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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Umo & Anor v R. [2020] EWCA Crim 284 (28 February 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2020/284.html Cite as: [2021] 1 Cr App R 12, [2020] EWCA Crim 284, [2020] 4 WLR 163, [2020] WLR(D) 141, [2020] Crim LR 728 |
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ON APPEAL FROM WOOLWICH CROWN COURT
HHJ Miller T20187185 & T20180388
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE FULFORD
MR JUSTICE SWEENEY
and
MRS JUSTICE LAMBERT
____________________
JEMINA UMO and JAMARI BENJAMIN |
Appellants |
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- and – |
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THE CROWN |
Respondent |
____________________
Ms Laura Brickman (instructed by Registrar) for the 2nd Appellant
Mr Simon Sanford (instructed by CPS Appeals & Review Unit) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 12th November 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Fulford:
Introduction
Count on indictment
T21087185Offence Sentence 2 Unlawful wounding (s. 20 Offences Against the Person Act 1861) Benjamin (guilty plea with 20% discount):
25 months' imprisonment3 Robbery (s. 8(1) Theft Act 1968) Benjamin (guilty plea with 20% discount):
9 years 8 months' imprisonment concurrent4 Having a firearm with criminal intent (s. 18(1) Firearms Act 1968) Benjamin (guilty plea with 20% discount):
2 years 11 months' imprisonment concurrent5 Possessing a prohibited firearm (s. 5(1)(aba) Firearms Act 1968) Umo (conviction): 3 years' detention in a young offender institution 6 Assault by beating (s. 39 Criminal Justice Act 1988) Umo (conviction): 3 months' detention in a young offender institution concurrent 7 Assault occasioning actual bodily harm (s. 47 Offences Against the person Act 1861) Umo (conviction): 6 months' detention in a young offender institution concurrent
The Facts
The Grounds of Appeal: Umo
Conviction
i) The nature of the allegation made by Ms Maduro;
ii) St Hilaire's assertion that the allegation was false;
iii) The timing of events, namely that the allegation was made following an unsuccessful attempt to blackmail St Hilaire; and
iv) The details of the relevant text message.
"100 Non-defendant's bad character
(1) In criminal proceedings evidence of the bad character of a person other than the defendant is admissible if and only if—
(a) it is important explanatory evidence,
(b) it has substantial probative value in relation to a matter which—
(i) is a matter in issue in the proceedings, and
(ii) is of substantial importance in the context of the case as a whole,
or
(c) all parties to the proceedings agree to the evidence being admissible.
[…]
(3) In assessing the probative value of evidence for the purposes of subsection (1)(b) the court must have regard to the following factors (and to any others it considers relevant)—
(a) the nature and number of the events, or other things, to which the evidence relates;
(b) when those events or things are alleged to have happened or existed;
(c) where—
(i) the evidence is evidence of a person's misconduct, and
(ii) it is suggested that the evidence has probative value by reason of similarity between that misconduct and other alleged misconduct,
the nature and extent of the similarities and the dissimilarities between each of the alleged instances of misconduct;
(d) where—
(i) the evidence is evidence of a person's misconduct,
(ii) it is suggested that that person is also responsible for the misconduct charged, and
(iii) the identity of the person responsible for the misconduct charged is disputed,
the extent to which the evidence shows or tends to show that the same person was responsible each time.
[…]"
"[…] whether the issue is of substantial importance in the context of the case as a whole, and whether the evidence has substantial probative value in relation to that issue, the issue of credibility. Assuming that Miss Maduro's credibility is of substantial importance in the context of the case, then the only issue for me to determine is whether the evidence in question, the allegation that she has fabricated a complaint against another, does have substantial probative value in relation to that issue."
"The evidence of a false compliant is no more than evidence of an allegation being made. It is not evidence that Miss Maduro has made a false complaint. There does not appear to me to be any hard evidence of a false allegations being made, even though there is a text message from Miss Maduro to Mr St Hilaire giving her bank details.
In order to rely upon this as a reason to disbelieve Miss Maduro, the jury would have to consider whether they thought that she has made a false complaint. This would involve a mini trial, probably including recalling Mr Rene St Hilaire to give evidence about whether indeed he had had an inappropriate sexual relationship with Miss Maduro. This would amount to what I regard as classic satellite litigation. My understanding is that Miss Maduro has alleged misconduct against Mr St Hilaire, he has denied it, and he has made a counter-allegation against her.
[…]
The impossibility of resolving whether this is a false allegation by her or a true allegation by her drives me to the view that adducing this evidence would not have substantial probative value in relation to the issue of Miss Maduro's credibility, and on the basis that it is going to be almost impossible to resolve, I take the view that the evidence of this alleged false allegation does not have substantial probative value in relation to the issue of Miss Maduro's credibility, in particular, because Miss Maduro's evidence is capable of being supported by other evidence – for example, cell site evidence, telephone chats, and some forensic, scientific evidence – so for those reasons the application is refused"
"(Bank account number)
(Sort code)
Miss Anouska Maduro
Sort it
You got TIL 5 done the games
Or police are coming to unit"
"Assumption of truth in assessment of relevance or probative value
(1) Subject to subsection (2), a reference in this Chapter to the relevance or probative value of evidence is a reference to its relevance or probative value on the assumption that it is true.
(2) In assessing the relevance or probative value of an item of evidence for any purpose of this Chapter, a court need not assume that the evidence is true if it appears, on the basis of any material before the court (including any evidence it decides to hear on the matter), that no court or jury could reasonably find it to be true."
"25. Moreover, the fact that the only basis for these allegations against the complainant was the account given by the appellant himself should not, of itself, have been considered a reason for excluding this evidence; as Miss Samuel, on behalf of the Crown, accepts before us today.
[…]
27. The judge's reason for excluding it seems to have been that the defendant's assertions were not of substantial probative value. In our view, that is to confuse the concepts. If the allegations were true — and the assumption is that they were true — then they clearly had substantial probative value in the context of this case. The fact that the allegation came from the appellant alone was not, of itself, a reason for refusing the application. We also note that other allegations which were allowed to be made emanated from the applicant alone, in particular those which had resulted in the appellant reporting matters to the police and which were then recorded in a police report."
"36. […] a fact-specific judgment directed to the statutory conditions in s.100(1)(b) and 100(3) must be made whether to admit evidence of bad character (within the ambit of s.98(a) of the 2003 Act).Where it applies, the assumption in s.109 is not determinative of the admissibility question. Rather, it provides the context in which the admissibility decision falls to be made. In short, the pre-conditions to admissibility under s.100(1) are not automatically established, and, notwithstanding the evidential assumptions provided by s.109 at the admissibility stage, the bare fact of an allegation (even if assumed to be true) is not necessarily conclusive of the question whether it constitutes substantial probative evidence or evidence of substantial importance in the context of the case as a whole. If it were otherwise, the court would be obliged to admit evidence of an allegation of a serious crime allegedly committed by the witness, even if it had been fully investigated by the police, but, because the investigation revealed serious doubts about the complainant's veracity, on the basis that the complainant continued to insist that the allegation was true. Accordingly, […] we do not see how the necessary judgment whether the pre-conditions to admissibility under s.100 are satisfied can be made without a careful examination of all the material which bears on the question.
37. A trial concerned with whether it is proved that the defendant has committed crime "A" is liable to be derailed if the jury is required to decide whether a witness has committed the distinct, separate crimes, "B" and "C". As we have explained, the evidential assumption in s.109 does not bind the jury, and the investigation of this evidence at trial may be liable to distract attention from the crucial issue which is whether the case against the defendant has been proved. If, in the context under discussion, the judge correctly directs the jury that they must not consider the alleged bad character evidence unless they are sure that it is true, two trials would be simultaneously in progress before the same jury. First, the trial of the defendant for the crime alleged against him by the prosecution; and secondly, the crime or misconduct alleged against the witness."
The Grounds of Appeal: Benjamin
Sentence
(i) He was sentencing against the background of Benjamin's admitted drug dealing, and that Benjamin was the principal offender, who had exercised influence over others.
(ii) It had been a premeditated revenge robbery - in which Benjamin, who had arranged for Umo to look after the revolver and then to provide it to him, had been armed with that gun (albeit not with intent to endanger life but only with intent to facilitate the robbery by brandishing it to cause fear) and Newton had been armed with a knife (although neither he nor Benjamin had intended causing serious harm). Benjamin had not been charged with any offence in relation to the second gun (which had been brandished by the third man) and it may have been that gun which was discharged.
(iii) Newton had stabbed Kyzia Sandiford who, as a result, had suffered very serious injury. Benjamin's was a lesser role in relation to that offence but, because he had been armed with the revolver, he was the more culpable of the two in relation to the robbery. Thus, given the seriousness of the injuries, a sentence at the top of the range, namely 12 years' imprisonment, was appropriate for Benjamin which, after 20% discount for plea, resulted in an ultimate sentence of 9 years and 8 months' imprisonment for that offence. A concurrent term of 25 months' imprisonment was imposed for the wounding.
(iv) Given that Benjamin had already been sentenced for the possession of the revolver on 22 February 2018, he had to embark upon a calculation of what Benjamin would have received instead, if the additional factors of taking the revolver out in public and using it with intent to commit an indictable offence had been taken into account, and he had concluded that it would have been an additional term of 3 years and 9 months' imprisonment, which he imposed concurrently.
(v) The total sentence of 9 years and 8 months' imprisonment was imposed consecutively to the total sentence of 10 years that Benjamin was already serving.
(vi) He had considered the issue of dangerousness but, notwithstanding the content of the pre-sentence report, had concluded that Benjamin was not dangerous, given that:
(a) His previous convictions did not demonstrate any history of violence.
(b) He had been acquitted of any intent to cause grievous bodily harm on 16 February 2018, and the use of the gun had reflected only an inention to cause fear.
(c) Above all else, and even if he was wrong about dangerousness, Benjamin's overall sentence was of such length that the length of licence to which Benjamin was going to be subject would be sufficient for public protection purposes.
(1) The judge took too high a starting point on count 3 (robbery). The appellant did not cause the injury to the victim. Furthermore, the judge considered it an aggravating feature of count 3 that Benjamin carried a firearm, despite that being reflected in a separate count on the indictment (count 4).
(2) Newton, who caused the injury to the victim of the robbery, was sentenced to 9 years on count 3 (robbery) after a trial. The appellant's sentence of 9 years 8 months on a plea was comparatively too high.
(3) Either the sentence ought to have been short and consecutive to the sentence passed at Inner London CC, or the sentences ought to have run concurrent to each other.