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Irish Court of Criminal Appeal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Irish Court of Criminal Appeal >> D.P.P.-v- Michael O'Neill [2007] IECCA 8 (16 March 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IECCA/2007/C8.html Cite as: [2007] IECCA 8 |
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Judgment Title: D.P.P.-v- Michael O'Neill Composition of Court: Kearns J., Dunne J., Mac Menamin J. Judgment by: Kearns J. Status of Judgment: Approved
Outcome: Refuse leave to appeal | ||||||||||
COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEAL Kearns J. Dunne J. MacMenamin J. [CCA 100/06] Director of Public Prosecutions RESPONDENT V Michael o’neill Applicant
The applicant was convicted of rape on the 8th April, 2006 following a trial in the Central Criminal Court and was thereafter sentenced to eight years imprisonment by Carney J. on 22nd May, 2006. Leave to appeal was refused by the learned trial judge and the present application for leave is based on a single ground, namely, that the learned trial judge erred in law in excluding all the contents of a memorandum of interview of the accused in circumstances where objection had only been taken to the admissibility of part of the memorandum of interview. The evidence at trial was that the complainant, who in March, 2004 was aged 18 years, lived with her family in a housing estate in Kildare. She and the accused knew each other well, having grown up and resided in close proximity to each other. The sister of the applicant was a close friend of the complainant. On Saturday 6th March, 2004 the complainant and the accused were socialising in various pubs around Kildare town with their friends. They met during the evening in one of the bars and kissing took place. It seems this was the first time that any degree of intimacy had occurred between the couple. In the early hours of the 7th March, 2004, the complainant and the applicant walked home together towards their respective homes in Kildare town. Their route took them past Saint Bridget’s Park. The couple entered the park where an act of sexual intercourse ensued. On 8th March, 2004, the complainant made a complaint to the gardaí that she had been raped by the applicant. On the same day, Garda Karen Pound and Garda Pat Dooner of Kildare Garda Station called to the applicant’s home in Kildare to interview the applicant regarding the matters alleged by the complainant. A memorandum of the interview was recorded by Garda Pound in her notebook. In the course of this interview, the accused was asked a series of questions about the events of the previous evening. In the course of the interview, the applicant admitted having had sexual intercourse on a consensual basis with the complainant for a short period until the complainant asked him to desist. In the latter part of the interview, however, the applicant admitted that he raped the complainant. The evidence of the garda officers was that the applicant was then told he would have to come to the garda station to make a full cautioned statement. The applicant elected to go with the gardaí to the station where he made a signed cautioned statement admitting rape. Carney J ruled that as the statement made in the garda station had not been video-taped, he could not be satisfied that it was admissible having regard to decisions of this Court in Director of Public Prosecutions v. Michael Murphy [2005] 4 IR 504 and Director of Public Prosecutions (Ivers) v Murphy [1999] 1 IR 98. Having succeeded in excluding the cautioned statement made in the garda station, counsel on behalf of the applicant then objected in the absence of the jury to the admissibility of portion of the interview which had taken place in the kitchen of the family home of the accused and which had preceded the visit to the garda station. It was argued on behalf of the applicant that this memorandum of interview had been obtained in an improper manner and in breach of his rights in that, inter alia, he had not been cautioned and it had not been read over to him before he signed it. No objection was raised by the defence to the admissibility of the earlier part of the memorandum of interview which was largely exculpatory. In the voir dire hearing about the interview, the applicant gave evidence that at a certain stage of the interview the attitude or the demeanour of the two gardaí changed. He testified that Garda Dooner said he was dissatisfied with his responses and threatened that the applicant would be taken into custody unless he furnished answers which were to his (Garda Dooner’s) satisfaction. The applicant stated that he would not have admitted to the rape except for the pressure he was put under by the gardaí. He also maintained that Garda Dooner had told him that CCTV footage existed which showed the applicant with the complainant on the night in question. Later enquiries by the applicant’s solicitor, Connell Boyce, indicated that, following an enquiry made to the local garda superintendent, Mr Boyce had received a letter in reply from Supt Murphy confirming that no footage was in fact in garda possession. Mr Boyce gave evidence to this effect. On behalf of the prosecution, Ms. Walley S.C. objected to the severance of the memorandum of interview arguing that the interview was either conducted in breach of the applicant’s rights or it was not. If taken in breach of the applicant’s rights, then all of the interview should be excluded. She characterised the application by counsel for the applicant as an exercise in cherry- picking in that he wished to exclude the incriminatory parts of the interview but get the benefit of the exculpatory portions. Counsel for the applicant had seen fit to put the exculpatory portions to the complainant in cross-examination before the jury. His decision thereafter to make objection to the interview before evidence about its contents was led by the prosecution - rather than at the point where it was alleged the applicant was put under pressure - was a tactical matter for the defence over which the prosecution had no control. It was certainly not open to the defence to argue thereafter that it was at a disadvantage because the effect of the ruling might be to create a requirement to call the applicant as a witness to substantiate matters put to the complainant in cross-examination. The trial judge gave his ruling on the matter at the end of the day’s hearing on 4th April, 2006 where he decided as follows:-
However, having heard counsel from both sides, Carney J. stated:-
Decision This appeal raises an interesting point of law in respect of which it appears there is a dearth of decided authority in this jurisdiction. The point in essence is whether or not a judge in a criminal trial may “sever” a statement (or in this case a memorandum of interview), so as to exclude inculpatory portions but to preserve and admit into evidence those portions or lines in an interview or statement which may be regarded as exculpatory of an accused person. Counsel for the prosecution in the course of argument relied to some extent on the decision in The People (Director of Public Prosecutions) v. John Clarke [1994] 3 IR 289 in which this Court had to consider whether a distinction could be drawn between incriminatory and exculpatory parts of a statement made by an accused. In the course of delivering judgment in the case, O’Flaherty J. stated at p. 303:-
The true position in law, as established by that case, and which we take this opportunity of reiterating is that once a statement is put in evidence as in this case by the prosecution, it then and thereby becomes evidence in the real sense of the word, not only against the person who made it but for him as to facts contained in it favourable to his defence, or case. A jury is not bound to accept such favourable facts as true, even if unrefuted by contrary evidence but they should be told to receive, weigh and consider them as evidence.”
There can be no doubt but that a court must exclude a statement if it is not voluntary. As Griffin J noted in The People v Shaw [1982] I.R. 1 at p. 48:-
It seems to the Court that the approach urged by counsel for the applicant could lead to very undesirable results. For example, it could be that an interviewee might drift from a state of voluntariness to one of involuntariness for any particular reason at any particular moment during the course of interview. A trial judge would be in an impossible situation if he is of the view that the interview as a whole is suspect and should on that account be excluded would then nonetheless be obliged to dissect the interview on a line by line basis, giving rulings on the admissibility of each line and the voluntariness or otherwise thereof. There may, of course, be certain cases, perhaps exceptional in nature, where a voluntary process of question and answer may alter in mid-stream, but the reasons offered by the learned trial judge for ruling out the interview in the instant case do not contemplate or acknowledge the occurrence of any such exceptional event. He took the view, as he was entitled to do on the evidence, that the entire interview process was tainted because he found that Garda Dooner had said to the applicant that he had been caught on CCTV footage leaving a particular licensed premises with the complainant. In the view of the trial judge that assertion, which had been proved in evidence to be untrue, undermined the reliability of everything that followed, whatever its effect. The Court is satisfied that, once he had reached that conclusion, the learned trial judge was correct to exclude the entirety of the interview. In this regard, it must be borne in mind that an interviewee will in many instances endeavour to place an exculpatory account in the balance with an inculpatory account in a self-serving way so that to sever the one from the other within the same process so as to admit only exculpatory portions could lead to a very distorted picture being given to a jury. That is not to say that there will not in certain cases be statements or interviews which may require “editing”, either by agreement between the prosecution and the defence, or by ruling of the trial judge, to exclude material from an otherwise admissible statement on the basis that it may be irrelevant or prejudicial in the sense that it is unrelated to the offence charged. Where, however, the entire process is found to have been tainted, the Court is of the view that the safer course is to exclude the entirety. The Court will therefore refuse the application for leave. | ||||||||||