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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 >> Sirrs & Anor, R v [2006] EWCA Crim 3185 (15 December 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2006/3185.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Crim 3185 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE WALKER
and
MR JUSTICE IRWIN
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R v |
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Christopher Jason Sirrs |
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Benjamin Edward Povey |
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WordWave International Ltd
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Simon Perkins for Christopher Sirrs
Ashfraf Khan for Benjamin Povey
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Gage:
SIRRS
Count 1 | Making and explosive substance | 2 years imprisonment |
Count 3 | Violent Disorder | 3 years imprisonment consecutive |
Count 5 (guilty plea) | Causing grievous bodily harm with intent | 6 years imprisonment consecutive |
Count 6/7 | Having an offensive weapon | 18 months imprisonment concurrent on each but consecutive to the above |
Count 8 (11:1) | Doing acts with intent to pervert the course of justice | 2 years imprisonment consecutive |
Count 11 | Doing acts with intent to pervert the course of justice | 2 years imprisonment concurrent |
Count 12 | Doing acts with intent to pervert the course of justice | 2 years imprisonment concurrent |
TOTAL SENTENCE: 14 YEARS AND 6 MONTHS IMPRISONMENT
POVEY
Count 1 | Making an explosive substance | 2 years imprisonment |
Count 2 (10:2) | Having an offensive weapon | 12 months imprisonment concurrent |
Count 3 | Violent Disorder | 3 years imprisonment consecutive |
Count 4 | Making an explosive substance | 4 years imprisonment concurrent |
Count 5 | Causing grievous bodily harm with intent | 6 years imprisonment consecutive |
Count 9 (10:2) | Intimidation | 3 years imprisonment concurrent |
Count 10 | Arson being reckless as to whether life is endangered | 8 years imprisonment consecutive |
TOTAL SENTENCE: 19 YEARS IMPRISONMENT
Overview
Counts one, two, three and four
Count Five
Count six and seven
Count eight
Counts nine and ten
"Now then, I hope what we talked about last week is sorted now. You know yourself what was being said, so I think you should ring me, don't you, to get it sorted. I think it has gone a bit far, don't you? All right."
Counts eleven and twelve
The grounds of appeal
Counts one, two and three
"Q. You say you had finished your Community Service but no doubt you would be still worried, would you, about this allegation? A. Yes I was.
Q. Did you think you'd got off leniently by being made the subject of a bind-over? A. Not particularly. I think I was fairly treated.
Q. Fairly ? A. I think I was treated fairly.
Q. Right. A. And then you come to make your statement in September a few days later. Okay? A. Yes.
Q. I'm going to try to ask you again because I don't suppose it's every day you go along to the police station and make statements who approached who first about that? A. I can't remember now.
Q. Well, did a policeman come knocking at your door and say, "Well look - - -" Had you moved, first of all, by this time? A. I was asked by the police what happened and I refused to tell them at first and then after that I then contacted Laurie McIntyre and spoke to him about it."
"Mr. Khan: And you've done a deal with the police, haven't you? A. I don't understand what you mean.
Q. You don't know what I mean when I say you've done a deal with the police? A. No. I haven't done a deal with nobody.
Q. So they can drop charges against you and you make statements against other people. A. And what charges would that be?
Q. The charge was when you appeared in court and they dropped, didn't they, dropped the charge against you? A. I don't know if the police dropped the charges, CPS dropped the charges, but I still pleaded not guilty and was bound over, just like there was another gentleman I was in court with and he was treated exactly the same and he still hasn't given a statement to this day."
"JACKSON stated that he did not wish to say anything further at this moment. He then asked if we could help him with his current charge of Section 4 Public Order. He stated that he did not wish to go to prison and if we could help him he would supply a statement.
JACKSON was told that we could not and would not make any assurances at this time and that we would speak to the Senior Investigating officers involved with this case and also if necessary the Crown Prosecution Service."
"Mr. Jackson was an important witness, and it is for you to determine whether his evidence is tainted by any deal that he may have made, or is alleged to have made. It is for you to determine, having seen him tested in cross-examination, whether he, or, indeed, any of the witnesses are sufficiently bright to maintain a complicated and convoluted set of lies. It is for you to determine whether you regard his evidence as reliable or not."
"Mr. Bradshaw and Mr. Khan say, well, this was a deal that the Prosecution dropped this case against him it wasn't perhaps the most serious matter, it was in the Magistrates' in return for giving evidence. No, he said, that is not the case at all."
"To summarise:
(1) Section 32(1) abrogates the requirement to give a corroboration direction in respect of an alleged accomplice or a complainant of a sexual offence, simply because a witness falls into one of those categories.
(2) It is a matter for the judge's discretion what, if any warning, he considers appropriate in respect of such a witness as indeed in respect of any other witness in whatever type of case. Whether he chooses to give a warning and in what terms will depend on the circumstances of the case, the issues raised and the content and quality of the witness's evidence."
"Now, Hemsworth is a man who is criticised by the defence for having axes to grind, for trying to keep people off the street and safe. Well, you saw Mr Hemsworth. I know it is some time ago now, and I trust you will remember him: the man who gave his evidence in a way which you may have thought was confident."
It is argued on behalf of Povey that the use by the judge of the word "confident" to describe Hemsworth went beyond the boundaries of what was proper. We disagree. The following sentence puts the matter in context:
"Whether he was confident or cocky or not is a matter entirely for you to determine."
"HEMSWORTH stated that around 22.00 hours a red Calibra came down Pryme Street got stopped before it could leave the street, then POVEY hit the Calibra with a baseball bat, then Bonehead hit the car with an iron bar and Chris threw a petrol bomb at the car which didn't ignite, then Chris threw a second petrol bomb which bounced off the Calibra and set FRAZER'S tyres on fire (FRAZER put the fire out). HEMSWORTH states that POVEY and Bonehead made the petrol bombs on Pryme Street in the bushes near Freetown Way.
POVEY, SIRRS and Bonehead then got in to the white Cavalier and went looking for as he describes it Kosovans.
At around 2230 hours Chris came back on to Pryme Street in the white Cavalier with Joanne CONNELL sat next to him.
The next night Sunday 20th July 2003 , HEMSWORTH was again on Pryme Street when first he was told by Bonehead that they had run a Kosovan over, then later by POVEY that they had hit a Kosovan and tried to reverse to run him over again.
HEMSWORTH states that he will not give a statement as he has a child by MORROW and POVEY knows where he lives and he has stated that he will sort him out if he grasses. HEMSWORTH states that these people do not fight one to one they do everything underhand.
HEMSWORTH states that Chris is pulling all the strings whilst he is in prison through Joanne SMITH."
Count 4
"Povey, through Mr.Khan, of course, complains that "others" allegedly involved in this haven't been proceeded against. Well, we don't know, but whether they have or they haven't is neither here nor there, because you have to determine whether Ben Povey was involved in this, and what happened to others is not our concern. The issue that you have to decide is are we sure that Povey was involved in making bombs on that verandah."
Count 5
"If two people engage upon an activity then it doesn't matter who, in particular, does what. If Mr Khan and I went out burgling one night, and I let Mr Khan keep a lookout for me whilst I broke into somebody's house, he would be just as guilty as me of burgling, even though he didn't actually enter as a trespasser, because he and I would have been involved in the joint enterprise, it is as simple as that. The Crown say here was Povey; he was in that car. Given the atmosphere, given his conduct, given what you know about this case, say the Crown, it is an irresistible inference that you can draw. That you really can't avoid it, that he was part and parcel of what Sirrs was doing. Mr Povey says, "Well, no I wasn't, I wasn't in the car; never in the car", and Mr Khan says, "Well, he wasn't in the car", he asks you to accept that, but insofar as there is evidence that he was bragging about being in the car, that still doesn't mean he is necessarily guilty, because if a person is sitting in a car inevitably he is to a certain extent in the hands of the driver as to where it goes, and if Mr Povey was saying, "well, I was in the car, and I was telling Sirrs to behave himself and not to be so wicked", then that would be a defence, because he would be trying to dissociate himself from what Sirrs was doing. Say the Crown this isn't the case here. He was in the car, they say, and in the circumstances it is very difficult to resist indeed impossible to resist the inference that he was part and parcel of this offence."
He then went on to recite the evidence and ended this section of the summing-up with the following sentence:
"The Crown say this quite clearly shows Povey in the car doing something; he has got something to hide; he is burning his tee shirt and, say the Crown, the conclusion is obvious that Povey was in the car playing his part in that dreadful attack upon Saalam Mohammed"
"You will hear some evidence about what had gone on earlier
in the evening and other incidents that had taken place.
But for now it suffices to say that Sirrs and Povey pursued the two Iraqis along Freetown Way to the traffic lights and roundabout at the junction with Wright Street and Percy Street. Sirrs drove his car over the central reservation and in to Percy Street across the junction with Wright Street.
He did not remain on the carriageway but drove up on to the pavement in a deliberate act. The Iraqis were left with nowhere to go and Sirrs drove in to them impacting with Salar who one witness described as being tossed in the air like a rag doll. He came down to the ground as a taxi coming along Wright Street was forced to make an emergency stop. Maybe that he also struck that taxi.
The prosecution case is that Sirrs and Povey were acting jointly together and that their intention was to do serious injury to this asylum seeker.
Sirrs admits that (or part of that); you must decide whether Povey was by his presence encouraging him and shared his intention."
Count Eight
Counts Nine and Ten
"Count 9 is intimidation, which is rather a beefed up Count Eight really. It involves to put it crudely putting the frighteners on, intimidating, by making threatening phone calls to Newlove which were intimidating, or intended to intimidate Newlove in relation to these proceedings."
"20 (1) Subject to subsection (2) and Section 21(8) a special measures direction has binding effect from the time it is made until the proceedings for the purposes of which it is made are either
(a) determined (by acquittal, conviction or otherwise), or
(b) abandoned,
in relation to the accused or (if there is more than one) in relation to each of the accused.
(2) The court may discharge or vary (or further vary) a special measures direction if it appears to the court to be in the interests of justice to do so, and may do so either
(a) on an application made by a party to the proceedings, if there has been a material change of circumstances since the relevant time, or
(b) of its own motion.
.. ..
(5) The court must state in open court its reason for
(a) giving or varying,
(b) refusing an application for, or for the variation or discharge of, or
(c) discharging
a special measures direction "
"A person is reckless as to life being endangered if he realises that there is a risk of what he is doing endangering life and carries on, if he couldn't care less. So, if a person you may think there can hardly be an argument about this sets fire to a car outside a dwelling house, where any explosion or spread of the fire is going to endanger people inside, then quite clearly it is being reckless. The issue is not whether what happened on this occasion amounts to reckless arson; it is whether Povey did it. It is a who done it, and the Crown say quite clearly this was Povey "
Counts 11 and 12
General grounds of appeal
"Given the importance of disclosure in ensuring a fair trial, the court is likely to be slow to accept that the safety of the conviction is unaffected if it is satisfied that a substantial volume of disclosable material has been wrongly withheld from the accused, as was the case here. The very fact that the material was capable of undermining the case for the prosecution or assisting the case for the defence means that it was material which the accused was entitled to put before the jury for their consideration and unless the court can be satisfied that the evidence tending to establish the defendant's guilt was so strong that the undisclosed material could have made no difference to the outcome, it cannot be sure that the jury would have reached the same conclusion if it had had that material before it."
But we must emphasise that when there has been a failure by the prosecution to disclose documents the test for this court remains whether such a failure renders the verdict or verdicts of the jury unsafe.
"The judge assisted the jury to focus on the issues, count by count, in a commendably brief summing-up. He is not to be criticised for failing to refer to all the witnesses or for failing to remind the jury of all the defence points. Most of your Counsel's lengthy arguments are a reiteration of points made to and rejected by the jury."
We agree.
Conclusion
Sentence