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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 >> Hall v R [2015] EWCA Crim 581 (01 April 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2015/581.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Crim 581 |
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ON APPEAL FROM
His Honour Judge Worsley QC
The Central Criminal Court
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE GILBART
and
HIS HONOUR JUDGE GRIFFITH-JONES (SITTING AS A JUDGE OF THE CACD)
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Emma Jayne Hall |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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The Queen |
Respondent |
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Simon Denison QC for the Crown
Hearing dates: 13 March 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Burnett :
Murder | GBH with Intent | Perverting the Course of Justice | Conspiracy to Pervert the Course of Justice | |
Appellant (Hall) | Guilty | Guilty | Guilty | Not Guilty |
Danby | Guilty | Guilty | Guilty | Guilty |
O'Toole | Guilty | Not Guilty | Guilty | Guilty |
Duggan | Guilty | Guilty | ||
Roberts | Not Guilty | Not Guilty | ||
Hassan | Not Guilty |
"… Mr Hill submits that the police attendance records for 29 and 30 May in respect of Mr O'Toole's solicitors now having been disclosed to all parties in unredacted form, that in effect is open season and that it would be fair and appropriate for there to be cross-examination on all aspects of inconsistency revealed in those records.
Mr Hill says whether the court is with him or against him on those submissions that, in any event the jury should be told that that which solicitors say was communicated to them by Mr O'Toole is not the truth of what in fact happened or was said. It is simply the fact he has said it on an earlier occasion. It goes to consistency."
i) Was the judge right to conclude that the waiver of legal professional privilege was limited for the purposes of establishing consistency between the oral evidence of O'Toole in a number of limited respects and the other accounts already in evidence?
ii) If it was not, did the appellant's inability to range more widely in cross-examining O'Toole's solicitor have any bearing on the safety of the conviction?
Issue 1 – the extent of waiver of privilege
Issue 2 – The effect of limiting cross-examination
"Sister was living there – she said to [Danby] that the boy had touched her when she was younger – I was sitting in the room when I heard this – I met him about two months ago he has not left.
26/27 years old – this [conversation] was in [the appellant's] bedroom – [my girlfriend] – total of five people three were women – Sarah [who left] [the appellant] Alice the sister – and [Roberts] – lives in area but not in our complex –
[Danby] was in room – he walked out into boys room – [Danby] is a head case – he [word indecipherable] in – first time Alice had actually been round – Harold Hill area is where she said she knew boy [possibly called Luke] – literally next door – he and [Roberts] started attacking the boy – everyone in the house."
"Sunday – [Danby] drinking – boy came round at 9.30pm – recognised him as person who she made allegation against two years ago – Emma said what's wrong. [Danby] came in asking what was wrong. Present when this was going on – aware that Luke sexually assaulted her."
A complete account of that interview was before the jury. It was the appellant's case at trial that her sister, Alice, had made an allegation about Luke Harwood in the presence of the men, particularly Danby. Alice denied making any specific allegation at all. Thus, submits Mr Hill, O'Toole's initial account supports the appellant's case.
"Me, [the appellant], Alice, [Roberts and Danby] and Sarah were in [the appellant's] room. I was on the laptop and we were chatting but [Danby] was drinking beer.
Luke was just moving into the property. It was his first day there when Alice who had been there since the Saturday night saw him. And became upset. She said oh my God, that's him, Emma said what, I'm gonna kill him. Emma was going out to confront him and [Roberts] held her back and asked what that was about. [The appellant] pulled away and went out. [Danby] followed her out. Emma told [Danby] only what it was about."