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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Iroegbu, R v [2003] EWCA Crim 2317 (9 July 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2003/2317.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Crim 2317 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE CRESSWELL
MR JUSTICE BENNETT
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R E G I N A | ||
-v- | ||
NWACHUKWU IROEGBU |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR M HOLLAND appeared on behalf of the CROWN
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Crown Copyright ©
Facts.
"Q. I suppose you have got another ton of this stuff at home?
A. No, that is all I got.
Q. That is a hell of a lot of cannabis, what were you going to do with it?
A. What do you mean?
Q. Were you going to use it all yourself?
A. No, I do not even smoke.
Q. Have you got a customer then?
A. You know already, I'm not going to tell you."
The officer then said that they would go back to Wembley to discuss the matter further. That conversation was not noted contemporaneously.
"I know I'm in trouble, I know I could go to prison for a long time, I can tell you who gave it me. Will that help?"
The officer claims to have replied that any information which the appellant wished to give later would be of assistance, but that he did not make deals, and the appellant was then presented to the Custody Sergeant and booked in. The appellant did ask to see a solicitor as soon as possible, but at 12.25 p.m. (according to the Custody Record) he was told by a superintendent that for the time being he would be held incommunicado. Plainly that was to enable the police to search his home before word of his arrest could get out.
"Q 'You said earlier that you could tell me who had given you the stuff.'
A 'You'll have to move quick he's flying to Nigeria today. Q 'What's his name? 'Elvis'. A Elvis who?' A 'I don't know any more than that.' Q 'Where does he live?' A 'I got his number.' Q 'What is his number?' A 'It is at my home.' Q 'Which one?' A 'I've only got one.' Q 'I think I should point out to you, that I know a lot more about you than you are aware of.' A 'What do you mean?' Q 'Well, that you've got two addresses.' A 'No, I've only got one'....
Q 'Is that the address you have given to the custody sergeant.'.... A 'Yes.' Q 'What about the address in Malvern Road?' A 'What address?' Q 'The Ratcliff House one.' A 'Yes, okay, I live there too.' Q 'Who lives there with you?' A 'No-one.' A 'What about the other address in Hazeldean Road?' A 'That's my brother's.' ....
A 'So getting back to who gave you the cannabis, which address will his number be at?' A 'He was going to come round at 11.am and I was going to give him the money I got from the drugs.'.... Q 'How much were you hoping to give him?' A 'About £1,400.00.' Q 'How much do you think it was worth?' A 'You tell me.' Q 'Tell me why you would give any money to Elvis at all?' A 'Because he wanted to go back to Nigeria.' Q 'Was it to buy drugs?' A 'It could have been.' Q 'This cannabis as you well know is not worth £1,400.00 but nearer £5,000.00.' A No reply. Q 'Other than Elvis coming to your home you have no other means of contacting him, is that correct?' A 'That is correct.' Q 'Are you sure? It seems strange to me that someone will trust you with £5,000.00 worth of cannabis, albeit you are going to get £1,400.00 for it and you don't have a contact number or address, anything could go wrong.' A 'That's the way it is, Q 'We will now leave you while I arrange for your two addresses to be searched, then when that is done I intend to formally interview you. Is there anything you wish to say about that?' A 'No. Will I be getting bail?' Q 'That decision will be made by my supervising officer, but it certainly can't be made until all enquiries have been completed, this includes the searching of your houses, etc.' A 'Am I still held incommunicado?' Q 'Until such time as we have searched your home addresses and completed all possible enquiries we can, yes, I'm afraid you will. However, you can have a solicitor when we interview you.' A 'I'm not bothered about one then, I have read law books and I hope to go to Cambridge University to study law. I know my rights. I just want one at court.'
"Q 'You understand why you have been arrested, don't you?' A 'It's about the stuff in the bag, isn't it?' Q 'Yes, that's an awful lot of cannabis you had there isn't it?' A 'I suppose so.' Q 'What were you going to do with all that?' A 'Do I really have to answer that?' Q 'You've been told you don't have to say anything, but we would like to know what you were going to do with it?' A 'I don't really want to say.' Q 'Well, you told us earlier you were going to sell it on behalf of someone else and you hoped to make about £1,400.00 for yourself?' A 'That was not on the record.'
Q 'So you are saying that's not true?' A 'No comment.' Q 'Who were you going to sell it to?' A 'I'd rather not say.' Q 'Who did you get it from then?' A 'A man called Elvis.' Q 'Elvis who?' A 'I don't know, but he lives in Kilburn Park Road.' Q 'How were you going to contact him?' A 'He was coming to my place at 11.' Q 'Which place?' A 'You know already.' Q 'So what were you doing at 67 Bessant Way this morning with all that cannabis?' A 'No comment.' Q 'Were you going to sell it to [C]?' A 'No comment.' Q 'Were you supposed to meet someone else there to sell it to?' A 'No comment.' Q 'I don't want you to name anybody, just tell me were you going to sell it to someone else?' A 'You tell me.' Q 'The first time we saw you with it was this morning. How long had you had it?' A 'No comment.' Q 'It seems to me you had an awful lot of cannabis, I think you intended to sell it for your own personal gain' or it may be financial gain - 'and not for someone else and that you would get much more than the £1,400.00 for it. I would say nearer £6,000.00.' A 'You should know, you tell me.' Q 'Is there anything else you would like to say?' A 'No.' Q 'You now have the opportunity to read over the record of questions and answers and if you agree with its content to initial the answers and sign the foot of each page. Do you agree to do this?' A 'No, I don't want to sign anything.'
"he was extremely anxious to get bail and he was offering information in exchange for us not opposing bail. I have a vague recollection that he named someone with an 'X' in the name, like Felix or Alex, or someone like that. I got the impression that he may have known something, but the information proved worthless.'
"Admit that this is yours and let C go free. We'll put you on a lesser charge and you'll probably get a suspended sentence"
He said he still needed a solicitor, and the officers then said
"Don't waste time, he's got tons of it at home."
As to the interview at 4.20 p.m. when, according to the police, his answers were contemporaneously recorded, he apparently accepted that the questions were asked, but said he only replied "no comment" or that he didn't want to say. The police, he said, had found a pornographic photograph under the bed at one of the houses searched, and were pulling his leg about it. According to the officers that simply did not happen.
Court of Appeal: 1988.
"(1) That when summing-up the judge at one point expressed his own view as to the appellant's credibility in a way which went beyond justifiable comment, and showed bias against the appellant. The passage in question reads:
'Mr McGrail, for the defence, has his instructions, but grasping the nettle, because it is obvious to everyone in this court, is it not, that I think his client is lying; lying cunningly, the prosecution say, in that he admits matters of detail that do not point to his guilt, but denies - and I thing 'ducks and weaves' was one of the phrases used by counsel for the Crown - anything which he thinks hurts his case."
(2) That the judge erred in law in admitting the evidence as to what the appellant said after on arrival at the police station, he allegedly asked to speak to DC Smith in private. Although, as we have said, there had been no application at the trial to exclude evidence counsel in this court sought to rely on sections 58 and 78 of the 1984 Act and a number of provisions of the Code of Practice."
As to the first ground of appeal the court had doubts as to the accuracy of the transcript, and having resolved those said that no such comment should ever have been made, but when the summing-up was read as a whole the jury would not have been misled or improperly influenced by that one comment.
"The criminal trial is that based on the adversarial system and reliance is placed upon counsel to do what is right in the interest of his client. In any given case, defence counsel may have good tactical reasons for not raising objection in respect of evidence which is arguably inadmissible, and for preferring that the whole of the evidence goes before the jury. While a judge who notices a problem of admissibility in the depositions may seek to raise it with counsel in advance if he sees fit, he has no duty to do so."
"This Court cannot speculate what the evidence or what the ruling of the judge might have been had the matter been dealt with on an advance objection; nor what, for instance, the police officers would have said had the question of their precise state of mind under section 58(8) of the Act been explored in the absence of the jury. Evidence of the admissions having been given without the judge having been asked to rule on a prior objection, such admissions were properly before the jury, and this court sees no reason to criticise the judge for the way he dealt with the matter in his summing up."
Fresh Evidence.
(1) CS was the informer, as was suspected by the defence at the trial.
(2) Prior to 25th February 1986 CS had been convicted on 15 previous occasions of offences of shoplifting, and on the last occasion, on 29th June 1984 for four such offences she received a sentence of 21 months imprisonment.
(3) On 25th February 1986 she was again convicted of shoplifting and was conditionally discharged for 12 months. The defence at trial knew of her previous convictions.
(4) On 31st October 1986, six days prior to the day on which the appellant was arrested, CS was again arrested for shoplifting by officers based at Wembley. She was ultimately convicted of that offence in January 1988.
(5) At some stage prior to that, and possibly after the appellant was convicted in July 1987, someone, presumably a police officer, suggested to the Branch Crown Prosecutor that outstanding proceedings against her should be dropped. It seems that by then there was more than one set of proceedings, CS having been arrested in December 1986, January 1987, April 1987 and October 1987, all of those being dates after the appellant was arrested. The Branch Crown Prosecutor did not accept the suggestion, and for four offences of shoplifting and an offence of wounding in January 1988 she received a sentence of 15 months' imprisonment.
Grounds of Appeal
(1) because contrary to section 58 of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 the appellant was for a time denied access to a solicitor, and -
(2) because the incriminating answers (assuming they were given) were given in the course of interviews which were not conducted in accordance with the provisions of Code C to the 1984 Act as then in force. Furthermore, the shortcomings are even more marked if one has regard to the current Code, as one can do when trying to decide whether what occurred was fair.
Of course the difficulty with this ground of appeal is that encountered by counsel for the appellant in this court in 1988, namely that no application to exclude evidence was made to the trial judge. Mr Taylor seeks to overcome that difficulty by submitting that such an application should have been made, and that if made it would have led to incriminating evidence being excluded. We disagree.
"At that time it was usual to reserve cross-examination of police officers until the jury could see and hear their reactions. I took the view that it would have been pointless to forearm the detectives with knowledge of what I was going to ask, when there was no prospect of excluding evidence under PACE."
That seems to us to have been a perfectly sensible forensic decision, which no appellate court should attempt to re-visit. The letter does not specifically deal with the denial of access to a solicitor, and Mr Taylor submits that in the light of authorities such as Samuel [1988] 7 Cr App R 232 and Sillcott 5th December 1991 unreported, if the point had been taken the Crown would not have been able to substantiate its reliance on section 58(8) of the 1984 Act. But, as was pointed out in the 1988 appeal, that is a judgment which cannot be made without hearing evidence from the superintendent who on 5th November 1986 gave authority for the appellant's right of access to a solicitor to be delayed, and because no application was made at the trial which disclosed any reliance on section 58, that evidence has never been heard. Whether Mr McGrail thought that the Crown would make good its reliance on section 58(8) which enables a senior police officer in certain circumstances to delay access to legal advice we do not know, but even if he considered that the Crown would be unsuccessful on that issue, before ordering that the evidence be excluded the judge would still have had to consider whether a proven breach of section 58(1) [the right to consult a solicitor privately at any time] was in the circumstances of this case so serious and significant that the admission of the evidence would have such an adverse effect upon the fairness of the proceedings that, pursuant to section 78 of the 1984 Act, the court ought not to admit it.
"(a) By oppression of the person who made it; or
(b) in consequence of anything said or done which was likely, in the circumstances existing at the time, to render unreliable any confession which might be made by him in consequence thereof."
In such a situation, which did not arise here because no representation was made:
"The court shall not allow the confession to be given in evidence against him except in so far as the prosecution proves to the court beyond reasonable doubt that the confession (notwithstanding that it may be true) was not obtained as aforesaid."
"Should obviously have been made and, if made, should have been granted and, if the court further takes the view that the conviction is thereby rendered unsafe."
We agree, but here we are not satisfied that the application should obviously have been made, or if made should have been granted, and we therefore cannot conclude that the conviction is thereby rendered unsafe. For the avoidance of doubt we specifically reject the submission that inadmissible evidence was placed before the jury. All of the evidence which the jury heard was and remained admissible until ruled otherwise, and no relevant ruling was made.
"I have always felt that the criticism of the trial Judge was unfair. In making the remark that the jury might think he disbelieved the accused, he was making an honest effort to cure any notion that by intervening in cross-examination of the Defendant, he was in some way pre-empting their decision. When Paton [that is to say prosecuting counsel] asked Mr Iroegbu if a pair of trousers was his, there was an agonised pause before the Appellant replied. Some of the jury were sniggering when Mr Iroegbu was asked to take from the laundry bag a red, white and green ski hat. Asked if he recognised it, he looked everywhere in the room for support, then triumphantly said 'not necessarily!' It was about then that Judge Coulthard said to him: 'Try and do yourself justice' or something similar. By the time the Court of Appeal had ruled, it was too late to do anything about it."
It seems to us that what Mr McGrail has written does enable the judge's remark to be understood in context, and substantiates the conclusion reached by this Court on the last occasion.
"Let me say a word about character. The defendant has not given any evidence before. He is a 27 year old Nigerian and living in this country. He has no convictions recorded against him. That is something which you put into the balance when you are weighing his evidence, in his favour....As I say, bear in mind that the accused is a man of good character and that really goes to whether or not you believe him."
That plainly explains how good character can assist in relation to credibility, but it says nothing about propensity. That is not surprising because, as Mr Holland pointed out, Vye & Ors [1993] 97 Cr App R 134 was decided in 1992, 5 years after the judge summed-up in the present case, and even then this court was unable to discern any principle or consistent pattern as to when a second limb direction (i.e. as to propensity) should be given, so the Court gave guidance for the future saying that such a direction should be given in a case where a defendant is of good character. The existence of that guidance does not mean that a conviction will be unsafe because an incomplete direction has been given. Before this court can reach that conclusion it must look at the facts of the individual case, as it did, for example, in Fulcher [1995] 2 Cr App R 251, where it was conceded that there was no direction as to the effect of good character on credibility. That was a case where such a direction could have been applied to the appellant's account as set out in the answers which he had given to the police, but in the present case there was no issue which a direction as to propensity could have assisted the jury to resolve. Clearly the appellant had no previous convictions. Although, if the evidence of the officers was accepted, it was initially suggested to him that he had "another ton of this stuff at home" it was clear that when searches were carried out nothing incriminating was found. Accordingly we are satisfied that the absence of a direction as to propensity did not render this conviction unsafe.
Conclusion.