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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 >> Pike v R. [2022] EWCA Crim 1501 (14 November 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2022/1501.html Cite as: [2022] EWCA Crim 1501 |
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ON APPEAL FROM AYLESBURY CROWN COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE ROCHFORD
SITTING AT AYLESBURY CROWN COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE GARNHAM
and
HER HONOUR JUDGE KARU THE RECORDER OF SOUTHWARK
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NIKKI ANTON PIKE |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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REX |
Respondent |
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Mr Brady (instructed by CPS) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 2 November 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
LADY JUSTICE WHIPPLE :
INTRODUCTION
FACTS
"The defendant denies engaging in any physical sexual activity with the complainant before she attained the age of consent, except a kiss when she was 15 years old (sometime after July 2017). … The Defendant accepts having consensual sexual intercourse with the complainant after she turned 16. The defendant also denies taking any indecent images of the complainant."
"The Defendant will state that the complainant became his friend whilst learning to climb at Xscape. The Defendant will say that he only tried to provide emotional support to the complainant who was going through a difficult time due to her parent's split. The Defendant accepts engaging in sexual conversation with the complainant, but it was only to answer the questions the complainant would ask him and over time their conversations became more sexual. The defendant was fully aware that he could not engage in any sexual activity with the complainant due to her age. The defendant denies arranging the charity event in June 2016, with a view to get the complainant alone. The defendant accepts that the complainant went to the staff room with him that day, but it was only to fill their water bottles and the defendant also checked Facebook page of the charity event on his manager's computer. The defendant denies that any sexual activity took place in the staff room. The room cannot be locked, and people constantly keep coming in and out of the staff room. The defendant denies ever recording the complainant on any of his devices or on the dash camera in his car, as alleged by the complainant. The defendant denies paying for the shoes for the complainant. … The defendant accepts that after the complainant turned 16 in November 2017, they had consensual sex at Jury's Inn, Milton Keynes. This was because they always used to have this discussion that they will have sex when the complainant turned 16."
GROUNDS OF APPEAL
Existing Grounds of Appeal
i. The learned trial judge wrongly did not give the defence permission to cross examine the complainant on the circumstances in which or as a result of which she made the allegations about the appellant. (We shall refer to this as the issue about "JH material".)
ii. The learned judge wrongly failed to give the jury proper and/or adequate directions on each occasion the learned judge gave his opinion, as to how to treat HHJ's opinion of the prosecution or defence evidence. The learned judge also spent a lot of time in his summing up explaining away the inconsistencies and inaccuracies in the complainant's account, but did not offer the same generosity to the defendant. (We shall refer to this as the complaint about "biased summing up".)
iii. The learned judge wrongly interfered, in the presence of the jury, with how the defence wanted to present their case, and put the defence under pressure to speed up the proceedings, having made no similar interference during the Crown's case. Such interference was capable of influencing the jury's attitude to the defence case. (We shall refer to this as the issue about "pressuring the defence".)
First Further Grounds of Appeal
Second Further Grounds of Appeal
"11. … At the heart of these [further grounds] lies his desire to seek to impugn the testimony of the complainant on the basis that she was suffering from false memory. This is to commence a wide ranging investigation at this appeal stage into that issue. We make the obvious point that this is in essence to seek to reopen a case which has already been tried in the Crown Court. This is an appeal and it would be an unusual course to permit such a wide ranging investigation at this stage. …
13. The reason is that there is no evidence or any material currently before this court to suggest that false memory syndrome might have been in play here. The suggestion of false memory syndrome is wholly speculative. There is no evidential basis for seeking that evidence at this stage and, indeed, there was no evidential basis for seeking it at the earlier stage at trial. The complainant is not a person in relation to whom there is any history of confabulation nor did she undergo any counselling which might have triggered false memory in her case.
14. We are mindful that the court has looked at matters relating to the circumstances in which expert evidence of this short should be admitted. We have in mind the case of Stephen H v R [2014] EWCA Crim 1555 where the Court of Appeal endorsed the trial judge's conclusions set out at paragraph 20 of the case report, notably that there had to be a "sound factual foundation" for such expert opinion to be admissible and in this case there is simply no foundation at all, sound or otherwise, for seeking to procure such evidence."
Summary
GROUND 1: JH MATERIAL
Background
Ruling
"The defence will only cross examine the complainant to the extent that she made the earlier allegations in August 2018 and that she had contact with the police throughout until October 2018 when she was informed that the investigation will stop, and that she never mentioned anything in relation to the defendant in this case. The suggestion being that once she had been through the process, she was familiar with the way the police investigations take matters further. Whilst part of what she says is true (the skype conversation and indecent images[1]), she has embellished the allegations against this defendant to get over the embarrassment of the case against [JH] not going any further."
"The defence say that it is surprising, if these complaints were genuine, that she did not make the complaint previously; she - they say that her previous dealings with the police, over the [JH] matter, between August and October, would have given her a familiarity with police procedure, and contact with the police, which might have been expected to trigger her making the complaint against Mr Pike, the defendant in this matter. It is also suggested … that she has embellished the allegations against this defendant, to get over the embarrassment of the case against [JH] not going any further. That has been somewhat expanded upon, orally, to suggest, also, that there was an element of revenge, or spite: the complaints against [JH] having not been proceeded with, she has, then, effectively, invented, or embroidered allegations against this defendant, and it is also said, in support of the application, that she may have learnt that it is helpful to add, or embroider to the allegations."
"There is no evidence on which a case can, really, be advanced against the complainant to the effect that she has embroidered these allegations out of spite, or out of disappointment, nor can it be said that she would be - that her coming into contact with the police would have provided her with an opportunity, earlier, to make complaints. The police are there, and available for complaints to be made to them, at any stage, and, in any event, the complaint was made to the police in October, which is only some two months - indeed, less than two months after the complainant first went to the police with information about [JH]. In my judgment, the prosecution are right to say that these questions are speculative, and no more than that. There is no positive case that can be put to the complainant, and, in those circumstances, I consider that the questions would not be admissible, or proper. I reach that conclusion without considering the exclusionary principles of section 41."
Parties' arguments
Conclusion
i) That the JH material was relevant to show that C1 had embellished her account, and/or that she might have fabricated these allegations out of spite or embarrassment once her allegations against JH were dropped.
ii) That the JH material was relevant to delay in making her complaint.
iii) That there were factual similarities between the JH allegations and the allegations against C1.
GROUND 2: BIASED SUMMING UP
Submissions of Parties and Approach
Particulars
"Well, you'll need to make of that what you will. Maybe the defendant used something other than a finger to open the lock, and [C1] is wrong about a particular but of the detail, or maybe she is just completely wrong about it. It's a matter for you what you make of that description. You may think it's odd to deliberately lie about those matters when she might be caught out."
"She described, also, an incident when she was in the front - indeed, actually, performing oral sex as he drove, when she described him, also, as being chased by the police with sirens, but the police went another way at the roundabout. Well, you may think that if her account is accurate, it's unlikely that the police would simply abandon the chase. You may think that the more likely explanation, if there is truth in [C1's] account, would be that the police happened to be responding to an emergency, and it felt to [C1]as if it was them that they were after, and we've probably had the experience of driving along and hearing sirens and wondering if they're wanting you to stop or somebody else, and then they disappear off into the distance, and it's clearly not you."
"So what are to you to make of that in the context of the fact that that exchange seems to be taking place after September 2015, the date when, on [C1's] account, they had had sex in the car, because she's 14 at the time of this, and she says she was 13 when they had sex in the car. Well, possibly, she is - possibly, that is part of role playing. She wasn't asked about that; we don't know what explanation she might have given, and you shouldn't speculate about that, but, clearly, there is an element of role-playing. The defendant's own account was that the sexting involved role playing; perhaps her pretending to be a virgin in that video was part of role playing or pretence, and role playing is a feature of many relationships, and as I say, the defendant says that there was role playing here. So you'll need to consider that when you analyse the evidence."
"She was asked by [defence counsel] "The vaginal sex didn't last long, and then you left". That was the question, and the reply to it was, "With everything included, I would say about 10 minutes". Now, [defence counsel] says that that answer means that the three acts of oral sex and the vaginal sex took 10 minutes, which [defence counsel] says is implausible and undermines [C1's] credibility. You may think - and you heard her give the answer - you may think her answer was not directed to the entire sexual activity, but was directed to how long the vaginal sex and, perhaps, any immediate preliminaries to that, took, rather than to the entire sexual event. The question, again, was "The vaginal sex didn't last long, and then you left". So it was a question specifically about vaginal sex, and the response was, "With everything included, I would say about 10 minutes".
"Now, in that, she is making clear and serious allegations to him, and he is responding by denying them. You may think it must have been pretty obvious to him that she was trying to get him to admit in WhatsApp messages that he had behaved in an inappropriate, indeed, criminal, way, and in those circumstances, you may think the fact that he denied everything, doesn't give much support to his case."
Conclusion
GROUND 3: PRESSURING THE DEFENCE
SAFETY OF CONVICTION
DISPOSAL
Note 1 A reference to the two counts to which the appellant had pleaded guilty [Back]