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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Patel & Ors v R. [2010] EWCA Crim 1858 (29 July 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2010/1858.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Crim 1858 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT LEICESTER
HH Judge Everard
T20067390
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE HOLROYDE
and
HIS HONOUR JUDGE STOKES Q.C.
The Recorder of Nottingham
Sitting as a Judge of the Court of Appeal (Criminal Division)
____________________
ASIF IBRAHIM PATEL ASIF IBRAHIM BHIKI SAJID IBRAHIM BHIKI SIKANDER PATEL also known as HOOSEN SHAIK SOYEB PATEL also known as JUNED EBRAHIM |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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THE QUEEN |
Respondent |
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Mr Rashid for Asif Bhiki
Mr D Friesner for Sajid Bhiki
Mr S Alfred for Sikander Patel
Miss P Radcliffe for Soyeb Patel
Mr D Herbert for the Crown
Hearing date : 16th July 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Leveson:
a. In May 2008 Yusuf Ameeji was due to give evidence for the prosecution in another trial, but failed to attend court. When subsequently asked why, he said he had been scared of being deported.
b. By letter dated the 18th June 2008 the prosecution quite properly disclosed to defence solicitors the fact that Yusuf Ameeji had failed to attend that trial, and also disclosed information which had come to their attention, together with copies of relevant documents. This information was to the effect that in March 2008 Yusuf Ameeji had given instructions to a solicitor representing him in immigration matters, saying that he had been promised indefinite leave to remain in this country in return for giving evidence for the prosecution against these Appellants. The prosecution deny that any such promise, or even suggestion, was made.
c. On the 19th January 2009 just 3 days before the directions hearing to which we have referred Yusuf Ameeji swore an affidavit in India in which he said:
"Whilst becoming the witness of the Crown I made certain statements which were false and I have realised that and it is playing with my conscience. I would like to correct all that and help the defence in the appeal of court against the conviction. By doing this it will help innocent victims that are convicted which is totally unjustified. The false statements actually played a big part in their conviction. I only gave those statements on the false promise of the crown prosecution. I have truthfully stated everything in my immigration application for leave to remain in the UK with regards to the statements I gave as a prosecution witness".
The affidavit then continued with a number of specific examples of parts of his evidence which he was now asserting had been untrue, the majority of them relating to the Appellant Asif Bhiki. It concluded with a request to "the independent solicitor to release this statement to the Court of Appeal and Crown Prosecution Service and all the solicitors that are involved in this case".
d. This affidavit was indeed sent by both fax and post, by the Indian solicitor before whom it was sworn, to the solicitors acting for Asif Bhiki, who provided it to the prosecution at the directions hearing. Thereafter it was disclosed to the other defence solicitors. Asif Bikhi's solicitors subsequently obtained a short statement from the Indian solicitor before whom the affidavit had been sworn: he said that Yusuf Ameeji had arrived at his office with the affidavit already typed out, and asked the solicitor to "register it". The Indian solicitor said that he checked the passport and photograph provided by Yusuf Ameeji, and "made registration of the said affidavit in routine manner". The Indian solicitor added that he did not find Yusuf Ameeji under pressure or stress, but gave no further details of this episode. We are bound to say that it must surely be an unusual event in the life of a solicitor for someone to attend his office with a typed affidavit admitting to perjury in a foreign court, and that in the view of this court the brief and bland terms of this statement raised more questions than it answered.
e. On the 21st January 2009, the day before the directions hearing and therefore before the prosecution were aware of this affidavit, witness protection officers spoke to Yusuf Ameeji by phone: he said that everything was in order, and appears to have made no reference to the fact that he had sworn the affidavit two days earlier.
f. On the 26th January 2009, having been made aware of the affidavit, witness protection officers again contacted Yusuf Ameeji, who was still in India. He said that he had been threatened, made to sign a statement and had had his photograph taken. He also said that the men who threatened him had told him not to tell anyone about it, and that he had not gone to the local police because he did not trust them. It was submitted to us on behalf of the Appellants that the details of this explanation were simply not credible.
g. On the 6th February 2009 Yusuf Ameeji returned to this country. He brought with him his affidavit, which he provided to SOCA officers.
h. On the 16th February 2009 Yusuf Ameeji unexpectedly contacted his witness protection officers, saying he wanted to fly back to India because his father was very ill. He did in fact fly to India that day, from an airport in the Midlands.
i. Also on the 16th February 2009, Yusuf Ameeji swore a second affidavit, confirming his earlier one, giving details of another part of his evidence about Asif Bhiki which he now declared to have been untrue, and asserting that his statement to the court had been induced by a SOCA officer who "pressurised me and threatened me that if I did not give evidence in their favour they will put me in prison for a long term". The affidavit ended with an assertion that it was made freely and without any pressure. Significantly, it also included this sentence: "I am willing to give evidence in the court again without any fear and favour". This affidavit was sent via DHL, with no indication of the sender's name, to the correct office of the Crown Prosecution Service, and to the solicitors acting for Asif Bhiki. The CPS disclosed it to other defence solicitors.
j. The circumstances in which Yusuf Ameeji swore this second affidavit were later described in a statement by a solicitor who practises in east London and is a registered foreign lawyer. This solicitor said that Yusuf Ameeji came to his office and produced a pre-typed affidavit for him to sign. The solicitor satisfied himself as to Yusuf Ameeji's identity, and noted that he did not appear to be under any form of duress. He further said in his statement "I do remember that when Mr Ameeji came to the premises he attested [sic] with a small Asian male who was aged about 40 years. This male remained outside the premises at all times. I also remember that Mr Ameeji was referred to me by other solicitors but I cannot recall which company". Once again, we are bound to say that this strikes us as a remarkably bland account of what was surely an unusual and memorable episode in the professional life of a solicitor.
k. We observe in passing that although the statement to which we have just referred was taken from the London solicitor by a SOCA officer, we reject the submission of Miss Radcliffe that the solicitor's evidence had therefore "been tested by the Crown's agents".
l. Three further features of this second affidavit must be mentioned. Firstly, it had been prepared in terms which not only referred to but also exhibited a copy of his first affidavit. Secondly, although Yusuf Ameeji flew out of the country later that day from an airport in the Midlands, and although the solicitor's statement records that he produced a photocopy of his passport and explained that the passport itself was in Birmingham, he took the completed affidavit to a solicitor in east London in order to swear it. The prosecution pointed to the fact that the solicitor in question had his office in the part of east London where the Bhiki family lived. Thirdly, the completed document which he brought with him to that solicitor's office was headed with the correct Court of Appeal reference number for the appeal of Asif Bhiki.
m. On a number of occasions later in February Yusuf Ameeji spoke by phone from India to his witness protection officers. He reported that his father had died, and that he would not be able to return to the UK until after the necessary period of mourning. It is the appellants' case that this was completely untrue, and that Yusuf Ameeji's father is still alive to this day: we have seen some documents which purport to show that, though they are unsatisfactory in a number of respects.
n. On six occasions in March and April 2009 flights were booked to enable Yusuf Ameeji to fly back from India. On each occasion he failed to board the flight, subsequently giving explanations to the general effect that his journey to the airport had been delayed and that he had missed the flight.
o. It is relevant to note that on the 8th May 2009 the prosecution received from India, again via DHL, an affidavit sworn by the Appellant Soyeb Patel, who had by this time served his sentence and returned to India. The affidavit sought to exonerate the Appellant Asif Bikhi, and claimed that a part of Soyeb Patel's evidence which had contradicted Asif Bikhi's evidence on a particular point was incorrect. The prosecution submission was that this affidavit provided further support for the inference that some person or persons were seeking to manipulate evidence to the advantage of an appellant.
p. On the 19th May 2009 Yusuf Ameeji made contact with his witness protection officers saying he wished to return to the UK and that there were "very bad people" in India.
q. On the 9th November 2009 Yusuf Ameeji did fly back to this country. He was interviewed at length by SOCA agents about his two affidavits. He said, in very brief summary, that his evidence at trial had been true and that he had sworn his affidavits under pressure.
r. On the day after those interviews he was told by a witness protection officer that he would have to leave a particular address. He responded by saying that what he had said in interview the previous day had been untrue. The prosecution submitted that this was no more than an angry reaction to some unwelcome news.
s. On the 5th March 2010, about 6 weeks before this Court heard the applications for leave to appeal against conviction, Yusuf Ameeji swore a third affidavit, this time before a solicitor in Leicester. It confirmed the truth of his two previous affidavits, and asserted that in his November 2009 interviews he had been put under pressure and had not told the truth. Exhibited to it were copies of each of the two previous affidavits. A copy of this third affidavit was posted to the CPS: on the back of the envelope the sender was identified as Yusuf Ameeji, with an address in Leicester.
t. The only information about the circumstances in which that affidavit was sworn was contained in a letter to Asif Bhiki's solicitors dated the 22nd March 2010. It was on the letterhead of the relevant firm of solicitors in Leicester, though the author did not identify himself by name, initials or other reference. The author said he could "confirm, from my recollection, that Mr Ameeji attended our office on 5th March 2010 and presented a pre-prepared affidavit". It is no doubt correct, as the letter went on to say, that "many people attend our offices and swear affidavits before us or have documents witnessed". We repeat however that the number of persons who do so in order to admit to perjury must be small. We therefore take the same view of the adequacy of this letter as we do of the statements from the other two solicitors to whom we have referred.
"The Court of Appeal shall, in considering whether to receive any evidence, have regard in particular to
(a) whether the evidence appears to the Court to be capable of belief;
(b) whether it appears to the Court that the evidence may afford any ground for allowing the appeal;
(c) whether the evidence would have been admissible in the proceedings from which the appeal lies on an issue which is the subject of the appeal; and
(d) whether there is a reasonable explanation for the failure to adduce the evidence in those proceedings."
"The Appellant does not rely upon the oral and written statements of Ameeji to prove the truth of their contents, but rather to show that when the totality of his utterances are considered that this Court will be driven to conclude that he is inherently unreliable and that this undermines the totality of his evidence given at trial."