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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Greens v. Her Majesty's Advocate [2007] ScotHC HCJAC_55 (12 September 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2007/HCJAC_55.html Cite as: [2007] HCJAC 55, [2007] ScotHC HCJAC_55 |
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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY |
|
Lord Macfadyen
Lord Johnston |
[2007] HCJAC55Appeal No: XC123/07OPINION OF THE COURT delivered by THE RIGHT
HONOURABLE LORD JOHNSTON in NOTE OF APPEAL AGAINST
SENTENCE by ROBERT WALLACE GREENS Appellant; against HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE Respondent: _______ |
Act: McClure, Solicitor;
McClure Collins, Edinburgh
Alt: Ogg Q.C., A.D.; Crown
Agent
12 September 2007
[1] The appellant pleaded guilty on
22 December 2005 in the High Court to the following charge:
"On 15 May 2005 at the B7003, Roslin to Rosewell
Road, Midlothian, you did assault [EMVDL], c/o Lothian and Borders Police, Dalkeith, and did
seize hold of her, throw her down an embankment, repeatedly push her,
repeatedly force her onto the ground, repeatedly grab hold of her and drag her
along the ground, sit on her, threaten her with a knife, handle her breasts,
ask her if she was a virgin, repeatedly strike her on the face all to her
severe injury and danger of her life, and did rape her".
[2] At the sentencing diet the sentencing judge imposed an extended sentence of seventeen years, comprising a custodial term
of ten years reduced to twelve to reflect the plea of
guilty, and an extension period of seven years.
[3] As will be the seen, the crime to which the plea was tendered
was one of rape and was committed in the following circumstances.
Background to the Offence - Complainer
[4] The date of the offence, 15 May 2005, was a Sunday. As she was not working that day the complainer decided to visit some
local tourist attractions, including Rosslyn Chapel. At about 2.45 p.m. she boarded a bus on Princes
Street to go to
Rosslyn Chapel. As the weather was
good, she got off the bus at a stop before Roslin, intending to walk to the
village. However, she got lost on the
way and therefore did not arrive at the chapel until 4.45 p.m., by which
time it was closing and too late to visit.
[5] She then decided to phone her friend who was still at
work. Her friend invited the complainer for dinner to her house in
Bonnyrigg. As the friend would not get back from
work until some time later, the complainer decided to walk from Rosslyn Chapel to her friend's house. The route she took was through Roslin Glen,
along the B7003 Roslin to Rosewell Road, Midlothian. That is where the attack took place, at a part of the road where it
climbs through woods along a steep slope out of the Glen.
Background to the Offence - Appellant
[6] Meanwhile the appellant, Robert Greens, had finished his work for the day
on the peat farm at about 3.15 p.m. He had
gone to a number of pubs with his work colleagues and then on to his parents'
house in Penicuik. When he left at about 5.30 p.m. he was
going to his sister's house in Newtongrange.
He drove his dark blue Rover car along the B7003 Roslin to Rosewell Road,
Midlothian.
Incident
[7] As
the complainer was walking along the road
to her friend's house she was noticed by a passing driver who then saw the car
in front of him veer across the opposite lane and pull in at a lay-by. This was the appellant's Rover.
By this time it was shortly after 6.00 p.m.
[8] Moments later another driver also noticed the complainer and the appellant, who had by now got out of
the car. They were now about fifty
metres apart and walking towards each other.
[9] The
complainer first
saw the
appellant when
he was about ten metres from her. As he
approached her, there was nothing to cause her alarm. However, when he reached her, without
warning he
grabbed her by the arms and threw her down the steep embankment that bordered
the road. She slipped down, unable to
get a foothold, and he followed her down, repeatedly pushing her further away
from the road. The complainer was shouting, screaming and
struggling desperately. She tried to
get back to the roadway but, when she did so, he pushed her back down. At one point she broke free and tried to
scramble up the embankment but the appellant grabbed her ankles and pulled her back towards him.
[10] In the end, the complainer was pushed to the ground, face down. The appellant sat on her back and told her to stop screaming
because he had a knife. The appellant then asked her if she was
a virgin. The complainer describes the appellant as hissing at her,
sounding agitated, when talking to her.
At this point the complainer realised that she was going to be raped and felt in
fear for her life. She therefore
decided to stop screaming and fighting.
At this, the
appellant put
his hands under her body and touched her breasts through her clothing.
[11] The
complainer does
not recalled being turned over, but the next thing that she remembers about the
incident is that she was lying on her back with her legs apart and the appellant lying between them having
sexual intercourse with her. She turn
her face to the left as she did not want to look at him while he was raping
her. During the attack the appellant repeatedly struck her to
the right side of her face. By now all
she wanted was for the attack to be over and for the appellant to leave her. The complainer does not remember anything else about the attack,
the appellant stopping or leaving her,
or indeed anything else until she was in the ambulance, where she had to ask a
paramedic what day it was.
After the Incident - Complainer
[12] At about twenty past six, the complainer was seen standing at the side of the road by a
passing motorist. She could see from her car
that the complainer's face was bloody and swollen and that there were
twigs in her hair, so she stopped to help.
From the complainer's appearance, she initially thought that she had been hit by a
car. She called 999 but was so distressed that another passer-by had to
take over the call. The complainer was in shock but able to
speak, saying that she thought she had been raped but repeatedly saying "this
isn't happening". In due course the
police and ambulance arrived.
Medical Evidence (Books of Photographs 2)
[13] On arrival at the Accident and Emergency Department, the complainer was found to have
substantial bruising and gross swelling to the right side of her face, so that
the right eye was swollen shut. Later
examination of the eye revealed haematoma in the eye itself. A two centimetre laceration to her nose was
glued. There were multiple scratch
marks and abrasions to her abdomen and legs.
Although she did not recall details of the attack, by the time she
reached hospital she was described as alert and oriented.
[14] On genital examination by the forensic medical examiner, she
was found to have swelling, superficial abrasions and punctuate bruising. There were no obvious tears and no bleeding.
[15] The nature of the attack, which involved injuries to the head
and ended with The
complainer being
abandoned in a remote location, meant that her life was at risk. However, although she remained in hospital
overnight for observations due to the head injuries, she made a good physical
recovery and was discharged the next day.
Although she was referred to a maxillofacial surgeon, by the end of May
her vision was found to be normal and the only finding was a slight depression
of the zygomatic arch in her cheek, which caused no cosmetic or function deficit other than
discomfort in cold weather.
[16] The ongoing psychological effects of the incident upon the
complainer are referred to below.
After the Incident - Appellant
[17] Following the attack, the appellant went back to his car and drove to his sister's house in Newtongrange,
staying for only five minutes before going back to his own home. His wife noticed new scratches on his arm,
but he stated that he had received these while at work.
Police Involvement
[18] The link to the appellant was first made via DNA found on the complainer's
pants, which were found discarded at the place where the attack had taken
place. This was found to match the appellant, but also his identical
twin brother. However, the brother
lives in Fort William and was able to provide the police with an alibi. Police investigations confirmed that he had
been in Fort William at the time of the offence.
[19] The appellant was detained on 27 May 2005. When cautioned in connection with the rape
allegation he replied "you're joking".
[20] At
interview, he stated that he had travelled home from Penicuik by bus that day
and not by car. He said that he had not
travelled through Roslin Glen on the evening in question and flatly denied
having seen the
complainer, far
less attacking her.
[21] However, by the time of judicial examination, he admitted that
he had been alone in his car at the relevant time.
Impact of Crime
[22] The
complainer first
saw the injuries
to her face in a mirror at the hospital and she broke down in tears. In the days following the attack she covered
the mirrors in her house so her face would be hidden from view. Although she initially felt physically weak
and sore, the bruising and pain subsided over time, leaving only a scar on her
nose as tangible evidence of the attack.
[23] However, the psychological effects have been more
persistent. In September 2005 her GP reported that she was
still mentally in severe disorder.
Before the attack she was a bright and independent girl who set off from her home in the
Netherlands to
the UK to spend a year, during which time she indulged a passion for hill-walking by
trekking both Offa's Dyke and the Pennine Way unaccompanied and living under
canvas. Since the attack her personality has changed. She now finds that she has lost
confidence in herself. She was afraid
to go out of the house alone, and even now she does not feel able to go out at
night alone, or
to hill walk alone. Even when
accompanied, she feels anxious each time a male walks towards her. In daily life, a loss of perspective means
that minor mishaps, such as misplacing a key, can cause disproportionate
distress which leaves her inconsolable for hours or even days. Since the attack she has found it hard to
make decisions, to solve problems and to deal with the minor setbacks which
occur in daily life. She has recently
taken steps to address this by starting to consult a psychiatrist but at
present she still regularly breaks down in tears.
[24] It is observed that the complainer, who is Dutch, had no
acquaintance or knowledge even of the existence of the appellant until the
crime was committed in a remote area, without any apparent motive save a sexual one.
[25] In
presenting the appeal Mr McClure, Solicitor Advocate, challenged the decision
of the sentencing judge both on the starting point of twelve years for the custodial term and also on the question
of discount in
respect of the appellant's guilty plea.
[26] With regard to the former point, he submitted that the
aggravations, apart from the obvious crime of rape, in the indictment to which
the plea was tendered and in particular in relation to danger of life, were at the
lower end of the scale. He submitted
that the complainer's life was never really in danger, she was not in hospital for any length of time and that therefore the
sentencing judge had started the process at too high a point at twelve years.
[27] However the appeal argument before us turned rather more on the
question of discount.
[28] Mr McClure argued that there
were good reasons why the plea was not presented until it was, namely not far
before the trial diet. Those included
an alleged lack of memory on the part
of the appellant as to what had happened, an attempt on his part to blame his
brother who was a twin and could be said to have similar DNA which therefore made
it essential to have a DNA report before any question of pleas could be
considered and also the fact that the appellant had tendered at least at the preliminary
diet a special defence of alibi. All
these factors, Mr McClure submitted, explain why the plea had come when it did and
should therefore be taken into account in increasing, so he argued to us, the
discount that the judge imposed.
[29] Before turning to the particular aspects of this case, we will
wish to make two general observations.
[30] There is currently within the media and political circles,
considerable discussion about the crime of rape and the apparent lack of
convictions in relation to recorded or reported incidents alleging the crime. It is therefore very important that it be
understood that although the crime of rape in itself is easily identified in
the context of overcoming a woman's consent in respect of sexual intercourse, the
circumstances in which that can happen vary enormously from what could be
described as an amorous sexual encounter that has got out of control at one end of
the scale to at
the other an
appalling attack on a woman by a complete stranger, unprovoked and without justification.
[31] There may be reasons why in relation to the former set of cases
convictions are difficult to obtain.
When it comes to the latter type of case, of which this is one and in
this respect the plea of guilty has avoided a trial, it has to be recognised in
the public domain that the courts will not tolerate this type of aggressive sexual conduct, to
put it at its least, when imposing sentences. If it is
appropriate, and we have some hesitation
whether it is, to scale the gravity of the crime of rape, this particular offence has
to be placed at the highest level of
it.
[32] We say that for two basic reasons.
[33] Firstly, as we have already stated, the victim was on her own
and in a relatively remote area and was attacked without notice by a complete stranger in a most brutal and
aggressive way, quite apart from the sexual content. Such is apparent from the narrative
presented by the Crown.
[34] More importantly, the
traumatic effect upon her has been apparently enormous and continues. We were shown photographs by the Advocate
Depute which are
frankly horrific in terms of the facial injuries to the young lady, to say
nothing what else she must have suffered mentally. They go far beyond what might on one view be
described as necessary for a rapist to achieve his sexual gratification.
[35] Separately, and also important, this court requires to record that the
reasons for late pleas, however well balanced, do not go to increase the amount. We are not at all sure in this case that the reasons have, in any
event, much merit
having regard to the various tacks that the defence took during the currency of
the procedure in relation to, for example, alibi and the alleged involvement of
the appellant's
twin which could have significant DNA implications if he is an identical
twin. The policy behind giving discounts for pleas of guilty has a number of
facets which we do not at this stage propose to rehearse but, the later the
plea in the process of the case, the less likely it is that the court should be
required to allow a large discount. The person who qualifies for the highest discount is he or she who recognises
their guilt from the outset and pleads, for example, by section 76 notice within a reasonable time
of that recognition. This court will
not be influenced with regard to the level of discount by reasons given as to
why a later plea was taken at the
particular time it was tendered. All the
more so, a plea tendered on the morning of the trial will attract, if any, a
modest discount
for the reasons given in Du Plooy.
[36] Returning to the present case, this in our opinion is one of the
worst cases of rape this court has had the misfortune to encounter for some
time, when not connected also
with murder. We are not impressed with
the arguments presented by Mr McClure with regard to the aggravations, for
example in relation to risk of life. We are much more concerned
by the extreme traumatic effect that we understand the events have had upon the
victim and appalled by the photographs that we were shown. Therefore it cannot be said that the
starting point of twelve years was in any way inappropriate or excessive.
[37] As regards to the question of discount, without rehearsing what
we have already said, the longer this case went on once the indictment was
served, whatever may be the reasons, the more the unfortunate victim must have
been subjected to a recurrent recollection but also, almost more importantly,
the fact that it was becoming less and less clear whether she would have to
give evidence. The fact that she did
eventually not have to give evidence is, and we use the word loosely, to the credit of the appellant but that credit has to be
reflected only
modestly for the
reasons we have tried to explain. His reasons for the delay in
pleading are not relevant.
[38] In these circumstances we are entirely satisfied that the
sentencing judge in setting the starting point for the custodial term at twelve years reflects
no more than an acceptable sentence. A
higher one could
easily have been contemplated. The discount of two years more
than reflects the factors that we have tried to take into account, namely that
there has to be some recognition for the plea of guilty but in this case not much more
than that. Finally, there is no
challenge to the extension
period of the
sentence.
[39] In all these circumstances this appeal is refused.