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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 >> Hussain v R [2005] EWCA Crim 31 (19 January 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2005/31.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Crim 31 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
AS A REFERENCE BY THE CRIMINAL CASES REVIEW COMMITTEE
FROM THE LEEDS CROWN COURT
(HON MR JUSTICE KENNETH JONES)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE LEVESON
and
SIR IAN KENNEDY
____________________
ABID HUSSAIN |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
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REGINA |
Respondent |
____________________
(instructed by Irwin Mitchell, S1 2EL) for the Appellant
MARTIN WILSON Esq QC
(instructed by The Crown Prosecution Service) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 7th, 8th December 2004
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Longmore:
Introduction
(i) 24 externally visible bruises to the face and head. Dr Green believed these had been caused by hard blows from a hand;
(ii) 25 bruises to the trunk and limbs caused, he said, by very hard slapping and gripping;
(iii) two brain haemorrhages. These would have been caused by shaking or blows to the head;
(iv) spinal bleeding. Dr Green believed this to have been caused by a blow or over-bending, or possibly through shaking;
(v) splitting of the membrane between the two halves of the brain. Dr Green thought this would have been caused by repeated blows to the head. He said he had only ever seen this injury before in boxers.
For this reason there was a voir dire on 6th December. There is no transcript of the argument or evidence on the voir dire nor of the judgment; all that has remained is an abbreviated solicitor's note of the cross-examination of DS Richardson probably by the late Mr Louis Lawton QC who represented Abid at trial. From this note, abbreviated as it is, it is possible to see that it was being put to the police officer that Abid had been subjected to violence, name calling and racial abuse, all of which was denied. It was also put to him that the first interview with Abid had been completed and the second interview had been begun and had continued for some while without attempting to procure that attendance of any adult other than an attempt made to contact Abid's father. DS Richardson confirmed that that was so. This exchange is then recorded:-
"Q. And you made no effort to have anyone else conforming to Judges Rules present?
A. No. If father had been there at 8.00 he could have been in.
Q. But the fact of the matter is that he wasn't and you knew he wasn't.
A. Yes."
The Detective-Sergeant then said that he had considered the proper person to be present was Abid's father (rather than the social workers who were present for the final interview) and that he told Abid and his father that they could have access to a solicitor after the second interview.
"This is, of course, a very important aspect of the case. In it, you might find the whole key as to who is telling you the truth here".
"If he [Abid Hussein] is right, those Police Officers were party to callous threats couched in obscene language. Brutality. They are guilty of concealing altogether the fact that a third Officer was present at the interview. They are guilty of creating – and I use the word deliberately – creating a Statement by this Defendant which is wholly false and then coming before this Court and committing deliberate perjury. And they have done all that to procure a false verdict of guilty against this Defendant.
Members of the Jury, it is probably difficult to imagine more serious charges that could be made against Police Officers. It is nonsense, I think, for it to be suggested that it is understandable for Police Officers to act in this way because a baby had been injured. Members of the Jury, they are, if he is right, guilty of conduct which should result in their immediate dismissal from the Police Service. They are not fit to be Police Officers. That is what is involved in his evidence. You will think about it and you will think about those Police Officers. You have seen them. Do you believe there is a word of truth in those allegations?"
"If, on the other hand, you think that the Defendant was telling you a pack of lies, particularly about this conduct of the Police Officers towards him in this case, then you probably would not attach very much importance to his denial before you that he had used violence towards his young brother. You would be left then only with the evidence of the Police Officers as to what he said to them in the Statement. Treat that all under one heading as a confession.
You would be left with his confession to the Police of having used considerable violence towards his baby brother. It would then be for you to decide whether you felt dissatisfied in acting upon his confession. You, of course, can only attach weight to a confession, if you feel that it was voluntarily made. Voluntarily, freely, made so it sets out what this Defendant really wanted to say at the time. The Prosecution must satisfy you that it was freely made. If you have any real doubt about that, then you would attach little or no weight to any confession. If you felt that it was freely made, as the Police Officers say that it was, then you are entitled to rely upon it and to regard it as being genuine and truthful.
The suggestion has been made by the Defence – perhaps a somewhat half-hearted suggestion – that you cannot be satisfied that this confession was freely and voluntarily made because, in some way, the Defendant is a young lad of sixteen who was frightened of the Police Officers – not because he had been beaten up (I am assuming you have rejected his evidence on that) – apart from that, simply because he was a young man at the Police Station and his father was not there to look after him. That, in some way, you should regard him as being frightened – overawed by the Police Officers. Mr Lawton has referred you to Home Office Directions that young people under seventeen should be interviewed only in the presence of parents or some other independant [sic] person who can look after their interests. Well, these are directions given to the Police Officers. They are not the law of the country, Members of the Jury and, of course, directions like that cannot cover every case which comes before the Court. Every case must be examined carefully and, as I say, the matter you have to decide is, in this case, was this confession made freely and voluntarily by this Defendant? You may think it is not so important what his age is. What is important is what type of young man he is."
This latter paragraph refers to the Administrative Directions, attached to the Judges' Rules at the date of trial, requiring that any interview with a juvenile be conducted in the presence of an appropriate adult. There is no separate reference in the summing-up to the fact that the jury should also take into account the fact that Abid had not been offered any opportunity to take legal advice until after the second interview.
There was then an application for leave to appeal but before that application was heard there was an investigation into allegations made by Abid after his trial. These allegations were not merely that the police had obtained admissions by oppression but also that Sabbir Hussain had been responsible for the death of Mushtaq but had encouraged Abid to take the blame. These investigations are summarised in the CCRC reference but took the matter no further and in due course leave to appeal was granted and the appeal heard on 5th March 1980. The principal grounds of appeal presented by Mr Peter Taylor QC (as he then was) were these:-
(1) That the judge had misdirected the jury in respect of the intent necessary to support a charge of murder in that he had not given them adequate directions on the relevance of the Appellant's age to that issue.
(2) The summing-up was hostile and therefore the conviction unsafe because:
(i) The trial judge should not have commented about the consequences for the police officers if the Appellant's allegations of mistreatment turned out to be true (cf. Culbertson (1970) 54 Cr App R 310.
(ii) The judge had failed to give the jury adequate directions about the Judges' Rules, in particular the interviewing of juveniles without an adult being present, and had been overly dismissive of them in his summing up.
(1) The first ground would have appealed to them but for the fact that the Appellant had admitted in evidence that he did appreciate that the things he was alleged to have done to Mushtaq would be likely to cause really serious injury.
(2) While disapproving the remarks about the police officers, the Court said that persons who make complaints about police officers could not complain if the judge commented severely about unjustified attacks on police officers. Also, although some judges may have gone further than Jones J in dealing with the absence of an adult, the issue had been left to the jury. Overall, the fact that in one passage of the summing-up the judge went further than he should have done and in another did not go as far as some might have done did not make the verdict unsafe or unsatisfactory.
On 26th March 2003 the CCRC after an exhaustive investigation referred Abid's case to the Court of Appeal under section 9 of the Criminal Appeal Act 1995 and thereby set in motion this (second) appeal. There are basically two grounds of appeal but each ground is divided into a number of sub-grounds. They are as follows:-
(1) The manner in which the Appellant was detained and interviewed resulted in serious and significant breaches of the Judges' Rules and other protections which the appellant should have enjoyed. The principal breaches were:
(i) He was detained without legal advice or being told he had the right to legal advice;
(ii) he was interviewed without any, or any effective, appropriate adult being present;
(iii) he was not cautioned before the first interview during which he made admissions;
(iv) he was a vulnerable 16 year old and was held incommunicado for nine hours.
As a consequence, the admissions made by the Appellant were procured by oppression and/or were unreliable and should not have been admitted by the learned judge. Accordingly, the verdict is unsafe.
(2) The summing-up was defective or deficient in the following respects:
(i) the judge failed to direct the jury on the potential effect of the breaches of the Appellant's rights;
(ii) he failed to give an adequate direction on the Appellant's good character;
(iii) he made comments about the police officers which were prejudicial to the Appellant;
(iv) he failed to give a Lucas direction on lies;
(v) he made comments about the Appellant's personal characteristics which were unfair and misleading.
These grounds of appeal rely heavily on the legal principle that where, between conviction and appeal, there have been significant changes in the common law or in standards of fairness, the Court is required to apply modern legal rules and procedural criteria even though they were not and, could not reasonably, have been applied at the time. This legal principle is set out in paragraph 5 of the judgment of this court in Bentley (31st July 1998) [2001] 1 CAR 307 where Lord Bingham CJ added:
"This could cause difficulty in some cases but not, we conclude, in this."
The reasons why no difficulty arose in Bentley was that there were errors in the summing-up in relation to the burden of proof, the standard of proof and the directions on joint enterprise which rendered the summing-up defective in the light of both the law and procedure at the time of trial.
"We remind ourselves that our task is to consider whether this conviction is unsafe. If we do so consider it, section 2(1)(a) of the Criminal Appeal Act 1968 obliges us to allow the appeal. We should not (other things being equal) consider a conviction unsafe simply because of a failure to comply with a statute governing police detention, interrogation and investigation, which was not in force at the time. In looking at the safety of the conviction it is relevant to consider whether and to what extent a suspect may have been denied rights which he should have enjoyed under the rules in force at the time and whether and to what extent he may have lacked protections which it was later thought right that he should enjoy. But this Court is concerned, and concerned only, with the safety of the conviction. That is a question to be determined in the light of all the material before it, which will include the record of all the evidence in the case and not just an isolated part. If, in a case where the only evidence against a defendant was his oral confession which he had later retracted, it appeared that such confession was obtained in breach of the rules prevailing at the time and in circumstances which denied the defendant important safeguards later thought necessary to avoid the risk of a miscarriage of justice, there would be at least prima facie grounds for doubting the safety of the conviction – a very different thing from concluding that a defendant was necessarily innocent."
"98. . . . . . . For understandable reasons, it is now accepted in judging the question of fairness of a trial, and fairness is what rules of procedure are designed to achieve, we apply current standards irrespective of when the trial took place. But this does not mean that because contemporary rules have not been complied with a trial which took place in the past must be judged on the false assumption it was tried yesterday. Such an approach could achieve injustice because the non-compliance with rules does not necessarily mean that a defendant has been treated unfairly. In order to achieve justice, non-compliance with rules which were not current at the time of the trial may need to be treated differently from rules which were in force at the time of trial. If certain of the current requirements of, for example, a summing-up are not complied with at a trial which takes place today this can almost automatically result in a conviction being set aside but this approach should not be adopted in relation to trials which took place before the rule was established. The fact that what has happened did not comply with a rule which was in force at the time of trial makes the non-compliance more serious than it would be if there was no rule in force. Proper standards will not be maintained unless this Court can be expected, when appropriate, to enforce the rules by taking a serious view of a breach of the rules at the time they are in force. It is not appropriate to apply this approach to a 40-year-old case."
With these principles in mind, we turn to the individual grounds.
For the Crown Mr Martin Wilson QC accepted that Abid was not offered legal advice until after the end of the second interview and that the third interview took place and Abid's statement was made before it was practicable for any legal adviser to attend. He pointed out, however, that this fact was elicited on the voir dire and submitted that the judge must have expressed himself satisfied that the admissions had been made voluntarily. It is a striking fact that nothing was made of this point when Mr Peter Taylor QC came to present Abid's appeal.
"These Rules do not affect the principles . . . .
(c) that every person at any stage of the investigation should be able to communicate and consult privately with a solicitor. This is so even if he is in custody provided that in such a case no unreasonable delay or hindrance is caused . . . ."
It may not be quite correct to say that, in 1978, the police were obliged to "offer" a suspect legal advice since, as far as we can remember, there was no duty solicitor scheme as such in those days. But when the police raised the question of legal advice, Mr Sabbir Hussain had no difficulty in identifying a solicitor he wished to consult.
"58 Access to legal advice
(1) A person arrested and held in custody in a police station or other premises shall be entitled, if he so requests, to consult a solicitor privately at any time.
(2) Subject to subsection (3) below, a request under subsection (1) above and the time at which it was made shall be recorded in the custody record.
(3) Such a request need not be recorded in the custody record of a person who makes it at a time while he is at a court after being charged with an offence.
(4) If a person makes such a request, he must be permitted to consult a solicitor as soon as is practicable except to the extent that delay is permitted by this section.
(5) In any case he must be permitted to consult a solicitor within 36 hours from the relevant time, as defined in section 41(2) above.
(6) Delay in compliance with a request is only permitted—
(a) in the case of a person who is in police detention for a serious arrestable offence; and
(b) if an officer of at least the rank of superintendent authorises it.
(7) An officer may give an authorisation under subsection (6) above orally or in writing but, if he gives it orally, he shall confirm it in writing as soon as is practicable."
The remaining sub-sections deal with the circumstances in which an officer of appropriate rank may authorise delay in complying with a request to see a solicitor. The generosity with which these provisions are construed in favour of the suspect can be seen from R v Samuel [1988] QB 615 in which at page 630E Hodgson J called the right of access to a solicitor "one of the most important and fundamental rights of a citizen".
The position as to this in August 1978 was governed by Home Office Circular 89/1978 dated June 1978. Appendix A to that Circular set out the Judges' Rules as they had been formulated in 1964. Appendix B to the Circular contained what were called "Administrative Directions on Interrogation and the Taking of Statements". Direction 4 was headed "Interrogation of children and young persons". (Abid Hussain was 16 years old both at the time of Mushtaq's death and at the time of trial.) Direction 4 said:-
"As far as practicable children and young persons under the age of 17 years (whether suspected of crime or not) should only be interviewed in the presence of a parent or guardian, or in their absence, some person who is not a police officer and is of the same sex as the child."
"Juveniles may not as readily understand the significance of questions or of what they themselves say and are likely to be more suggestible than adults. They may need the support of an adult presence; of someone to befriend, advise and assist them to make their decisions . . . . This presence is, however, no substitute for having access to legal advice and the right to that applies equally to a juvenile."
The Commission recognised that social workers would often attend interviews of juveniles and said this about them (in para. 4.108):-
". . . whether or not the juvenile is in care and whether or not the social worker is standing technically in loco parentis the social worker should have the same function as the juvenile's parent, of providing support and advice and he should have an opportunity to speak with the juvenile in private. Generally the social worker should be present to ensure that the person being interviewed . . . understands the questions that are being put to him. He should not attempt to act as his legal adviser."
first, to advise the person being questioned, then to observe whether or not the interview is being conducted properly and fairly, and thirdly to facilitate communication with the person being interviewed.
"prone to provide information which is unreliable, misleading or self-incriminating".
(1) Abid was interviewed twice without any adult being present. That was a breach of paragraph 4 of the Administrative Directions annexed to the Judges' Rules in force at the time of trial;
(2) Abid was held at the police station alone, apart from the police officers interviewing him, from 12.00 until about 21.00 when his father was invited into the interview room during the second interview;
(3) A moment's reflection would have shown that Abid's father could not be expected to give him effective support. The father had just heard that his infant son, Mushtaq, had met a violent death: his first instinct would be to discover how this had come about. The interests of his other son, the suspect, would inevitably take second place in his mind. Unsurprisingly, when the police asked Abid to repeat in front of his father what he had told them and Abid's father then heard him admit that he had hit and kicked Mushtaq, and saw him go on to gesture how he had masturbated over the baby, Abid's father left the room. But there was another reason why this father might well not have been the most suitable independent adult. At the stage of interview the police ought to have kept open all possibilities in relation to Mushtaq's death and, if Abid were convincingly to deny that he was responsible, his father would be the only other realistic candidate;
(4) Abid was woken up to have a third interview at 23.30;
(5) the social workers Ms Jessie Owens and Mr Bryan Mettrick were invited by the police to attend this third interview; there is no reason to suppose that they could not have been called earlier; Abid was not given any opportunity to talk to them privately before the third interview, although he did talk to them privately before he made his statement;
(6) the one question which the interview notes record Ms Owens as having asked Abid in the course of the third interview was:-
"Why did you do it, are you homosexual? Have you done this thing before with other boys?"
We think this would today not be regarded as a suitable intervention by an appropriate adult and gives some support to the submission made to us that Ms Owens may have been more concerned to find out what had happened to Mushtaq, rather than to protect the interests of Abid. We do not say this by way of criticism. As we have already indicated, the concept of an "appropriate adult" was unknown in 1978 in that phrase. (The Administrative Directions referred merely to "parent or guardian or, in their absence, some person who is not a police officer".) Even since 1984 the role of the "appropriate adult" has developed considerably;
(7) Mr Mettrick, junior to Ms Owens, is not recorded as having said anything in interview. We were invited to receive in evidence pursuant to section 23 of the Criminal Appeal Act 1968, a statement from him given to the CCRC in 2002. We have decided that it is appropriate to do so. He said that in 1978 he had a more limited understanding of his role than he does today. He said in particular that he did not then regard it as his duty to advise Abid, although he would have intervened to stop abusive behaviour. Although we think it right to admit his statement in evidence, it does not take matters very far. Any useful advice would mainly have been that Abid should consult a solicitor; no social worker would or should take it on himself to give any legal advice.
Mr Owen QC for Abid submitted that, despite the exclusion of most of the first interview from the trial by reason of the police's failure to caution Abid, there was material unfairness because Abid had made incriminatory statements in the first interview which led to the similar (but more seriously) incriminating statements in the second and third interviews.
(1) "I remember now throwing baby into the couch end, he bounced and banged his head . . . at the back";
(2) In answer to questions whether he had shaken the baby when he was wrestling with him or dropped him otherwise than on the couch, Abid twice said "I might have".
Either counsel had agreed or the judge had ruled (correctly in our view) that these were incriminatory admissions which had not been made under caution and should not, therefore, go before the jury.
"Where there is a series of interviews and the Court excludes one on the ground of unfairness, the question whether a later interview which is of itself unobjectionable should also be excluded is a matter of fact and degree . . . . it is likely to depend on whether the objections leading to exclusion of a first interview were of a fundamental and continuing nature and, if so, if the arrangements of a subsequent interview gave a defendant a sufficient opportunity to exercise an informed and independent choice as to whether he should repeat or retract what he said at the excluded interview or say nothing."
Here there was no opportunity to exercise an informed and independent choice; all that happened was that the caution was administered to Abid at a time when he had no solicitor and no independent adult to advise or support him. This point, although comparatively small in itself, shows how important the presence of a solicitor or an appropriate adult is. They would have been entitled to know what Abid had already said before advising him whether to continue to be interviewed. As it was the questioning effectively took over from where it had been left earlier in the day and Abid may well have thought that he had little option to continue in the same vein. It is in just such circumstances that the exclusion of the first interview will often not be enough.
"that the totality of the situation which faced Abid Hussain at the age of sixteen was such that he should, by any criteria, have legitimately been considered as extremely vulnerable and . . . not therefore capable of making a freely offered statement unless he had been interviewed strictly in accordance with the later introduced PACE requirements."
It seems to us that interviewing a 42 year old to establish his frame of mind or vulnerability when he was 16 years old is such a doubtful exercise that it would not be right to admit this evidence. In this respect we do not consider that the provisions of section 23 of the Criminal Appeal Act 1968 are satisfied and, in our discretion, have, therefore, declined to admit this new evidence.
The first of these grounds that the judge failed to direct the jury on the potential effect of the breaches of Abid's right to have access to a solicitor and to have an independent adult present at interview is an extension of the first group of submissions. The judge did not refer to the breach of Abid's right to have a lawyer present but did refer to what he called the "Home Office Directions", that young people should only be interviewed with an independent person "who can look after his interest". He described these as being directions given to police officers not the law of the country. That was correct at the time; no such direction could be given to-day. He correctly said that the question for the jury was whether the confession was made freely and voluntarily by the defendant. We do not think that this ground of appeal can have life independent of the first group of submissions. On the other hand neither do we consider that what the judge did say to the jury about the absence of an independent adult can be said to detract from the conclusion which we have reached that there are prima facie grounds for doubting the safety of the conviction.
"When they are made without justification, accused persons must not complain if the judge comments severely upon what they have done, provided always the judge leaves it to the jury to determine who is to be believed . . . ."
This with respect is circular reasoning. The whole issue for the jury is whether it is the police or the defendant who are to be believed. At the time of his direction the judge ought not to presume that attacks are made without justification so as to justify the severity of his comments.
The position therefore is that there are prima facie grounds for doubting the safety of the conviction. Is it in fact unsafe?