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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 >> Mbadugha, R v [2020] EWCA Crim 1049 (30 July 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2020/1049.html Cite as: [2020] EWCA Crim 1049 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Royal Courts of Justice Strand London, WC2A 2LL Thursday, 30 July 2020 |
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B e f o r e :
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE DICKINSON QC)
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R E G I N A | ||
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LOUISA MBADUGHA |
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Mr D Hughes appeared on behalf of the Crown
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Crown Copyright ©
i. "There doesn't seem to be much dispute that fraud was going on. The question is whether they were knowingly concerned. How are we ever going to know they were knowingly concerned when they dispute it? There is no magic way to press a button and the answer comes out before you. It can't be done like that. You are going to have to look at all of the evidence and your inferences about whether you are sure somebody was knowingly concerned. That is the only way of doing it, and that means you can use your logic, your common sense, in relation to evidence that you are sure about - what was going on, what did that person say, what did that person do, what else was happening, what the documents show, what they said about it, and you can use, as I said, logic and common sense to come to common-sense conclusions, based on evidence which you are sure about.
ii. One thing you cannot do is speculate, guess. There is to be no guesswork and no speculation, please. That is forbidden."
i. "So examine the evidence and decide what you are sure the defendant in question was doing and saying at the material times, in the context of whatever else you are sure was going on. In that way, you may use logic and common sense to draw inferences; that is, to come to common-sense conclusions, but you must not speculate. And where there are alternate inferences available from the evidence, well, then you may only draw an inference of guilt against the defendant if you're sure that you can reject inferences consistent with innocence.
ii. Just to expand upon that for a moment, two sides may say: 'These are the facts'. The prosecution will say, 'The inference you should draw is this.' The defence may say, 'No, the inference you should draw is that.' So you will have two different arguments about the proper inference you should draw. You can only draw the inference against a defendant consistent with their guilt if you're sure you can reject the ones that are consistent with their innocence. That's the way to approach it."
(a) the convictions are unsafe because the Crown had failed "to lead highly technical evidence in order to demonstrate that the "landscape" that the applicant was presented with and that she in turn placed in front of the auditors "was not such, viewed objectively, as to alert someone in her position and with her characteristics of any underlying extensive Italian fraud."
(b) The judge failed properly to give the jury any direction as to how they should treat circumstantial evidence.
(c) It was not disclosed to the jury that the fraud was a major "Mafia" type of financing operation.
i. " GROUNDS OF APPEAL
ii. AND IT IS SUBMITTED THAT
1. The Learned Judge failed to give the jury full directions in respect of how they should approach circumstantial evidence, as was required in a case of this nature.
2. In all the circumstances of the case as set out above, the verdicts returned by the jury against Louisa Mbadugha were unsafe: The Court is invited to quash her convictions."
i. "Wrongly and to my detriment the Crown failed to make Leonardi available at the trial as the best person to give evidence as to what I would have seen, as he himself designed, built and maintained the servers."
i. "The grounds of appeal must:
1) Include in no more than the first two pages a summary of the grounds that makes what then follows easy to understand.
2) In each ground of appeal identify the event or decision to which that ground relates;
3) In each ground of appeal summarise the facts relevant to that ground; but only to the extent necessary to make clear what is in issue;
4) Concisely outline each argument in support of each ground;
5) Number each ground consecutively, if there is more than one;
6) Identify any relevant authorities and;
i. state the proposition of law that the authority demonstrates, and
ii. identify the parts of the authority that support that proposition..."
i. "It is not unusual for the trial judge to point out to the jury the difference between proof by direct evidence and proof by circumstances leading to a compelling inference of guilt. However, there is no rule of law that requires the trial judge to give such an explanation or any requirement to use any particular form of words. It depends upon the nature of the case and the evidence."
i. "The risk of injustice that a circumstantial evidence direction is designed to confront is that (1) speculation might become a substitute for the drawing of a sure inference of guilt and (2) the jury will neglect to take account of evidence that, if accepted, tends to diminish or even to exclude the inference of guilt (see R v Teper [1952] AC 480). However, as the House of Lords explained in McGreevy, circumstantial evidence does not fall into any special category that requires a special direction as to the burden and standard of proof. The ultimate question for the jury is the same whether the evidence is direct or indirect: Has the prosecution proved upon all the evidence so that the jury is sure that the defendant is guilty? It is the task of the trial judge to consider how best to assist the jury to reach a true verdict according to the evidence."