citizen's duty ..."