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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Jersey Unreported Judgments >> AG -v- F [2016] JRC 079 (07 April 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/je/cases/UR/2016/2016_079.html Cite as: [2016] JRC 79, [2016] JRC 079 |
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Hearing (Criminal) - application by the defendant for leave to adduce evidence of a psychologist.
Before : |
J. A. Clyde-Smith, Esq., sitting alone |
The Attorney General
-v-
F
S. C. Thomas, Esq., Crown Advocate for the Attorney General.
Advocate M. L. Preston for the Defendant.
JUDGMENT
THE commissioner:
1. The defendant seeks leave to adduce the evidence of a psychologist, Dr David J La Rooy, in his forthcoming trial on charges of alleged sexual abuse against two complainants.
2. The expert evidence relates to the testimony of the first complainant and I will refer to her, therefore, as "the complainant". Under the indictment, the allegations cover the period 21st February, 1996 - 20th February, 2001, when she was aged between 3 and 7 years old. She is now 22 and so will be giving evidence as an adult of incidents that she says took place when she was very young.
3. Dr La Rooy has produced a report dated 16th March, 2016, and he gave evidence before me. There is no issue as to his qualifications and his expertise in human memory. The issue is whether his evidence should be admitted.
4. Inevitably, his report was based on what the complainant said in her two interviews with the police. The prosecution do not seek to adduce those interviews as her evidence in chief, which she will give orally before the jury and be cross-examined. It may well be that the defence will seek to put parts of the interviews to her in cross-examination.
5. Dr La Rooy's evidence covers what he describes as the key psychological factors, namely false memory, the reliability of episodic memory, the reliability of memory after a long delay, the reliability of adult memory of childhood experiences and the reliability of apparent repressed and recovered memories. I acknowledge this does not do credit to his evidence, but I would briefly summarise it in this way:-
Lengthy recall delays provide numerous opportunities for suggestions to be put to alleged victims, who may re-interpret previous memories to form false memories. Research has shown how easy it is to create false memories.
Episodic memories of a person's experience of events, which are in themselves error prone, are to be differentiated from auto-biographical memories which are facts or beliefs about a person's life, such as, for example, where you lived, where you went to school etc. It is important not to make the assumption that simply because a person can recall numerous facts about their life accurately, that this means that their memories of particular experiences, episodic memories, are equally accurate. In interviews where episodic memory and biographic memory are blended together, there is a risk that non-experts come to a conclusion about the reliability of memory as a whole, rather than the reliability of episodic memory in particular. It is important to look carefully at the context in which memories are provided and whether there are features that give rise to additional concerns about the reliability of episodic memory.
There is a wealth of psychological research confirming that the reliability of episodic memory is diminished by long recall delays. The amount of correct information able to be recalled progressively decreases and the number of memory errors and confabulations increases. The trajectory of memory decay progresses in a negative exponential manner - the greatest amount of forgetting occurs soon after events in question and then levels off over later years. The content of memory also changes over time reflecting that memories of the past are created in the "present" and are interpreted and understood in the context of one's current beliefs and experiences.
As adults, we have virtually no episodic memories of our very early years of life and the few we do have tend to date from the age at which we learn to use language. This is a phenomenon referred to as "infantile amnesia". Adults cannot remember experiences that occurred in infancy or toddlerhood, although many believe that they can and do. Many think that if a child has suffered repeated and painful abuse as an infant he or she can remember it, but research shows that infantile amnesia occurs for both positive events as well as negative and/or stressful experiences. This means that if adults are asked to report events that occurred prior to the age of 3 or 4, (that is during the phase of infantile amnesia), it is highly unlikely that the reports will be based on clear or detailed memories of the events in question. After that age, memory does not suddenly become reliable. Between the ages of 4 - 7, only a few memories are available and they contain very few details and are often not to be placed in time and space or to be well understood. Given the problems associated with adults recalling early childhood memories, the British Psychological Society has recommended these rules of thumb:-
"26 'Detailed and well-organised memories dating to events that occurred between 7 to 5 years of age should be viewed with caution'.
27 'Detailed and well-organised memories dating to events that occurred between 5 to 3 years of age should be viewed with considerable caution.'
28 'All memories dating to the age of 3 years and below should be viewed with great caution and should not be accepted as memories without independent corroborating evidence'."
From a psychological perspective, there is a complete lack of scientific support for the concept of repressed and then recovered memories, and claims about recovered memories are a serious "red flag" in cases involving historic allegations of abuse.
6. Dr La Rooy reaches this conclusion:-
"2 Considering the information provided by the key witness - [the complainant] - I am of the opinion that the manner and context in which the allegations have been made suggests that they are unreliable. As a consequence, there is a risk that the allegations in this case are untrue and considerable caution should be exercised in the absence of corroborating evidence. The reasons that caution should be exercised stems from my expertise regarding important psychological factors about the reliability/unreliability of memory in relation to this case. As such, fact-finders should be provided with adequate knowledge about relevant psychological matters before forming a view as to credibility of the allegations."
7. Dr La Rooy distinguishes between "reliability" and "credibility" in this way; the former relates to the accuracy of information reported whereas the latter is concerned with whether people appear to be truthful or not. The latter, he says, is the role of the fact-finder, in this case the jury. The jury need to be aware of the psychological factors in order to be equipped to assess the evidence they are considering.
8. The starting point is this extract from the judgment of Lawton LJ in R v Turner [1975] 60 Cr.App.834 at p. 841:-
9. Referring to the case of Lowery v The Queen [1974] A.C.85 where, in the special circumstances of that case psychiatric evidence had been admitted, he went on to say at p.842:-
10. In R v X [2005] EWCA Crim 1812 expert evidence was admitted by the Court of Appeal in an application under s.23 of the Criminal Appeal Act 1968 a case in which the complainant had claimed detailed memories of an indecent assault by her father going back to when she was 3 years old (which was not pursued) and indecent assaults when she was 4 of 5, in which she gave a very detailed narrative account including much detail about the circumstances leading up to the incident and about her own emotional reaction to what had happened, including what she and her father were wearing. Professor Conway, a psychologist with an accepted expertise in the area of memory, gave evidence on childhood amnesia. A child might, he said, retain a memory of a traumatic experience but would not be able to remember the surrounding or extraneous details or give an accurate and reliable narrative account. Evidence that did might well be unreliable. Quoting from paragraphs 35 and 36 of the judgment:-
11. However, the Court of Appeal gave this warning at paragraphs 47 and 48:-
12. An attempt to widen the ambit of R v X was made in the case of R v Jonathan CWS [2006] EWCA Crim.1404, where an application was made to introduce the "fresh evidence" of Professor Conway on appeal. For some reason, Professor Conway's report had considered the statements of the complainants and not the evidence actually given at trial, and the Court of Appeal questioned just how far this area of expertise actually goes (an issue not considered in R v X). Without setting out the Court of Appeal's interesting analysis, I would draw attention to this part judgment of Rafferty J at paragraph 23:-
13. She went on to say at paragraph 26:-
14. The Court of Appeal declined to admit Professor Conway's evidence, which it held would not have been admissible at trial. Dealing with the two individual cases before it, it concluded in this way:-
15. I was also referred to R v E [2009] EWCA Crim 1370, which concerned a child of 14 giving evidence about an incident when she was 12 years 8 months, and a child of 12 giving evidence of alleged abuse that took place between the ages of 4 and 8. The English Court of Appeal doubted whether this was truly a case of "historic sex abuse". There was no evidence of any particular difficulties as far as the children were concerned and no evidence of mental disability or of learning difficulties. There was no reason to doubt their reliability on medical grounds and in the final analysis, the nature of the evidence came down to little more than common sense. There was no reason to burden the jury, in its view, with conflicting evidence from experts on how much detail might be expected from children of that age, knowing what had happened to them earlier in their lives. Quoting from paragraph 43 of the judgment of Hallett J:-
16. Advocate Preston submitted that the evidence of the complainant as disclosed in her interviews with the police falls within those rare cases in which the complainant provides a description of very early events which appears to contain an unrealistic amount of detail.
17. This inevitably involves an analysis of what the complainant said in her interviews with the police. It is the case that the complainant purports to remember moving into the new family home when she was 1½ but the alleged abuse started when she thought she was about 4 or 5 and continued until the defendant left the family home some years later. She made it clear how hard it was to say when the abuse started. This is illustrated by this answer:-
"The abuse would have started around when I was, it's hard to say that the abuse would have started at that age because I don't know but it would have been around when I was about five, that's when I can remember it, like four or five."
18. The complainant made the point that what she alleges the defendant did to her seemed normal to her at the time and was not therefore traumatic - she did not understand, at that age, that she was being abused by a step-father who she loved.
19. What is clear to me is that the complainant did not volunteer to the police a coherent, sequential narrative account of the abuse she alleged that she suffered. What she volunteered was fragmentary, and does not include surrounding or extraneous details. Those details emerged in response to questions put to her by the police officer which the complainant attempted to answer.
20. The process is very similar to that described by Rafferty J above in the making of a police statement. The complainant starts with an allegation of what she remembers which is not, as here, a coherent sequential narrative. The police officer then probes, understandably, for detail, when did this start, in which room did it take place, describe the layout of the house, what was the position of the bed, what were you wearing, what was he wearing and so on. The complainant does her best to answer and in doing so is often forced to make assumptions. This exchange at page 8 of the transcripts illustrates the point:-
"[Police Officer]: Ok talk me through what you were wearing when he put you to bed?
[Complainant]: Urm probably a nightie, I usually wore nighties when I was younger."
21. The allegations in this case do not comprise an unrealistically detailed account of an isolated event which took place when she was four or five, but a course of conduct which started when she thought she was four or five and continued until she was seven. I do not agree, therefore, that this case comes within the strict limits of admissible expert evidence based on memory research and I will not therefore give leave for it to be admitted.
22. The distinction between reliability and credibility made by Dr La Rooy is a very fine one. Assuming the expert evidence he gives is accepted by the jury (and I appreciate that they are not obliged to accept it), namely that the manner and context in which the allegations have been made suggest that they are unreliable, it is difficult to see how that does not usurp or come very close to usurping the role of the jury. It is almost inevitable that his evidence will be understood by the jury to indicate his (expert) view of the accuracy and truthfulness, or otherwise, of the allegations made by the complainant. It is understandable, therefore, that the courts have sought to severely restrict the cases in which such evidence is admissible.
23. We are dealing here with human nature and behaviour which is within the limits of normality and upon which the jury will not need the assistance of expert evidence. It will, of course, be necessary for the jury to be directed about the effect of the passage of time on a person's memory and in that respect, Advocate Thomas drew my attention to the illustrative direction contained in the Crown Court Bench Book at page 33. This and a possible warning on the need for caution will be matters for consideration with counsel at the trial in the usual way.
24. However, I recommend that Dr La Rooy (and the prosecution expert, Dr Tully) should attend the trial to hear the evidence that the complainant actually gives, for this reason, in that in her interviews with the police, the complainant makes references to:-
(i) Memories "popping up".
(ii) not remembering everything "yet".
(iii) blocking out memories which re-occur.
(iv) not having all of her memories "yet".
(v) her having counselling which had unblocked a memory leading to further allegations.
25. It is possible, therefore, that her evidence may comprise, in part, repressed or recovered memories and, if so, it may be that expert evidence might be helpful to the jury in that limited respect. I note that in the trial in the case of R v X, the defence was given leave to use expert evidence on false memory syndrome.