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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 >> Burnett, R v [2016] EWCA Crim 1941 (06 December 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2016/1941.html Cite as: [2016] EWCA Crim 1941 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
The Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE HADDON CAVE
and
HIS HONOUR JUDGE DEAN QC
(Sitting as a Judge of the Court of Appeal Criminal Division)
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R E G I N A | ||
v | ||
WILLIAM BURNETT |
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Wordwave International Ltd trading as DTI
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Telephone No: 020 7404 1400; Fax No 020 7404 1424
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr T Moran appeared on behalf of the Crown
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Crown Copyright ©
Tuesday 6th December 2016
LORD JUSTICE ELIAS:
Introduction
The Background
The Grounds of Appeal
The section 35 direction
"Despite these cognitive difficulties he did relatively well for his age in the interview and managed to give a good history with some gaps in the recent and remote memories which would reflect the nature of his problems."
That, we think, relates to the interview with the doctor, not to the interview with the police.
"It is open to you to reach decisions adverse to [the appellant's] case, but you should only do so, as I say, if you regard the prosecution case sufficiently strong to require an answer from him, and further the only explanation for his silence is awareness that he has no answer to the charges that he faces, or none that would bear examination. The defendant was interviewed at length twice in the last two years. He made certain admissions about his behaviour at the time with some boys, but not these boys specifically in the counts or charges before you, and with at least one other boy and one other adult male in the years since in similar circumstances, and you have those again in the agreed document. You have what he said in interview, and you will weigh what he said in interview, I am sure, in the balance with all of the other evidence that you have heard, because that is what you have got from the defendant and that is all that you have got from the defendant. When you weigh them in the balance you have to decide what you feel to be the reason for his failure to give evidence, and if that reason is a good one, for medical or other reason, then it precludes you from drawing an adverse inference against him for remaining silent." (Our emphasis)
"However, I am concerned about the terms of the direction which tends to suggest that the jury first have to decide why [the appellant] did not give evidence: 20F. They were then directed that if they 'felt' that the reason was a good one this would preclude an adverse inference. Obviously if they 'felt' that the reason was a bad one, then they would draw such an inference. This is not connected in the summing-up with the passage at 20C which requires them to decide that the only explanation for silence is the absence of an answer to the charges. The way in which those two directions cohere is quite important to understanding them. The jury can only arrive at the end point (no answer etc.) by excluding other explanations because ex hypothesi they will have no explanation from the defendant himself."
As we read those observations, the complaint is that there would be some confusion as to the appropriate test. The jury are first quite properly told that any adverse inference could be drawn only if the prosecution case was strong and if the only explanation for the appellant's silence was that he had no case to answer. In a later passage the jury were told that they must consider the reason why he did not give evidence and if they felt that it was a good reason, then they were precluded from drawing an adverse inference. The suggestion is that the later way of explaining when an inference can be drawn suggests that if the jury feel that the explanation is not a good one, they can draw an adverse inference. We are not sure that that is a necessary inference in arising from the way the direction is framed. But, in any event, we do not think that this constitutes a material misdirection. There is no doubt that this direction could have been considerably clearer. The single judge suggested a much more desirable way in which the judge could have given the direction to the jury. But the issue is not whether this was the most focused or eloquent of directions; the question is whether it fairly represented to the jury how they should deal with the appellant's failure to give evidence. We consider that the judge's direction does do that. It seems to us that it would have been clear to the jury that a good reason for not giving evidence would be any reason "medical or other reason", as the judge said in terms. It would not be a good reason if the only reason was that the appellant had no answer to the case against him, or none which would bear examination. The direction could have been put better and more crisply, but we do not consider that it was a misdirection.
"Counsel cannot advance reasons for silence without evidence. That evidence, in this case, is in the form of Dr Singh's statement. You have been given a copy, as I say, to review. There may have been matters that Mr Moran could have put to assist his memory perhaps, if he had given evidence. Perhaps his memory could have been jogged by certain things being put to him, or indeed measures put in place to help him give his evidence more easily or in more comfort – some form of special measures perhaps, which would have meant that it would have been less difficult for him to give that evidence due to his personal circumstances. That option, of course, is not available because he did not give evidence."
Lies
Bad character of the prosecution witnesses:
"You must decide in this case if his character as to the offence for which he has been convicted makes him so incapable of being relied upon that his evidence on these matters should be discounted. That is a matter for you to decide on the facts that you have before you in assessing his evidence."
That direction is inaccurate. It suggests that unless the bad character completely destroys the evidence, then the jury should pay no attention to it.
"Concerning [HB], the subject of counts 1 to 3 on the indictment of indecent assaults, that is three indecent assaults, the defence say, 'Look, here is a man who lied to Social Services. He had to go on a domestic violence perpetrators course because he trashed his family home'. They say these matters are capable of undermining his credibility in this case. If he is prepared to tell lies about having contact with his wife and children, having made an agreement and breached it with Social Services, what else is he prepared to lie about?"
"Again, you must ask yourselves to what extent that previous behaviour may assist you in deciding if his evidence in this case against this [appellant] is true or untrue, credible or unreliable."
The Cross-Admissibility Direction
The Appeal against Sentence