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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 >> Jones v R. [2020] EWCA Crim 1021 (03 August 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2020/1021.html Cite as: [2020] EWCA Crim 1021, [2020] 2 Cr App R 26 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT LIVERPOOL
HHJ Cummings QC
T20187630
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE HOLGATE
and
MR JUSTICE LINDEN
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WILLIAM FRANCIS JONES |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE QUEEN |
Respondent |
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Simon Mills (instructed by The Crown Prosecution Service) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 24 July 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Irwin:
FACTS
i) A fire at SS's gym, the Muscle House Gym in Warrington, on 21 February 2018.
ii) Windows being smashed at 19 Honister Avenue, the home of LC's girlfriend, on 23 February 2018.
iii) A car being set on fire on the driveway of LC 's girlfriend, again on 23 February 2018.
"5. The statistical evaluation provided addresses only whether an individual could be a possible donor of DNA and does not address the mechanism by which any DNA was deposited, the time at which it may have been deposited, or the order in which different contributions of DNA were deposited.….
6. If it were to be accepted that the DNA from William Jones is present on the safety pin, then the DNA result alone does not assist in determining: (a) whether William Jones was the last person to touch the safety pin before it was recovered; (b) how long ago the DNA from William Jones was deposited on the safety pin; (c) the mechanism by which the DNA from William Jones was deposited on the safety pin, including whether it was left directly (primary transfer) or indirectly via an intermediary (secondary transfer) ….
7. There are a range of factors which affect the likelihood of the transfer of DNA via either direct or indirect mechanisms which have been discussed in both of our previous statements.
8. If William Jones has handled the safety pin at some time, without wearing gloves, then he may have transferred his DNA directly to the safety pin. Therefore, in our opinion the result obtained is with[in] the range of expectations we might have if William Jones has had direct contact with the safety pin at some stage.
9. If sufficient DNA from William Jones was present on another person or item then it may have been transferred to the safety pin indirectly.
10. Both direct and indirect (also called secondary) transfers of DNA are possible and have been demonstrated in experiments. There is little experimental data to support any expert opinion on the weight to be assigned to the route of transfer in a particular case. However, there are a range of factors which affect whether or not DNA may be transferred by indirect means, and consideration should be given to these factors when discussing indirect transfer.
11. Logically, any transfer method requiring one step will be likely to occur more often than a path requiring two steps. But it does not follow from this that the path requiring one step must have occurred in the specific instance.
12. Since the tiny traces of DNA or skin involved in such transfer are invisible to the naked eye, it is not realistic to expect anyone to be able to account for the ways in which their DNA may have been transferred by indirect methods.
13. In the absence of experimental data relevant to this case, there is no scientific basis for assigning a weight of evidence to possible direct or indirect (secondary) transfer."
"MR MILLS: Were you also agreed at point eleven that logically any transfer method requiring one step will be more likely to occur - sorry, would be likely to occur more often than a path requiring two steps?
A. Yes, that's correct.
Q. But is it also right to say that it does not follow from that that the path requiring one step must have occurred in a specific instance?
A. Yes, that's correct.
Q. …that statistical evaluation does not assist in relation to the question of when the DNA was deposited?
A. Yes, the statistical evaluation solely relates to the source of DNA, it does not relate to any mechanisms of transfer.
Q. And thirdly, and perhaps a little crudely, the statistical evaluation does not assist in relation to how the DNA may have deposited itself or been deposited on the item in question?
A. Yes, that is correct.
"I am entirely satisfied that it is properly open to a jury to conclude that there was an agreement of the kind alleged by the prosecution. In particular, a jury would properly be entitled to find: (a) that there was indeed a series of tit-for-tat exchanges between the parties indicated (b) that the depositing of the hand grenade was an event in that series (c) that whoever deposited the grenade did not simply act of his/her own motion but pursuant to an agreement with one or more other persons (d) that the grenade contained an explosive substance."
"there was no evidential or legal principle that a case can never be left to a jury solely on the basis of the presence of the defendant's DNA profile on an article left at the scene of a crime, but whether it will be appropriate to do so will depend on the particular facts of the case."
"Although there was discussion in the course of submissions, and to some extent during questioning, of theoretical scenarios which could innocently account for the presence of [the appellant's] DNA, there is presently no actual evidence before the jury to support any of them. The defendant himself when interviewed largely made no comment but he did say that it was impossible for his DNA to be on the grenade because he had never handled a grenade…. Thus he was not saying, for example, that he had at one time innocently handled a paintball grenade (which might then subsequently and unbeknownst to him have been converted into an explosive device) that being one of the scenarios which it was suggested the evidence could not exclude".
"The prosecution do not appear to be suggesting that it was necessarily William Jones himself who placed the grenade outside 27 Cleveland Rd, but in a general sense, as noted, this is a Warrington case and William Jones is from the area. It is not, for example, as though he is from some distant corner of the country with no connection to anyone else in the case."
"In my judgment the DNA evidence in this case, when viewed in context, is sufficient to constitute a case to answer. It would be open to a jury to conclude (a) that any grenade – be it a military combat grenade or a "harmless" paintball grenade – is a relatively unusual item, with which only a minority of the population is likely to come into contact (b) that William Jones's DNA was on the firing pin of the grenade recovered by the police (c) that it can only have got there because either William Jones himself or some other person or thing bearing his DNA has had contact with that part of the grenade (d) that William Jones is linked to one or more persons who were parties to the conspiracy. In these circumstances, and in the absence of any evidence of a contrary explanation, it would in my judgment be open to a jury to conclude that the only explanation for the presence of William Jones's DNA on the grenade is that he was himself a party to the conspiracy alleged. Having reached the above conclusion, it is not necessary for me to consider the cogency of the attribution evidence relied on by the prosecution in relation to the disputed 2893 phone."
"27. It is clear from the decision in Sampson and Kelly, and the approach of Lord Bingham CJ in Adams (No2) that where DNA is directly deposited in the course of the commission of a crime by the offender, a very high DNA match with the defendant is sufficient to raise a case the defendant to answer. There is a clear distinction as the authorities stand, between such a case and cases such as Lashley where the DNA was deposited on an article left at the scene.
28. In the present case, there can be no doubt that the DNA was deposited in the course of the commission of the offence by the person who committed the offence…..
…
30. … As Lloyd Jones LJ made clear in giving the judgment of the court in Sampson and Kelly, it is important to bear in mind that the analysis and techniques of analysis of DNA have improved markedly in the past decade, certainly since the decision in Lashley. Thus the fact that the DNA was on an article left at the scene of the crime (as distinct from DNA being directly deposited in the course of the commission of the offence by the offender) may be sufficient to raise a case to answer where the match is in the order of one in a billion."
"22. On the facts of this case it is quite clear that there was a case for the appellant to answer. His was the major DNA profile on the door handle of the car which was used by the offender in the course of the robbery. The expert evidence was that the likely reason for the defendant's DNA profile being on the door handle was that he had touched it at the close of the prosecution case there was no explanation for this fact. The rhetorical question posed by the judge demonstrated some geographical connection between the location of the offence and the appellant albeit not sufficient to amount to supporting evidence…."
CONCLUSIONS