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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 >> Khan & Ors v R [2013] EWCA Crim 2230 (04 December 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2013/2230.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Crim 2230 |
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ON APPEAL FROM READING CROWN COURT
Her Honour Judge Smith
T 20117087
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE WYN WILLIAMS
and
MRS JUSTICE PATTERSON
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IMRAN KHAN AMJED KHAN MAHMOOD JASPAL KAJLA |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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REGINA |
Respondent |
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Mr Dafydd Enoch QC (instructed by Janes Solicitors) for the Second and Third Appellants
Mr John Price QC (instructed by the Crown Prosecution Service) for the Respondent.
Hearing date : 8th November 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice McCombe:
"…to gather intelligence and evidence on the…subjects with a view to proving or disproving their involvement in this offence namely the attempted murder of Quadir Hussain…"
The circumstantial case, as then known, was summarised. It was said that, owing to the complex nature of the investigation, warrants for further detention would be needed and that the suspects would be likely to provide "no comment" interviews. The application continued,
"It is firmly believed that this application will enable the police to establish a link between Imran Khan who resides in Reading and the individuals from Coventry…The tactic will only be employed post arrest and once the…suspects have been given every opportunity to provide their version of events, having had every opportunity to utilise their rights under the PACE Codes of Practice. A Policy decision will be made by the SIO [Senior Investigating Officer] with regards to pairing the suspects together for transportation. This will be done to try to achieve the best results to progress this investigation further. Two suspects will be placed in each of the transit vans whereby they will be left for a short period of time on their own. It is believed that this engineered meeting will generate a conversation between the suspects which will greatly assist in proving or disproving their involvement in the Incident."
"A vast amount of enquiries have been conducted regarding this investigation. However at this time the majority of the evidence is circumstantial and it is unknown as to whether CPS will provide an authority to charge. Therefore, this tactic, if successful, could identify critical evidence to assist in reaching a charging decision. This method is the least intrusive means of obtaining such evidence and is a necessary justified and proportionate tactic. Should the authority be granted, it will be kept under continual review until the day of deployment in case the intelligence or evidential picture changes. Should significant evidence come to light before then, the authority will be reviewed with the SIO to identify whether it is still a justified tactic."
"I believe [this application] is necessary for preventing and/or detecting crime or of preventing disorder under section 28(3) of [RIPA] and para. 5.1 of the "Covert Surveillance and Property Interference" Codes of Practice.
I believe that it is proportionate, having regard to para. 3.6 of the … Codes of Practice, as the application is material to progress an investigation into attempted murder…
…I concur with the applicant that, if required, this activity could be considered to be the only reasonable means of achieving the objectives of the operation. It is anticipated that if all other investigative methods have been utilised, and conclusive evidence sufficient to charge [sic: is] still required then the use of this tactic may secure the necessary evidence of the criminal offences being investigated…
The purpose of the directed surveillance is to gather intelligence and evidence of the … subjects with a view to proving or disproving their involvement in this offence…"
"The defendants here were charged with one of the most serious of offences. Nothing evidentially had changed from the time the authorisation was given and, therefore, the same degree of necessity and proportionality remained. And in these circumstances, the use of the covert device in the opinion of the court did not amount to an abuse.
By section 78, the court may refuse to admit evidence if it appears to the court that, having regard to all the circumstances, including the circumstances in which the evidence was obtained, the admission of the evidence would have such an adverse effect on the fairness of proceedings that the court ought not to admit it.
The defence submissions are well set out in the skeleton arguments put before me and in their oral submissions.
No coercion was practised on the defendants to make them talk. The decision to pair the second and third defendants was obvious; they were friends and it was necessary to pair at least two defendants in order that there would be a conversation. And I conclude that the recording is relevant and admissible and from which a jury would be entitled to infer that both men were present at innovate on 25 September when the false plates in the MG were required. And that they had hypothesised as to what they might say as to a reason for having visited Reading."
There followed certain other specific decisions to include or exclude certain specific passages, but we do not need to say any more about those particular points.
"It was not disputed before us that the burglary of the Butt household and the terrifying attack to which they were subjected was conduct that a civilised society cannot tolerate. It must have been the case, as the judge found, that the Butt family were terrified, s they had not reported the attack for some months. Those who had carried out the attack were persons plainly prepared to resort to the most serious violence and could be regarded as exceptionally dangerous. The judge was fully entitled to find that the Detective Superintendent believed that the surveillance was necessary and that there were indeed very strong objective grounds for that belief. The judge was right. Establishing who the attackers were was, in our judgment, plainly necessary."
"58. In our judgement, even if there had been a breach of RIPA or of s.30 (1A) of PACE, the breaches would have been minor, given the immense seriousness of the crime and the need to protect the Butt family. There was nothing in what the police did that called into question the integrity of the criminal justice system.
59. Against those observations, we turn to consider the central question of the fairness of the trial. The judge rightly held that there had been no misrepresentation, entrapment or other conduct that could be characterised as misbehaviour; the police had simply afforded the opportunity to the applicants to talk together. There was nothing to suggest that what was said by the applicants during the conversations was anything other than true. They had full opportunity to test all the other evidence in the case and to provide an explanation of the conversations in the van.
60. We conclude that the judge was entitled to exercise the discretion under s.78 as he did. Not only was it within that ambit of discretion open to him, but he was correct in exercising it as he did. Even if, contrary to the views both the judge and this court has formed, there had breaches of RIPA or s.30(1A) of PACE, the evidence was properly admitted and there was no ground to exclude it under s.78."
"But if the behaviour of the police in the particular case amounts to an apparent or probable breach of some relevant law or convention, common sense dictates that this is a consideration which may be taken into account for what it is worth. Its significance, however, will normally be determined not so much by its apparent unlawfulness or irregularity as upon its effect, taken as a whole, upon the fairness or unfairness of the proceedings."
Sir John further noted that the European Court of Human Rights, in its decision in the Khan case, also made clear that despite a breach of Article 8 of the Convention, the central question was whether the proceedings as a whole were fair.
"Questions of admissibility of evidence are not governed by Article 8. The fair use of intercept evidence is not a breach of Article 6, even if the evidence was unlawfully obtained".
A little later in the speech (at p.161E), his Lordship said that it was not within the power of the criminal court at trial to provide a remedy for a breach of Article 8 of the Convention. As he put it, summarising the European Court's view on this matter in Khan,
"Section 78 was concerned with the fairness of the trial not with providing a remedy for a breach of Article 8".
"Right to respect for private and family life.
1. Everyone has the right to respect for his private and family life, his home and his correspondence.
2. There shall be no interference by a public authority with the exercise of this right except such as is in accordance with the law and is necessary in a democratic society in the interests of national security, public safety or the economic well-being of the country, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health of morals, or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others."
"The Code is absolutely silent as to a circumstance such as this, and it does not provide that there should be any kind of warning to an accused at a police station as to the fact that it might be possible that a police officer or police officers would in certain circumstances eavesdrop upon conversations that an accused person might be having with someone else at a police station, for example, with a fellow prisoner or with someone else with whom he was having an audible conversation about the matter in respect of which he was being kept in custody and in respect of which he may by that time have been charged. There is nothing in the Code which prohibits, so it seems to us, inferentially or directly, what was done by the police here in bugging the interview room."
……
…….that recordings of conversations taken in an interview room which the police have bugged is admissible in law in court. The remaining question is always, therefore, whether a trial judge, having regard to the provisions of section 78 of the 1984 Act, should in the exercise of his discretion, having regard to the way in which the evidence has been gathered, admit it and, therefore, allow it to be heard by the jury….
We are very firmly of the view that the police in the most serious circumstances of the investigations being conducted, whatever views some may have against eavesdropping by bugging and so on, did not act unlawfully, although the appellant by that time had been charged. There was clearly no oppression of him and no questioning at all. Even if we had formed a contrary view, we would not rule that the learned judge's exercise of discretion was wrong. There is a very broad discretion given to the court under section 78, even to the extent of recognising that the method used was to gather evidence contrary to the Code."
"We regard as mere rhetoric Mr Wood's submission that deceitful conduct of this sort drives a coach and horses through the Code to the point where the police will in future not bother even to interview suspects. Manifestly this is not a stratagem to be used with any frequency - nothing would more obviously be self-defeating; it should be used only in grave cases. And manifestly nothing should be done oppressively or so as to render unreliable any admissions made - grounds in either case for objection under section 76 of PACE. But where, as here, very serious crimes have been committed - and committed by men who have not themselves shrunk from trickery and a good deal worse - and where there has never been the least suggestion that their covertly taped confessions were oppressively obtained or other than wholly reliable, it seems to us hardly surprising that the trial judge exercised his undoubted discretion in the manner he did."
"Dealing now with the submissions made by Mr Trimmer [Counsel then acting for Khan]. There are 4 references to Mr Khan by his nickname Bana, 3 made by Mr Kajla: (inaudible) Bana; Bana's family are in Reading, and a reference to him as "our mate". And there is one reference by Mr Mahmood, "Let's see what Mr Bana has to say".
Mr Trimmer has submitted here, and in a full skeleton argument, that these references should be excluded. Put briefly, the grounds are that the words uttered are either hearsay or they are words spoken in the absence of the First Defendant. In either case, it is submitted that the First Defendant is unable, therefore, to explore how it is that Mr Kajla comes to know him by that name and therefore the context in which he comes to speak of him and that they should, therefore, be excluded.
In the court's opinion, these words are not hearsay. They are not evidence of the matter stated. They are not being said to make another believe they are true. This is a conversation between two friends in which a third party is referred to in circumstances from which it can be inferred they both knew the person that was being referred to.
Had notes scribbled by Mr Kajla been uplifted in the search, notes that indicated that he was familiar with Mr Khan, there would be no proper objection to them being produced. The fact that these are oral statements should not be treated differently. There is no dispute as to the accuracy as to what was said and in the court's opinion, the references to [Bana] are admissible as to the question whether Mr Kajla and Mr Khan are associated and as to whether that supports the Crown's contention that they met on 22 September".
"(1) In criminal proceedings a statement not made in oral evidence in the proceedings is admissible as evidence of any matter stated if, but only if-
(a) Any provision of this Chapter or any other statutory provision makes it admissible;
(b) Any rule of law preserved by section 118 makes it admissible;
(c) All parties to the proceedings agree to it being admissible, or
(d) The court is satisfied that it is in the interests of justice for it to be admissible."
Section 115 defines what is meant by the word "statement" and the phrase "matters stated" within section 114. It reads,
"(1) In this Chapter references to a statement or to a matter stated are to be read as follows;
(2) A statement is any representation of fact or opinion made by a person by whatever means; and it includes a representation made in a sketch, photofit or other pictorial form.
(3) A matter stated is one to which this Chapter applies if (and only if) the purpose, or one of the purposes, of the person making this statement appears to the court to have been-
(a) to cause another person to believe the matter, or
(b) to cause another person to act or a machine to operate on the basis that the matter is as stated."
In Twist & Others this court considered these provisions in detail – see paragraph 3 to 17 of the judgment. At paragraph 17 the Vice President set out the approach which was likely to be helpful in determining the question whether the hearsay provisions apply in any given case. He said,
"(i) Identify what relevant fact (matter) it is sought to prove;
(ii) Ask whether there is a statement of that matter in the communication. If no, then no question of hearsay arises (whatever other matters be contained in the communication);
(iii) If yes, ask whether it was one of the purposes (not necessarily the only of dominant purpose) of the maker of the communication that the recipient, or any other person, should believe that matter or act upon it as true? If yes, it is hearsay. If no, it is not."