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Cite as: [2001] NICA 32

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McClean and McCready, R v. [2001] NICA 32 (28 June 2001)











IN HER MAJESTY’S COURT OF APPEAL IN NORTHERN IRELAND

_____

THE QUEEN

V

STEPHEN JAMES McCLEAN and NOEL WILLIAM JOSEPH McCREADY

_____

CARSWELL LCJ

1. This is an appeal against the conviction of both appellants by Kerr J, sitting in Belfast Crown Court without a jury on 2 February 2000, on five counts on an indictment charging them with a number of terrorist offences. The charges arose out of an incident on 3 March 1998, when two masked gunmen entered a public house known as the Railway Bar in Poyntzpass, Co Down and sprayed the occupants with gunfire. Two men, Damien Trainor and Philip Allen, died and two others, Clarence Frazer and Stephen Williamson, sustained injuries from gunshot wounds. Three men were charged with a series of charges. One, Ryan Thomas Robley, pleaded guilty to a number of charges and after a trial the judge convicted the appellants on two counts of murder, two of attempted murder and one of possession of firearms with intent. The evidence against each appellant was circumstantial in nature and the major issue before the trial judge and on appeal was whether the evidence was sufficient to constitute a prima facie case against each. That evidence was not identical in the case of each appellant, though much of it was common to both. The learned judge acknowledged at the outset of his judgment the obligation upon him to consider separately the evidence against each appellant, and we shall do the same. It was also argued, amongst other submissions, that the judge drew unjustified inferences under Article 4 of the Criminal Evidence (Northern Ireland) Order 1988 from the fact that neither appellant gave evidence.

2. The facts of the incident were set out in the following passage, which we gratefully adopt, at pages 2 to 3 of the judge’s judgment:

“On the evening of 3 March 1998 there were eight customers in the public bar of Canavans. Mrs Canavan was behind the bar. Damien Trainor and Philip Allen were nearest the door. They were sitting on stools. Mr Allen's brother, David, was standing between them. James Murnaghan was to the right of this group near a fruit machine and somewhat behind one of the two doors which provided access to the public bar from a porch which in turn led to Railway Street. The door on the right (as one views the entrance to the bar from the street) was kept permanently unlocked during opening hours. The other door was kept locked. Further down the narrow bar was a group consisting of Stephen Williamson, his twelve year old daughter, Louise, Clarence Frazer and Edwin Lyons.

At 9 pm approximately, the door to the public bar was kicked open and two masked gunmen burst in. They ordered those who were in the bar to lie down. Mrs Canavan ran through a back door to an internal hall. Those who remained in the bar lay down as they had been order to do. David Allen managed to crawl along the floor towards the back of the bar but the others lay down at the place where they had been sitting or standing. When the gunmen had the occupants of the bar in a position of complete vulnerability they opened fire. It is clear that they intended to kill as many people as possible, irrespective of their age or gender. Damien Trainor and Philip Allen sustained fatal injuries. Stephen Williamson, who had been shielding his daughter, suffered wounds to the upper arm. Miraculously, Edwin Lyons, who was also shielding Louise Williamson, had gunshot damage to his clothing but was not injured. Clarence Frazer suffered gunshot wounds to his right shoulder, right elbow and left leg. Altogether twelve shots were fired from two handguns. The distribution of damage to the bar and the position of those who were injured indicate that the gunmen sprayed the interior of the public bar with bullets.

The attack was over in a very short space of time. The gunmen then returned to a waiting white Ford Escort car which sped off in the direction of the railway station. “

3. The prosecution case was that the circumstantial evidence, when taken together, all pointed so clearly towards the appellants that it was capable of proving to the requisite standard that each of them was guilty of the murder of the victims and the cognate offences. The several strands of evidence upon which the Crown relied to constitute their case were the following:

  1. The getaway car used in the attack belonged to David Garry Gibson. It was stolen from his place of work in Dromore between 2 pm and 4 pm on 3 March 1998. David Keys, a known associate of the appellants, was seen driving it into Hillhead Drive, Banbridge about 4 pm that afternoon, followed by Ryan Robley in a Vauxhall Nova belonging to Keys. Keys entered 12 Hillhead Drive, a house occupied by Mark Bingham, who was friendly with at least some of the associates, the appellants, Keys and Robley. The Ford Escort was found burnt out on the night of the attack at Old Mill Road, one of a network of small roads between Poyntzpass and Banbridge.
  2. The appellants, Keys and Robley were together in McClean’s flat at 3c Hillside Park, Banbridge when Edgar Nugent called there to see McClean.
  3. The guns used in the attack were found late in the evening of 5 March 1998. They were contained together in a white plastic bag, partially covered with soil, at the base of a bush in a disused laneway at the rear of Highfield Gardens, Banbridge. Their location was pointed out to police by David Keys, who was then in custody, having been arrested at 1.55 am on 4 March.
  4. Immediately after pointing out the location of the guns Keys took the police officers to a coal bunker at 14 Hillside Park, Banbridge, in the same housing estate as Highfield Gardens, about 170 yards from the hiding place of the guns. In the bunker was found a bin bag containing two complete sets of clothing, including underwear, socks and footwear, plus other items of clothing not attributable to the appellants. The two sets of clothing were linked to the appellants as follows:
(ii) McClean’s girlfriend Paula Bloomer identified a grey pair of track suit bottoms, a T-shirt and boxer shorts as being his garments.
(iii) The bin bag containing the items came from the same manufacturing batch as bags found in McClean’s flat.
(b) McCready
(ii) Three head hairs found on the white shirt were similar to McCready’s hair.
(iii) Mitochondrial DNA extracted from pubic hair in the underpants found matched that from a buccal swab taken from McCready.

4. The bin bag had in fact first been found on 4 March 1998 by a Constable Francey engaged in a search, but after looking inside he replaced it in the bunker, having been informed that the police were not seeking clothing. The judge discussed these pieces of evidence with care. He expressed himself as satisfied that those items attributed to McClean were in fact his. The probative value of each comparison relied on by the Crown against McCready was lower on the scale of probability than in McClean’s case: the comparison of the boots was sufficient to give moderate support to the proposition that McCready was their regular wearer, the head hair comparison is not a conclusive match and the database for comparison of the sample of mitochondrial DNA is not large enough to provide conclusive proof. The judge concluded, however, that there was a sufficient prima facie case that the clothing and footwear attributed to McCready were his.

  1. Three fibres taken on tape lift from the grey track suit bottoms found in the coal bunker and three from the white T-shirt (garments identified as those of McClean) were microscopically indistinguishable from fibres from brown jeans worn by Mrs Alison Gibson, the wife of Garry Gibson, owner of the white Ford Escort. Five fibres from the blue track suit bottoms found in the bunker were indistinguishable from those from Mrs Gibson’s jeans. Fibres such as those from the jeans were relatively common. Neither appellant had ever been in Mr Gibson’s car while he owned it. Secondary transfer was possible from another person who had sat in the car. Moreover, the police officer who first found the bin bag in the bunker had opened it and rummaged in it, so creating the possibility of disturbance of the fibres and transfer between garments.
  2. Eight calls were made in the few minutes between 8.52 pm and 9.05 pm on 3 March to a mobile telephone owned by Trevor McConville and lent by him that evening to McCready. The calls were all made from a mobile telephone owned by Keys’ brother. These calls spanned the time of the attack on the Railway Bar, and the judge drew the inference that the telephones were in use as a means of maintaining communication between the occupants of the cars used in the attack.
  3. Edgar Nugent had previously received driving lessons from McClean, and on one occasion the latter had taken him by a route between Banbridge and Poyntzpass via the Old Mill road, which the Crown suggested was the attackers’ getaway route, the suggestion being that this was a means of reconnoitring that route.

5. The judge adopted a statement of the law concerning the evaluation of circumstantial evidence which I expressed at pages 34 and 35 of my judgment in R v Caraher and others (1999, unreported), and which we consider suitably conveys the proper approach:

"Circumstantial evidence has to be evaluated with the correct amount of circumspection. Where it points in one direction only, it can be a highly convincing method of proof, but it is necessary to beware of the possibility that it may be laying a false trail. It is incumbent upon the Crown to establish that the evidence points beyond doubt to one conclusion only, and in the process to rule out all reasonably tenable possibilities which may be consistent with the evidence. The individual pieces of evidence making up a case based on circumstantial evidence may each be of greater or lesser weight, but what matters is the conclusion to which the combination of circumstances leads. This was graphically illustrated by Pollock CB in R v Exall (1866) 4 F & F 922 at 929:

'It has been said that circumstantial evidence is to be considered as a chain, and each piece of evidence as a link in the chain, but this is not so, for then, if any one link break, the chain would fall. It is more like the case of a rope comprised of several cords. One strand of the cord might be insufficient to sustain the weight, but three stranded together may be quite of sufficient strength. Thus it may be in circumstantial evidence - there may be a combination of circumstances, no one of which would raise a reasonable conviction or more than a reasonable suspicion; but the three taken together may create a conclusion of guilt with as much certainty as human affairs can require or admit of.'

6. I would also refer to two quotations from Commonwealth decisions, approved and adopted by the Court of Appeal in R v Meehan [1991] 6 NIJB 1 at 32-34. The first is from Thomas v The Queen [1972] NZLR 34 at 36, where the trial judge Henry J stated in charging the jury:


'... the law says that a jury may draw rational inferences from facts which it finds to have been proved, and a jury may ultimately find a verdict of guilty by this process of reasoning ... Now whilst each piece of evidence must be carefully examined , because that is the accused's right and that is your duty, the case is not decided by a series of separate and exclusive judgments on each item or by asking what does that by itself prove, or does it prove guilt? That is not the process at all. It is the cumulative effect. It is a consideration of the totality of the circumstances that is important.'

7. The second is from Cote v The King [1942] 1 DLR 336, where the Supreme Court of Canada said:


'It may be, and such is very often the case, that the facts proven by the Crown, examined separately have not a very strong probative value, but all the facts put in evidence have to be considered each one in relation to the whole, and it is all of them taken together, that may constitute a proper basis for conviction’.”

8. Counsel for the appellants attacked the judge’s conclusions on a number of grounds, but the major theme was that the connections made by him between the clothes, the Ford Escort car and the appellants could not be supported. They submitted that in consequence the circumstantial evidence was not sufficiently compelling to constitute a prima facie case against either appellant. The second main area of criticism of the judge’s conclusions was in respect of the inferences which he drew from the failure of each to give evidence and the way in which he used this failure against them. They presented their arguments in a series of discrete points, which tend to overlap. We shall consider the points raised by counsel and then address the overall questions whether we find a prima facie case established against each appellant and, if so, whether the overall burden of proof resting on the Crown has been discharged.

9. A major challenge was mounted in argument to the connection which the judge drew between the finding of the guns and the finding of the clothing. He inferred it from the relative proximity between them and the facts that Keys had taken the police to both sites. Counsel for the appellants submitted in relation to the proximity point that too much weight was placed on this. They submitted that the fact that Keys accompanied the police officers to each site and pointed out its location was inadmissible (though no objection was taken at the time when the evidence was adduced) and when it was ruled out the link between the guns and the clothing was too weak to be sustained.

10. The evidence challenged came from police officers, not from Keys himself, who was not called as a witness. They described the visits to the locations in which the guns and clothing were found, in each case accompanied by Keys, who showed them where to look. The Crown rely upon the fact that Keys pointed out these locations as evidence of his knowledge that these items had been secreted in the respective hiding-places, which constituted a significant link between the guns and the clothing. The fact that Keys pointed out the locations is, however, equivalent to his having said to the police where they were (see May, Criminal Evidence, 4th ed, paras 9-15 and 9-16) which if recounted by the police officers would be hearsay evidence. The Crown riposte was that the evidence was adduced not to show the truth of what Keys by inference told them, but the state of his mind. His knowledge of both locations is accordingly probative as a link between the contents of each hiding-place.

11. The admissibility of evidence as to the state of mind of a third person was considered by the House of Lords in R v Blastland [1986] AC 41. The appellant, who was charged with the buggery and murder of a young boy, advanced the defence that the offences were committed by another person known as Mark. He sought to call several witnesses to adduce evidence that Mark had told them before the victim’s body was discovered that a young boy had been murdered, but the judge ruled that such evidence was inadmissible as hearsay. The appellant was convicted and his appeal was dismissed by the Court of Appeal and House of Lords.

12. Counsel for the appellant submitted that the evidence was admissible original evidence as tending to prove Mark’s state of knowledge, from which the jury might reasonably have inferred that Mark might have himself committed the offences. The House of Lords rejected this argument. Mark’s state of knowledge was neither a fact in issue at the trial nor of direct and immediate relevance to an issue arising. Lord Bridge articulated the principle and its application to the case at page 54:

“It is, of course, elementary that statements made to a witness by a third party are not excluded by the hearsay rule when they are put in evidence solely to prove the state of mind either of the maker of the statement or of the person to whom it was made. What a person said or heard said may well be the best and most direct evidence of that person’s state of mind. This principle can only apply, however, when the state of mind evidenced by the statement is either itself directly in issue at the trial or of direct and immediate relevance to an issue which arises at the trial. It is at this point, as it seems to me, that the argument for the appellant breaks down. The issue at the trial of the appellant was whether it was proved that the appellant had buggered and murdered Karl Fletcher. Mark’s knowledge that Karl had been murdered was neither itself in issue, nor was it, per se, of any relevance to the issue. What was relevant was not the fact of Mark’s knowledge but how he had come by that knowledge. He might have done so in a number of ways, but the two most obvious possibilities were either that he had witnessed the commission of the murder by the appellant or that he had committed it himself. The statements which it was sought to prove that Mark made, indicating his knowledge of the murder, provided no rational basis whatever on which the jury could be invited to draw an inference as to the source of that knowledge. To do so would have been mere speculation. Thus, to allow this evidence of what Mark said to be put before the jury as supporting the conclusion that he, rather than the appellant, may have been the murderer seems to me, in the light of the principles on which the exclusion of hearsay depends, to be open to still graver objection than allowing evidence that he had directly admitted the crime. If the latter is excluded as evidence to which no probative value can safely be attributed, the same objection applies a fortiori to the admission of the former.”

13. Mr McCrudden QC for McClean and Mr Harvey QC for McCready both submitted that the present case was directly analogous to R v Blastland , in that Keys’ knowledge of the location of the guns and clothing could have been obtained from any of a number of sources, and that it was mere speculation how he came by it. Mr Lynch QC for the Crown pointed to the fact that Keys had been arrested at 1.55 am on 4 March 1998, so there was little opportunity for him to hear from other sources where the items had been hidden. Taken together with his proved links with the appellants, this tended to show that he had the knowledge because he had some connection with the planning of the attack, the attack itself or the disposal of the guns and clothing. That accordingly provided a probative link between the objects found.

14. We consider that there is a tenable distinction between the present case and R v Blastland . In the latter case the issue to which the knowledge possessed by Mark was directed was whether he might have committed the offences himself. That could not legitimately be directly proved by evidence from a third party that Mark had so admitted, and it was sought to adduce evidence of his knowledge to prove the same thing in an indirect fashion. In the present case the comparable issue would be whether Keys had taken part in the conspiracy. The Crown is not seeking to establish that possibility, merely that there is a link between the guns and the clothing through some activity or information which gave Keys knowledge of the whereabouts of both. It is not mere speculation how he came by this knowledge, there is a sustainable inference on the facts that he came by the knowledge by means of his own connection or a well-informed source connected with the perpetrators of the attack in the bar. We take the view that the evidence was admissible, and that it is a matter of inference how much weight one puts on it. The judge had regard to it, putting it in the scale along with other matters, but did not treat it as conclusive evidence. We are of opinion that he was justified in doing so, and we ourselves have regard to the evidence as tending to some extent to show a connection between the guns and the clothing.

15. Counsel for the appellants both submitted that the fibre evidence was insufficient to establish a connection between the appellants and the crime. Its strength was lessened by the common nature of the cloth in Mrs Gibson’s jeans, and the fact that the police officer who first discovered the clothing opened the bin bag and rummaged inside it before replacing it in the bunker. They also suggested that the owners of the clothing might have done no more than steal the car to order, without being made privy to the purpose for which it was to be stolen. These factors have to be taken into account in assessing the strength to be attributed to the fibre evidence, and the judge referred specifically to the first two in his judgment. He also took into account the fact that the guns and clothing were found relatively close to each other. The appellants’ counsel submitted that the distance of 170 yards was such that the proximity proved nothing, but we consider that the fact that the items were apparently dumped in the same estate may properly be regarded, as part of the amalgam of factors, as tending to show some connection between them.

16. It is the proper use of the amalgam of factors in a case of circumstantial evidence which is of importance. It is possible in many instances to take any individual piece of evidence and show that it cannot bear much weight or can bear an explanation consistent with innocence, so that it could not of itself be the foundation of a finding of guilt. When such straws in the wind are placed together, if they all point in the same direction, their combined effect may be very convincing of guilt. It is clear from the terms of his judgment that the judge understood and applied this correctly and did not place more weight on any piece of evidence than it could properly bear. Thus, he regarded the making of the calls to the mobile telephone borrowed by McCready, though not of itself determinative of guilt, as carrying some significance and fitting in with the pattern of other pieces of evidence tending when taken together to point towards his complicity.

17. The appellants’ counsel were strongly critical of the reliability of the evidence given by Edgar Nugent. The judge took into account the manifest weaknesses of his testimony and expressed at page 19 of his judgment his reservations about the reliability of that evidence. He expressed himself satisfied, however, that in respect of his visit to McClean’s flat on the afternoon of 3 March 1998 and his description of McClean’s giving him a driving lesson over the roads in the Poyntzpass vicinity his evidence was accurate and truthful. In our view he was entitled, having seen and heard the witness and had an opportunity to assess his veracity, to reach this conclusion. It is to be noted that at page 21 the judge was properly cautious about the significance which he attributed to these pieces of evidence. Counsel complained that the judge was prepared to accept that there may have been an understandable reason for Nugent’s lying about some matters, whereas he did not consider, by applying the equivalent of a Lucas direction given to a jury, whether the appellants may have had some reason for lying which did not demonstrate guilt of the crime. No such reason was put before us and no evidence was placed before the judge which might have tended to establish its existence. In our opinion the judge was entitled to draw adverse inferences from the denials by the appellants that they had been with Keys and Robley on 3 March 1998 and McClean’s claim that he had never taken Nugent on a driving lesson to Poyntzpass.

18. Mr McCrudden submitted that the judge made incorrect use of McCready’s failure to give evidence when considering the ownership of the clothes, in that he took it into account not only against McCready himself but also against McClean. We do not consider that there is the significance in this point which counsel attributed to it. At page 12 of his judgment the judge considered the case against McCready in respect of ownership of the clothing. He concluded, on grounds which were in our view sustainable, that there was a prima facie case that he was the owner of one set of the clothing found and that his failure to give evidence gave rise to a strong adverse inference under Article 4 of the Criminal Evidence (Northern Ireland) Order 1988. He therefore concluded that the clothing in the bin bag attributed to McCready in fact belonged to him. He went on in the succeeding pages to consider whether a connection between the clothing and the weapons had been established. At page 14 he stated, in a passage criticised by Mr McCrudden:

“As I have observed, two sets of outer clothes, underwear, socks and footwear were discovered. Clearly, this was no casual abandonment of surplus or unwanted clothing. The fact that two complete sets of clothing including underwear and footwear were found suggests that they had been used for some purpose before being concealed in the bunker. That conclusion is strengthened by the fact that the clothing belonged to two people who associated together regularly. Why would two complete sets of clothes belonging to two close friends be left in a coal bunker unless they had been worn for some venture? Their discovery shortly after the attack on the bar and within a short distance of the murder weapons, while not sufficient alone to establish a connection between the clothes and the guns, is at least indicative of such a connection.”

19. Mr McCrudden submitted that the judge was wrong to take into account against both appellants the ownership of the clothing, which had been shown to belong to the two associates, whereas in McCready’s case that ownership had been established to a substantial extent by evidence which was not admissible against McClean. It is to be remarked, however, that the issue to which the judge was directing his attention was the connection between the guns and the clothing and in support of this drew attention to the fact that two complete sets of clothing had been found in the coal bunker, which suggested that they had been used for some connected purpose before their deposit there. His reference to the ownership of the clothing by the appellants, who were known to be associates, was used only as an extra reinforcing argument. If the judge was wrong in relying on this point, accordingly, we consider it only a minor part of his reasoning. He had in our judgment ample material on which to reach the conclusion that there was a proven link between the guns and the clothing, and that conclusion is not invalidated by his reference to the ownership by the appellants of the clothing.

20. We therefore conclude that the judge was entitled to conclude that there was a prima facie case against each appellant of guilt of the mattes with which they were charged. Once that was established, he was then fully entitled to draw adverse inferences against them when they did not give evidence. We do not consider that there is any substance in the criticisms made by the appellants’ counsel of the inferences drawn by the judge from the appellants’ failure to give evidence. On the contrary, we are satisfied that no other or less damaging inference could sensibly be drawn. We consider therefore that the judge was fully justified in concluding that the appellants were guilty as charged, and that the convictions are safe.

21. The appellants’ appeal will be dismissed.

IN HER MAJESTY’S COURT OF APPEAL IN NORTHERN IRELAND

_____


THE QUEEN


V


STEPHEN JAMES McCLEAN and NOEL WILLIAM JOSEPH McCREADY

_____


JUDGMENT



OF


CARSWELL LCJ


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