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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 >> Norman, R v [2016] EWCA Crim 1564 (20 October 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2016/1564.html Cite as: [2016] WLR(D) 551, [2017] 1 Cr App R 8, [2017] 4 WLR 16, [2016] EWCA Crim 1564 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CENTRAL CRIMINAL COURT
His Honour Judge Marks QC, the Common Serjeant
T2014 7203
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE POPPLEWELL
and
MR JUSTICE GOSS
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REGINA |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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ROBERT NORMAN |
Appellant |
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Mr Julian Christopher QC and Mr Jacob Hallam (instructed by CPS Organised Crime Division) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 17 May 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
This is the judgment of the court to which each of us has contributed.
Introduction
The Appellant's Conduct
"(1) No officer shall make, directly or indirectly, any unauthorised communication to a representative of the press or any other person concerning matters which have become known to him in the course of his duties."
"Civil Servants must not misuse their official position or information acquired in the course of their official duties to further their private interests or those of others. They should not receive benefits of any kind from a third party which might reasonably be seen to compromise their personal judgment or integrity."
i) an identified prisoner who had committed suicide;ii) the suspension of the prison chaplain for inappropriate behaviour with other prisoners and the perceived inadequacy of what the appellant thought at the time was going to be the sanction imposed;
iii) the demands which Abu Hamza had made upon the Prison Service;
iv) the costs incurred in keeping the Ipswich murderer, Stephen Wright, in isolation and the costs of his transport to and from Ipswich for his trial there, which would not have been incurred had he been tried at a court centre closer to Belmarsh;
v) what was believed to be the transfer of Jamie Bulger's killer, John Venables, to the prison;
vi) the arrest of a prison officer ("O") on suspicion of possessing false identity documents, although charges were subsequently dropped; O was not referred to by name in the article; it was O's evidence that the appellant was his union representative at his disciplinary meeting with the Governor and Deputy Governor, but this was denied by the appellant;
vii) a sexual relationship between a female prison officer and one of the prisoners;
viii) an article relating to the dismissal of a prison officer ("L") over allegations of sexual harassment in which both his name and town of residence were given; he subsequently received an out of court settlement for wrongful dismissal;
ix) a story about a named sex offender who had been transferred to Belmarsh;
x) the Governor being reprimanded for a budgetary overspend;
xi) the Governor's decision to ban the use of control and restraint methods;
xii) the staff's dislike of the then Governor.
i) prison staff cuts in conjunction with increased prisoner numbers;ii) a prison van breaking down near court with prisoners in it;
iii) violent prisoners being transferred to open prisons as a result of overcrowding at Belmarsh;
iv) a fight between Muslims and non-Muslims at the prison;
v) excessive expenditure on a staff party off site;
vi) prisoner suicides;
vii) staff overtime payments in breach of the Prison Rules;
viii) attacks on, and plots to kill, prison staff by Al Qaeda linked prisoners;
ix) access by Al Qaeda linked prisoners to laptops;
x) the suspension of a prison officer for falsifying his CV;
xi) the falsification, for the Governor's inspection, of figures about the time prisoners spent out of their cells;
xii) the prison failing a security inspection;
xiii) the increased costs being caused by centralised sourcing;
xiv) the foiling by staff of an escape plot;
xv) a tuberculosis outbreak;
xvi) the arrest of a prison officer for a firearms offence;
xvii) the placement of expensive televisions in prisoners' cells;
xviii) a plot by inmates to kill the Governor;
xix) an attack by Muslim prisoners on a fellow prisoner after a row about observing silence on Remembrance Sunday;
xx) a ban on topless pin-ups.
Disclosure by the Newspapers of the Appellant's Identity and of Evidence of his Corrupt Relationship with Mr Moyes
"For the purposes of this MOU, Excluded Material means material which is:
(a) subject to Legal Professional Privilege ("LPP")
(b) journalistic material held in confidence which, in the judgment of [MGN] would not be in the public interest to disclose having regard to the CPS Guidance [as defined], the Code [for Crown Prosecutors] and the PCC Code and in particular to the public interest served by freedom of expression on the one hand and the extent of any apparent wrong doing and harm on the other."
Abuse of process
"Freedom of expressionArticle 10
1. Everyone has the right to freedom of expression. This right shall include freedom to hold opinions and to receive and impart information and ideas without interference by public authority and regardless of frontiers. This Article shall not prevent States from requiring the licensing of broadcasting, television or cinema enterprises.
2. The exercise of these freedoms, since it carries with it duties and responsibilities, may be subject to such formalities, conditions, restrictions or penalties as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary."
"101 It is clear enough that the Strasbourg jurisprudence requires prior, or (in an urgent case) immediate post factum, judicial oversight of interferences with article 10 rights where journalists are required to reveal their sources. In such cases, lack of such oversight means that there are no safeguards sufficient to make the interference with the right "prescribed by law". This is not surprising in view of the importance to press freedom of the protection of journalistic sources: see, for example, Sanoma at paras 88 to 92. As the ECtHR said in Nordisk Film & TV A/S v Denmark:
"The protection of journalistic sources is one of the cornerstones of freedom of the press. Without such protection, sources may be deterred from assisting the press in informing the public on matters of public interest"."
………
"113. ……The central concern is that disclosure of journalistic material (whether or not it involves the identification of a journalist's source) undermines the confidentiality that is inherent in such material and which is necessary to avoid the chilling effect of disclosure and to protect article 10 rights. If journalists and their sources can have no expectation of confidentiality, they may decide against providing information on sensitive matters of public interest. That is why the confidentiality of such information is so important."
"10.The relevant information evidencing these activities was all within the possession of NI and Mirror Group Newspapers (MGN), both of whom agreed to assist the Metropolitan Police Service (MPS) with their investigation. On all the available material I accept that there is a reasonable inference that they did so not for altruistic reasons but rather in the hope that by so assisting the police, there was a likelihood that any possibility of prosecutions at a higher level would be avoided."
Submission of No Case to Answer
"34. The offence requires, as the third element, that the misconduct must be so serious as to amount to an abuse of the public's trust in the office holder. It is not, in our view, sufficient simply to tell the jury that the conduct must be so serious as to amount to an abuse of the public's trust in the office holder, as such a direction gives them no assistance on how to determine that level of seriousness. There are, we consider, two ways that the jury might be assisted in determining whether the misconduct is so serious. The first is to refer the jury to the need for them to reach a judgment that the misconduct is worthy of condemnation and punishment. The second is to refer them to the requirement that the misconduct must be judged by them as having the effect of harming the public interest....
36. We therefore turn to examine the second way in which the standard of seriousness can be judged – by reference to the harm to the public interest. In our view, in the context of provision of information to the media and thus the public, that is the way in which the jury should judge the seriousness of the misconduct in determining whether it amounts to an abuse of the public's trust in the office holder. The jury must, in our opinion, judge the misconduct by considering objectively whether the provision of the information by the officeholder in deliberate breach of his duty had the effect of harming the public interest. If it did not, then although there may have been a breach or indeed an abuse of trust by the office holder vis a vis his employers or commanding officer, there was no abuse of the public's trust in the office holder as the misconduct had not had the effect of harming the public interest. No criminal offence would have been committed. In the context of a case involving the media and the ability to report information provided in breach of duty and in breach of trust by a public officer, the harm to the public interest is in our view the major determinant in establishing whether the conduct can amount to an abuse of the public's trust and thus a criminal offence. For example the public interest can be sufficiently harmed if either the information disclosed itself damages the public interest (as may be the case in a leak of budget information) or the manner in which the information is provided or obtained damages the public interest (as may be the case if the public office holder is paid to provide the information in breach of duty)."
"(1) No-one shall be held guilty of any criminal offence on account of any act or omission which did not constitute a criminal offence under national or international law at the time when it was committed….."
"34. ….In summary, it is not to be supposed that prior to the implementation of the Human Rights Act 1998 either this Court, or the House of Lords, would have been indifferent to or unaware of the need for the criminal law in particular to be predictable and certain. Vague laws which purport to create criminal liability are undesirable, and in extreme cases, where it occurs, their very vagueness may make it impossible to identify the conduct which is prohibited by a criminal sanction. If the court is forced to guess at the ingredients of a purported crime any conviction for it would be unsafe. That said, however, the requirement is for sufficient rather than absolute certainty.
35. The ambit of the principle, as well as its limitations, were clearly described in the Sunday Times v United Kingdom (1979) 2 EHRR 245. The law must be formulated:
"…with sufficient precision to enable the citizen to regulate his conduct: he must be able – if need be with appropriate advice – to foresee, to a degree that is reasonable in all the circumstances, the consequences which any given action may entail. Those consequences need not be foreseeable with absolute certainty: experience shows this to be unobtainable. Again, whilst certainty is highly desirable, it may bring in its train excessive rigidity, and the law must be able to keep pace with changing circumstances. Accordingly, many laws are inevitably couched in terms which, to a greater or lesser extent, are vague, and whose interpretation and application are questions of practice."
Moreover, there is a distinction to be drawn between undesirable, and in extreme cases, unacceptable uncertainty about the necessary ingredients of a criminal offence, and uncertainty in the process by which it is decided whether the required ingredients of the offence have been established in an individual case…."
Conclusion