BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Kingston & Ors v R [2014] EWCA Crim 1420 (09 July 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2014/1420.html Cite as: [2014] EWCA Crim 1420 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
A REFERENCE BY THE CRIMINAL CASES REVIEW COMMISSION
His Honour Judge Paget QC
T19990958
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE BURNETT
and
MR JUSTICE HOLROYDE
____________________
Thomas Gordon KINGSTON Thomas REYNOLDS Terence O'CONNELL |
Appellants |
|
- and - |
||
Regina |
Respondent |
____________________
Crispin Aylett QC (instructed by Crown Prosecution Service) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 20th May 2014
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Rafferty:
The facts led by the Crown to prove the case against the Appellants.
Panorama 2006
The Independent Police Complaints Commission ("IPCC")
Mark Ellison QC's report on the Lawrence Enquiry.
"The detail of Neil Putnam's debriefing John Davidson in 1998
The records that survive from Neil Putnam's debriefing in 1998 show that he provided potential evidence of John Davidson's corrupt activity in the South East Regional Crime Squad (SERCS). This alleged activity began shortly after John Davidson arrived at SERCS from the Stephen Lawrence murder investigation in the early summer of 1994. It included:
(i) Recycling drugs and stolen property, often seized as a result of informant information, back to the informant for them to sell for the shared benefit of the informant and officers;
(ii) A history of corrupt relationships with one or two such informants that had gone back years. This explained why he had 'hit the ground running' at SERCS in terms of acting corruptly. It also suggested that he had been involved in corrupt activity including with informants both before and immediately after he had worked on the Stephen Lawrence murder investigation; and
(iii) Involving Neil Putnam and other officers in the squad in collaborating in corrupt activity.
Whilst we do not have the original intelligence available in 1998 to CIB3, we do have the recollection of John Yates, who was in effective day-to-day command of the debriefing process of Neil Putnam. Mr Yates told us about the response that he got after asking the intelligence section of CIB3 what they knew about John Davidson in 1998:
"…he had been the subject of intelligence work for years as I understood it…from recollection without doubt somebody that they have been wanting to find something about for a while."
Findings
In our view, both the intelligence picture suggesting that John Davidson was a corrupt officer and the content of Neil Putnam's debriefing relating to Mr Davidson should have been revealed to the Chairman of the Inquiry.
Anybody who was focused on the vexed issue of the motives behind John Davidson's involvement in the deficient Lawrence investigation, and who knew that the source of the "new line of enquiry" concerning Mr Davidson was a self-confessed fellow corrupt officer, should have recognised the potential for Mr Davidson to have confided in that officer as to his true motivation in the Lawrence case. It is a source of some concern to us that nobody in the MPS who was aware of the detail of what Neil Putnam was saying about Mr Davidson appears to have thought to ask him about Mr Davidson's motives in the Lawrence case.
The absence of contemporaneous records showing exactly what level of information from Neil Putnam's debriefing regarding John Davidson was passed up the chain of command makes it difficult to identify where any personal criticism is merited….
The alleged confession by John Davidson to Neil Putnam that he had a corrupt relationship with Clifford Norris when he worked on the Stephen Lawrence murder investigation
After the Stephen Lawrence Inquiry had reported, and after he had been released from prison in 2000, Neil Putnam alleged that in the summer of 1994, John Davidson had admitted to him that he had a corrupt connection with Clifford Norris at the time that he worked on the Stephen Lawrence investigation.
Mr Putnam also alleged that he had told his debriefers about this in July 1998. They responded by saying that it "would blow the MPS wide apart" but that they would speak to senior officers about it. He had assumed someone would come and see him about it, and thought that what he had said had been noted. However, no one did come to see him.
In our report we have set out in detail the substantial arguments that we believe exist on either side as to the credibility of Mr Putnam's allegation. We have also explained the reasons why we have found them to be sufficiently balanced to leave us unable to resolve the issue with the powers we have.
Findings
We believe that there are substantial arguments on either side of the issue of whether John Davidson admitted to Neil Putnam that he was in a corrupt relationship with Clifford Norris at the time that he worked on the Stephen Lawrence murder investigation.
This is, for us, an unresolved issue….
Independent corroboration of Neil Putnam's allegation does not currently exist, so far as we are aware. However, there do remain some outstanding lines of enquiry identified in the 1999-2000 intelligence reports which could be investigated, which, were they to amount to evidence capable of providing independent support, may change that assessment…."
The CCRC
"At trial Putnam admitted having originally lied about [the drugs theft at Clapham] when he first mentioned it to the police, trying to minimise what had happened. However he said that he had now told the unvarnished truth. He also admitted having given perjured evidence in other matters in the past (though nothing to do with police corruption): "noble cause" lying as he called it, on six or seven occasions……….Even if he had admitted corrupt involvement in the seizure of the bonds (which we consider most unlikely) it would have added nothing significant to his discredit"
The Appellants' developed arguments.
"1. Putnam invented this allegation post-2000 (the Appellants do not concede that this is correct) and is a clever, calculated, detailed and persuasive liar, no longer regarded by the Crown as a truthful witness. He has lied determinedly from 2006. The Crown's view set out by Mr Ellison QC [rejecting him as a witness of truth in futuro] is fatal to the safety of these convictions.
2. Putnam made the allegation truthfully in 1998 but the police suppressed it, critical as it was to the defence at the 2000 trial;
3. Putnam made the allegation untruthfully in 1998 but the police suppressed it, critical as it was to the defence at the 2000 trial."
"It had been recognised by the Crown at the trial of Clark and Drury and the jury had been directed, that Putnam and Fleckney were each deeply flawed witnesses whose evidence the jury could not act on unless it were corroborated from a wholly independent source. It was the Crown's case that each was independent of the other - "the sterile corridor"- and on a number of counts it was evidence from the other that was relied on as the independent corroborative source. As we prepared for the hearing of the CCRC Reference of Clark and Drury's convictions to the Court of Appeal, Putnam's position as a potential Crown witness had to be reviewed. My recollection is that at some stage I was informed he would not agree to give evidence again having become disillusioned with the way he had been treated over the years. I accordingly sought clarification of his attitude which tended to confirm that………At the hearing of the Reference it followed that where Putnam had been the independent evidence corroborating Fleckney we did not seek a retrial. The retrial ordered concerned counts where there was independent corroboration of Fleckney's evidence from other sources. In taking this approach we did not make any concession that his evidence as to the Appellants' offending at trial had been false."
Discussion and conclusion.